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These pollutants are different from the carbon dioxide emissions that have divided nations over more than two decades of fractious talks and that the Obama administration has been unable to get Congress to limit. These persist in the atmosphere for only a short time but are blamed for up to a third of the human-caused warming in the Arctic. They can be reduced by shifting away from dirty diesel engines, agricultural burning and hydrofluorocarbons. Yet governments have done little, even if the U.S and Canada proposed Monday to phase down their use of hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs, a potent greenhouse gas used in consumer products that ironically was promoted as a substitute for ozone-depleting chemicals. And this week's meeting will probably only instruct countries to increase their individual conservation efforts. Officials hope the good will and precedent set by the search-and-rescue agreement will gradually bring nations together on more sensitive topics. Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the government's point person on the Gulf oil spill, said the treaty ensures that a mission to rescue missing or stranded people won't get bogged down in politics. Coordinating the response to an oil spill on the magnitude of the BP disaster in the Gulf of Mexico would be far more difficult. The region's ice mass and cold waters would make big booms, chemical dispersants and other techniques for removing oil far less effective. And with no roads connecting remote coastal towns, storms and fog that can ground aircraft, and no deep-water ports for ships, a response on the scale needed last year to clean up the mess would be unfathomable. That burden would rest to an even greater degree on the company doing the drilling. David Hayes, the deputy interior secretary, said countries would advance discussions this week on gas and oil drilling, and how to deal with the potential for blowouts and spills. Steinberg said a task force would be set up specifically for spill response, and the council would mature into a full-fledged political organization for the future of the region. Environmentalists aren't fully on board. They say the organization's disaster preparedness is different from disaster prevention. "Basically, once you have a spill in the Arctic, it's virtually impossible to clean up," said Erika Rosenthal, an attorney for the Oakland-based environmental group Earthjustice. The organization isn't advocating for a blanket ban on Arctic oil drilling, but rather tight constraints on how and where companies can operate. "The Arctic is largely unexplored," Rosenthal said. "This is perhaps the only opportunity left on the planet to plan something well from the beginning."
[Associated
Press;
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