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  Pet Magazine Issue 06


EU, Environmentalists Alarmed With Russia's Indecision On Kyoto

After hearing Russian President Vladimir Putin say yesterday during the opening of the World Climate Change Conference in Moscow that the country has not yet decided if it will ratify the Kyoto Protocol, environmental groups and European Union representatives said they were alarmed with the country's lack of commitment, the London Guardian reports.

"This is an extraordinary display of bad faith by President Putin that will sour his relations with the EU," said a member of the European Parliament's climate-change delegation, Chris Davies.
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"For months Russia has insisted that it will eventually ratify the Kyoto Protocol. It must be hoped that this announcement signals a last-minute attempt at brinkmanship to extract further financial concessions out of the EU rather than heralding the collapse of the world's only agreement to curb global warming," he added.

Putin said yesterday that the Russian government is closely studying the issue, but that more research on climate change was needed. "Modern science needs to determine the actual degree of danger posed by global climate change," he said. "Scientists should also help answer another crucial question about the limits of the impact of industry on the climate system."

According to the Guardian, Putin's statement was likely to cause delight in Washington, since the United States does not support the protocol.

For the climate-change convention to come into force, countries accounting for at least 55 percent of 1990 gas emissions must ratify the protocol. Russian ratification would achieve those numbers (Walsh/Brown, London Guardian, Sept. 30).

Also speaking at the conference was World Meteorological Organization Secretary General G.O.P. Obasi, who said that scientific data shows with certainty that global surface temperatures and sea levels are rising and that the world's glaciers are melting.

Obasi also said that research shows that pollution from human activities is changing the composition of the atmosphere, and that extreme weather and climatic events have been causing forest fires, floods and droughts around the world.

He stressed the importance of the climate-change convention to address the problem, as well as more incentive at the scientific level, saying "commitment and cooperation of all nations are essential in consolidating and building a comprehensive, coordinated, integrated and sustainable global observing system for climate" (WMO release, Sept. 29).

In a message to the participants of the conference, U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan warned that if actions are not taken, "by the end of the century, as a result of ever-increasing emissions of greenhouse gases, our planet may look very different: with many small islands gone, the Arctic Ocean free of ice for many months of the year, agricultural regions dramatically altered, and our ecological life-support system under stress as never before" (U.N. release, Sept. 29).
Copyright, UN Wire, Year 2003 . http://www.unwire.org/UNWire/

 



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