Special Report: Fight against Global
Warming
BALI, Indonesia, Dec. 14 (Xinhua) -- A new U.S.
proposal that wanted to get away from international commitments on reducing
emissions of greenhouse gases and came up with national domestic objectives
instead could push the Bali climate negotiations in Indonesia to the brink of
failure, officials from the World Wide Fund (WWF) for Nature warned on Friday.
The U.S. new proposal , which came an hour before
midnight Thursday, would eliminate language that called upon developed nations
to consider specific, internationally binding, quantified reduction commitments,
replacing it with text that calls upon countries to adopt any measures they deem
appropriate, WWF said in a press release.
"At the eleventh hour, the U.S. has submitted a
proposal that is the equivalent of taking no action at all against climate
change," WWF International Director General James P Leape said. "This proposal
would gut the international effort towards halting climate change and put the
future of our planet at risk."
"The Bush administration has a moral obligation to
make commitments that are commensurate with their contribution to the climate
crisis," said WWF Global Climate Change Director Hans Verolme. "The U.S.
government, aided by a small group of nations including Canada and Japan, has
over the last few days thrown up several roadblocks in the negotiations," he
said.
He added: "We are pleased that several large emerging
economies, including China, Brazil, and South Africa, are still showing
flexibility and creativity in their contributions to the Bali negotiations. That
is the same spirit one would hope we could expect from the US."
"With these actions, the US jeopardizes the
agreements that have already been reached on deforestation, technology and
adaptation," he noted.
On Thursday evening, Al gore, Nobel Peace Prize
co-laureate and former U.S. vice president, in a speech delivered here, also
accused his own country, the United States, of being "principally responsible"
for blocking progress here toward an agreement on launching negotiations to
replace the Kyoto Protocol when it expires in 2012.
WWF, a global environmental conservation
organization, said more than 50 members of the U.S. Congress from both parties
wrote to U.S. President George W. Bush urging him to shift gears and play a
constructive role in bringing these negotiations to a productive close.
The Bali U.N. climate conference, which is due to end
on Friday,came to a deadlock as the EU and the United States, Japan, Canada have
disputed over a number of goals in emissions in the final text for the Bali
Roadmap, which will guide negotiations on a new global climate deal before the
Kyoto Protocol when expires in 2012.
The EU favored a 25-40 percent deep emissions cut for
rich countries by 2020, while the United States said such a range would prejudge
the outcome of the negotiations.