Special Report: Fight against Global
Warming
BALI, Indonesia, Dec. 14 (Xinhua) -- New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and
Deputy Mayor of London Nicky Gavron Friday joined together to sign the World
Mayors and Local Governments Climate Protection Agreement, which was launched on
Thursday in Bali, a resort island of Indonesia.
They pledged to reduce emissions 60-80 percent from 1990 levels by 2050,
the target recommended by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) to combat global warming.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg urged U.S. delegation to the ongoing U.N.
climate change conference to join world ministers to fight global warming.
Bloomberg, who was selected to give the Local Governments and Municipal
Authorities statement Friday morning to the high-level delegations at the
conference, said, "The mayors of the world's cities are the great pragmatists on
the world's stage. Results, not ideology, are what matter to us."
"Already, mayors are taking the lead in improving our environment and the
U.N. climate change conference should include cities and municipalities as a
major part of the solution to reduce our carbon footprint," he said.
"Cities and urban areas are responsible for 80 percent of global greenhouse
gas emissions," said Nicky Gavron, "We have great economic opportunities, and
cities will drive the transition to a low-carbon economy, if empowered and
resourced by our nations."
Both Bloomberg and Gavron are attending the U.N. Climate Change Conference
representing local governments worldwide through Local Governments for
Sustainability (ICLEI). The two-week meeting, which is scheduled to end on
Friday, came to a deadlock due to EU-U.S. disputes over a number of goals for
emissions in the final text of the meeting.
Al Gore urges Washington to act on
climate change
BALI, Indonesia, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- Former U.S. Vice
President Al Gore here on Thursday urged the Bush Administration to act with
sense of urgency on climate change, which he described as a "moral" issue. Full story
AL Gore: "We are one people on one
planet with one destiny"
BALI, Indonesia, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- "My own country,
the United States of America, is principally responsible for obstructing the
process here in Bali, we know that," said former U.S. vice president Al Gore to
an enthusiastic applause from his audience gathering here for the U.N. climate
conference. Full story
The United States has been objecting to including in
a final conference document a suggestion that industrialized countries reduce
emissions by between 25 percent and 40 percent by 2020.
The United States is the world's largest emitter of
greenhouse gases and is the only country that has not ratified the Kyoto
Protocol among major industrialized countries. Full story