NEW DELHI, July 2 (Xinhua) -- Industrialized countries should meet their
own commitments in the fight against climate change rather than asking countries
like India and China to cap greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, the Indian prime
minister's principal negotiator on climate change Shyam Saran said on Wednesday
here.
A week before leaders of 16 major economies - including India -are expected
to sign a declaration underscoring the importance of fighting climate change,
Saran told reporters in an interview that emission reduction targets being
announced by developed countries meant nothing in the absence of a baseline year
from which to measure the reductions.
As agreed in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC), "1990 must be the baseline year" from which GHG emissions would be
reduced, Saran said. "We'll resist any unilateral attempt to try and change the
baseline to some future date."
Declarations by developed countries to halve GHG emissions by 2050 "make no
sense" without a baseline, he pointed out. "It will only confuse world public
opinion. It may make them think you are doing something very major, which you
actually have no intention of doing," Saran told reporters.
Saran also wanted industrialized countries to draw out the path they would
follow to their 2050 goals. Otherwise, "how do we know whether this is a
credible target? Especially, taking into account the fact that most major
countries are unlikely to meet their current (2007-2012) commitments".
Answering criticism on why India was not committing itself to capping GHG
emissions, Saran said: "To merely ward off pressure, we don't want to announce
targets which we have no intention of achieving.
"We'd like industrialized developed countries to meet the obligations they
have undertaken before they start pointing fingers at countries like India."
Saran acknowledged that there had not been much progress in international
climate change negotiations since the UNFCCC summit in Bali last December, but
was hopeful of agreement by the end of 2009.
Asked about fears of Indian industry that exports to developed countries
would be subject to carbon tariffs, Saran said: "That would be trade
protectionism under a green label. And that, of course, we're not prepared to
accept."
Saran expected next week's major economies' meet in Japan to deliver a
strong message to climate change negotiators that their leaders "consider this
to be a matter of great urgency and importance."