The US, as one of the world’s
major polluters, has faced a lot of criticism for refusing to sign the
Kyoto protocol which mandates lowering of emissions among industrial
countries. Australia, the world’s major coal producer, also refused to
sign. But the main point, according to
spokesmen for the Bush administration, which held the US back from
ratifying the Kyoto protocol, was that it applied only to industrialized
nations, and was not required of such huge developing giants as India and
China. The new agreement is not intended
to replace the Kyoto protocol, Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick
explained, when the agreement was announced, but to complement it, by
bringing in the developing countries, and offering them the most modern
technology to help lower emissions. Despite the fact that the US did not
ratify the Kyoto pact, it has proceeded voluntarily and been able to
reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 0.3 percent while the EU’s 25 members
have increased to 3.4 percent. The new agreement, known rather
cumbersomely as the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and
Climate, was signed by Australia, China, the US, India, and South Korea.
ASEAN members were invited to join the pact. The "Catch-22" problem facing
developing countries, as Deputy Secretary Zoellick pointed out, is to
expand and develop without hurting the environment. If environmental
restrictions are too severe, growing economies are slowed down. The Kyoto
pact affected only developed countries. One of the world’s fastest growing
economies is China and its energy needs are met in large part by coal, a
known polluter of the environment. The new agreement would offer China the
latest in "clean coal technology" and also encourage the developing
nations, including China, to develop alternate sources of energy such as
wind power, solar power, hydropower, and geothermal power, which provide
energy but do not pollute the environment. Environmentalists suggest that
since the changes recommended in the new agreement are voluntary and not
mandatory, nothing will happen. But if the developed countries do supply
the rapidly developing countries with the latest technologies to protect
the environment, the agreement can be, as Zoellick suggests, a "win-win
situation" for them both. The new group will hold its first
formal meeting in November in Australia in preparation for the next United
Nations conference on global climate change which is scheduled to be held
in Canada in early December. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
Energy secretary Samuel Bodman are expected to
attend.
Source: www.mb.com
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