CED Documentation is for your personal reference and study only
E31d
I Government, 16 Jun 2008
US scanner on India climate change combat plan
 India is close to finalising its national action plan to combat climate change. The US wants the plan to turn into a binding commitment.

New Delhi: The US is trying to break the deadlock in global climate change negotiations by getting countries like India and China to turn their national action plans into binding commitments to be included in an international treaty.

US Council on Environmental Quality Chairperson, James L. Connaughton, met the Prime Minister's Chief Negotiator on climate change Shyam Saran, here on Monday and sought India's support in this effort, reports IANS.

Referring to India and China, Connaughton said the world's "major industrialised and emerging" countries were drafting a declaration that would lead to a robust global treaty by the end of 2009.

The declaration is expected at a major economic leaders meeting in Japan on July 9, along with the G8 summit.

India is close to finalising its national action plan to combat climate change. Like that of the US, it is a potpourri of energy efficiency measures, incentives for energy generation from renewable sources and tree plantation schemes.

The binding commitments, by industrialised countries, were in the Kyoto Protocol, which the Bush government refused to ratify.

Connaughton preferred the Montreal Protocol approach, by which every country would have a responsibility to control GHG emissions, though the levels of control and target dates to achieve them would vary "according to the principle of common but differentiated responsibility".

Claiming that the US was on the right path to controlling its GHG emissions - which would peak by 2025, going by current projections - Connaughton said a "bottoms up" approach of controlling GHG emissions sector by sector (energy efficiency, green building codes and so on) was far more likely to succeed than "the top down approach of the Kyoto protocol".

Connaughton repeated the US government position that there could be "no major progress" in combating climate change if industrialised countries committed to reduce GHG emissions but major emerging economies like India and China did not.

India has consistently opposed any mandatory emission caps on developing countries, saying it would affect plans to provide electricity to all.

Connaughton hoped the US plan to turn national plans to international commitments would bridge this fundamental gap. He said Mexico had pledged to do exactly that. Industrialised countries like the US, Australia and Canada had done the same.

http://www.igovernment.in/site/us-scanner-on-india-climate-change-combat-plan/

© 2008 Blue Slate Media. All Rights Reserved.