Barack Obama.
President Barack Obama is considering setting a
provisional target for cutting the United States' huge
greenhouse gas emissions, removing the greatest single obstacle
to a landmark global agreement to fight climate change, writes
Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington.
Obama Administration officials have been consulting
international negotiators and key players on Capitol Hill
about signing up to a provisional target at the United
Nations global warming summit in Copenhagen, now less than
three weeks away.
Todd Stern, the State Department climate change envoy, said
the Administration recognised the US had to come forward with
a target for cutting its emissions.
The US, which with China is responsible for 40% of the
world's greenhouse gas emissions, is the only major developed
nation yet to table an offer. "What we are looking at is to
see whether we could put down essentially a provisional
number that would be contingent on our legislation," Mr Stern
said from Copenhagen, where he was meeting Danish officials.
"We are looking at that. There are people we need to consult
with."
A provisional target, if accepted by other nations, would
solve Mr Obama's dilemma.
The Senate will not have passed a domestic law before
Copenhagen, meaning that, if he makes an offer there, it
could subsequently be rejected in Washington.
But if he makes no offer, the deal is likely to crash anyway,
and with it hopes of rapidly combating global warming.
Mr Stern did not go into detail on the level of emissions
cuts being considered, but it is thought likely a provisional
target would be a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions of
14%-20% by 2020, compared with 2005 levels.
The White House and State Department have also discussed the
idea of putting forward a range of targets rather than a
specific figure.
"I think the president has several options," said Jonathan
Lash, president of the World Resources Institute.
"One which seems to be under discussions inside the
Administration is to offer a range, to say, `Here is what we
hope to be able to propose,' and that range might go from
what the president has always committed to since his campaign
- 14% - to the highest number in any pending legislation,
which is 20% in the Senate."
The House of Representatives narrowly passed a Bill in June
that would cut US emissions by 17%.
A proposal now before the Senate would cut emissions by 20%,
but several key Democratic senators have said the target is
too stringent.
Even at the higher end, such figures fall short of the
emissions targets adopted by other industrialised countries
in Europe and Japan, and those recommended by scientists to
avoid the worst ravages of climate change.
Many negotiators are frustrated with the US, especially given
the high expectations for the Obama presidency.
"One could perhaps argue that this could have been a much
higher priority and this should perhaps have been pushed
before any of the other initiatives the Administration has
taken, particularly given the fact that there was a deadline
of December for getting an agreement," said R. K. Pachauri,
chairman of the Intergovernment Panel on Climate Change.
Mr Obama and other world leaders have already conceded the
Copenhagen meeting will not produce a legally binding treaty.
But the leaders are looking to the meeting to seal firm
political agreement about specific action plans by the
industrialised and rapidly emerging economies that can go
into immediate effect.
But ensuring success at Copenhagen carries a risk that could
ultimately defeat efforts to reduce global greenhouse gas
emissions, Mr Lash warned.
Setting too strong a provisional target could provoke
retaliation from Congress, which might damage efforts to pass
climate change laws in the US.
"Without the US passing legislation, we can't move an overall
agreement," Mr Lash said.
"My greatest concern is that the Administration does nothing
in Copenhagen, because that ultimately undercuts everybody's
efforts to achieve an international agreement."
Democratic leaders in the Senate are growing increasingly
wary about taking up a controversial climate change Bill.
The Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, said leaders would
not turn to a Bill until March 2010, but even that date is in
doubt because of congressional elections in November.
Last week, John McCain, Mr Obama's presidential opponent and
a sponsor of past climate change legislation, said about the
backers of the present Bill: "Obviously, they're going
nowhere."
Despite the paralysis in the Senate, Mr Obama has been edging
towards a concrete commitment to cutting US emissions.
During his summit in Beijing with China's Hu Jintao, Mr Obama
said the US would come forward with emission reduction
targets provided China offered specific measures of its own.
But the Administration is mindful of a potential rerun of the
1990s, when the Senate voted down ratification of the Kyoto
treaty by 99-0, despite the US having already committed to it
internationally.
Such concerns make it more likely other nations would view
favourably a more modest provisional target at Copenhagen.
Mr Stern said there was a generally positive reaction in the
international community to the idea of a provisional target.
"On the one hand, people are keen on having the United States
put a number down," Mr Stern said.
"On the other hand, people are extraordinarily keen on
getting [US] legislation done and don't want us taking steps
that will make that more difficult."
- Guardian News and Media
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.