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"We still have 150 million people under the poverty line," Xie told reporters Monday. In a nonbinding Copenhagen Accord last December, an agreement not accepted by all treaty parties, the U.S. and other industrial nations announced targets for reducing emissions by 2020, and China and some other developing nations set goals, also voluntary, for cutting back on the growth of their emissions. Many parties now want to have those voluntary targets "anchored" more formally in a document emerging from the Cancun talks. At the same time, developing countries are pressing for the industrial nations to commit in Cancun to a second Kyoto period, further mandatory cutbacks beyond 2012
-- a demand resisted by Japan, Russia and others who won't submit to more legally binding emissions cuts until the U.S., China and some others take on binding targets under treaty. It's the kind of negotiating impasse custom-made for creative diplomacy and lawyerly wordcraft. Late Monday, looking for a middle ground on these post-2012 commitments, diplomats searched "for some kind of a political message from Cancun included in the Cancun final decision that there will be a second commitment period for the Kyoto Protocol, although no numbers will be decided upon at this stage," said Brazilian negotiator Sergio Serra. The wordcraft was already being practiced by China's Xie. With linguistic sleight-of-hand, he told reporters that his country's ambitious energy-efficiency plans represented "binding" targets
-- although the obligation will be owed only to China's National People's Congress, not to the international community.
[Associated
Press;
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