Global Climate Change Treaty Delayed



06 November 2009

Senior negotiators at a U.N. conference in Barcelona say a legally binding environment treaty will be delayed. In the final day of a weeklong conference, world leaders say a global climate treaty might be postponed by up to a year.

Delegates have been in Barcelona all week to hash out a plan that would pave the way for 192 nations to sign a legally binding international climate deal next month.

But now executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change Yvo de Boer says any decision taken next month in Copenhagen will instead be "morally binding." And a legally binding deal may take another year to put in place.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt interacts with the media during a visit to Sulabh International in New Delhi, India, 06 Nov 2009
Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt interacts with the media during a visit to Sulabh International in New Delhi, India, 06 Nov 2009
Speaking in India, Sweden's prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt told journalists the setback comes because some countries are not politically ready to sign a deal.

"What we hear is that the kind of legally binding agreement that we, for instance, did inside the European Union, will probably not be possible since some of the countries like the United States say we do not have the support in our congress to make a ratification on an international agreement," he said.

But speaking from Barcelona, Hugh Cole of the charity group Oxfam, says European leaders need to focus on their own lack of political will.

"As far as we're concerned they're basically hiding behind the United State's lack of ambition," he said.

He says the mood at the conference today is one of disappointment. And he says it's developing countries that will be worst hit by this delay.

"We're also seeing a clash between politics and special interests in rich countries contrasted very sharply with real impacts for people in the developing world," said Cole.

"We're talking about farmers who are losing their crops; we're talking about people who are having to learn to live with more frequent drought and floods. We're talking about more natural disasters, increased levels of disease. These are impacts that are being felt here and now in the developing world," he added.

Earlier this week African delegates boycotted some talks because they said developed nations were not making concrete promises on cutting greenhouse gas emissions. They also say rich countries must make financial pledges to help developing countries deal with the changes brought by climate change.

The European Union has said that developing nations will need almost $150 billion in aid per year by 2020 to deal with climate change.

Cole says there is still potential for a good climate deal in Copenhagen next month.

"What is currently being discussed is that you would have a second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol, which doesn't currently include the United States, and then you would have a separate agreement which would bind the U.S. into its own omission reduction targets," he said.

The Kyoto Protocol is a legally binding treaty agreed to by 37 countries in 1997. The current goals of the treaty end in 2012.