Obama
says world must reach climate deal in Paris 'while we still can'
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[September 01, 2015]
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) -
President Barack Obama said on Monday that world leaders must agree to
cut carbon emissions at a U.N. summit in December because the climate is
changing faster than efforts to curb global warming.
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Obama told a meeting of foreign ministers in Alaska that the
United States recognized it played a big part in raising the Earth's
temperatures and "embraces our responsibility" to help fix the
problem.
"This year, in Paris, must be the year that the world finally
reaches an agreement to protect the one planet we've got while we
still can," Obama said, according to his prepared remarks.
The Arctic is already feeling the effects of climate change, Obama
said, noting Alaska had "some of the swiftest shoreline erosion
rates in the world," which threaten coastal villages.
Forest fires are accelerating the thaw in permafrost, which
threatens homes and damages roads in the state and also releases
carbon stored in the land, which contributes to the problem, he
said.
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"The science is stark, it is sharpening, and it proves that this
once-distant threat is now very much in the present," he said.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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