July 4, 2009 Saturday
Updated

July 4, 2009
WWF want G-8 climate pledge

GENEVA - THE environmental group WWF on Friday urged the Group of Eight industrialised nations to show global leadership by making a commitment to keep climate change in check at their summit next week.

Echoing a call by German Chancellor Angela Merkel a day earlier, the WWF said the G-8 summit in L'Aquila, Italy, must commit to keeping the rise in global average temperature 'well below' 2 deg C.

'A clear commitment to a two degree Celsius danger threshold on paper is an absolute must for G8 countries,' said Kim Carstensen, the leader of WWF's Global Climate Initiative.

'The countries gathering in L'Aquila have the biggest responsibility to show leadership on climate. Without their action we cannot expect the rest of the world to move,' he added.

Negotiations to strike a new deal to tackle global warming by the end of the year have been foundering, partly over disagreements on emissions targets and a rift between industrialised and emerging nations on the burden of responsibility for deeper cuts.

WWF said the long-term target under discussion, of 80 per cent cuts in carbon emissions over 1990 levels by 2050, was at the low end of what was needed.

'This is an absolute minimum and anything weaker will be a complete failure,' said Ms Carstensen.

'A firm statement by the G-8 will send a powerful signal to the developing world and make it easier for the poorer countries to slash their emissions.' Dr Merkel on Thursday set a similar target for the two-day G-8 summit which opens on Wednesday.

But she said that European Union and US targets meant little if emerging giants like China and India were not on board at the Copenhagen conference in December, when countries aim to set emissions reduction targets beyond 2012.

WWF said 17 countries in the Major Economies Forum (MEF), which it says account for about 80 per cent of the world's emissions, had a particular responsibility to double investment in research and development of green technology and renewable energy by 2012.

The MEF is meeting on the sidelines of the G-8 next week. -- AFP

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