Special Report: Fight against Global Warming
BALI, Indonesia, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- Hans Verolme,
Director of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)'s Global Climate Change
Program, on Thursday called on ministers attending the ongoing U.N. climate
conference in Bali, Indonesia, to break the deadlock and secure a "Bali Mandate
the world is crying out for."
In a press release on Thursday at the sideline of a
U.N. climate conference in Bali, Indonesia, Hans said "Ministers need to see the
wood from the trees and personally invest in a political package that meets the
needs of a climate-stressed world."
"Also it must result in a binding global deal by 2009
under which all rich countries make deep cuts in emissions, and agreement on
technology and other incentives to speed up climate action everywhere," he said.
He added: "Ministers must break the logjam where it
exists and secure the Bali Mandate the world is crying out for."
All countries need to commit to do more and launch
formal negotiations on meaningful reductions in carbon dioxide emissions. Real
political momentum has built up over the course of this year, opening the door
for ministers to strike a deal that is good for people and nature.
Indonesia, the host of the U.N. climate conference,
gathered Wednesday 40 ministers attending the U.N. climate conference here to
discuss unresolved issues left over by senior officials.
One of the sticking points that slowed the
negotiations, according to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer, included the rejection of several countries,
especially the United States, to adopt emission reduction targets for developed
countries, which range between 25 percent to 40 percent by 2020.
While emphasizing its support for the creation of the
Bali Roadmap in 2009 for advancing negotiations toward a post-2012 arrangement,
the U.S. reiterated its rejection to the inclusion of any figures in the
roadmap.
Developing countries grouped under G-77 expressed
their disappointment with the developed countries, which they accused of
deliberately slowing the negotiation process in the area of transfer of
technology and deforestation issues, and hence hampered the whole negotiation.
The scientific data from the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) clearly show that action to reduce emissions must be
taken now.
The two-week climate meeting which gathered over
10,000 delegates from over 180 countries, as well as observers from
intergovernmental and nongovernmental organization will conclude on Friday.
Established in 1961, WWF is a global environmental
conservation organization.