EU leads call for stronger climate ambition as U.N. summit wavers
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[December 14, 2019]
By Matthew Green and Valerie Volcovici
MADRID (Reuters) - The European Union
warned on Saturday that a U.N. summit in Madrid must send a strong
signal that countries are ready to do more to cut emissions, as fears
grew that international efforts to fight climate change were slipping
into reverse.
The two-week round of annual climate negotiations had been due to
conclude on Friday, but dragged on into the weekend as delegates failed
to resolve multiple disputes over implementing a climate accord forged
in Paris four years ago.
Krista Mikkonen, Finland's environment minister, speaking on behalf of
the EU, told the latest session at the talks that it would be
"impossible to leave" without agreeing a "strong message" on the need to
redouble pledges to cut emissions next year, when the Paris deal enters
a crucial implementation phase.
"This is something that the outside expects from us and we need to hear
their calls," Mikkonen said.
Countries including Nepal, Switzerland, Uruguay and the Marshall Islands
echoed the call from the EU for more ambition.
Observers say that the latest draft statements drawn up by Chile, which
is presiding over the summit, for consideration by delegates lack the
kind of strong commitments needed to inject fresh momentum into the
faltering Paris process.
"We are in the final (stage) of these negotiations and what we see thus
far is that this text is completely unacceptable and it would be a
betrayal of people around the world suffering from the impacts and those
that are calling for action," Jennifer Morgan, executive director of
Greenpeace International, told reporters.
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Carolina Schmidt, Chile's Minister of Environment and President of
the 2019 U.N. Climate Change Conference (COP25) attends a meeting
with delegates during COP25 in Madrid, Spain, December 14, 2019.
REUTERS/Nacho Doce
"The Chilean presidency had one job, to protect the integrity of the
Paris Agreement and not allow it to be torn apart by cynicism and
greed and right now it is failing," Morgan said, expressing mounting
outrage among climate campaigners.
Morgan named the United States, which has begun the process of
leaving the Paris Agreement, Japan, and Brazil as among the biggest
obstacles to meaningful action.
With global emissions hitting a record high last year, countries
pushing for stronger climate action say that big polluters must
agree to submit more ambitious pledges next year to give the accord
a fighting chance of success.
Bhutan's Sonam Phuntsho Wangdi, who chairs a bloc of Least Developed
Countries, told the session he could not "face our peoples back at
home" without a stronger outcome to protect the world from the worst
impacts of climate change.
(Reporting by Matthew Green; Editing by Alex Richardson and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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