Skip navigation and title
Friends of the Earth

Home > Press releases > 2003: Kyoto Agreement on Climate Change Gets Nearer


Grass

Making life better for people by inspiring solutions to environmental problems


Archive by year

2008, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001, 2000, 1999, 1998, 1997, 1996, 1995, 1994



Join email list
Press releases delivered direct to your inbox

News by RSS?

Join us

Send this page to a friend

Press Release

Kyoto Agreement on Climate Change Gets Nearer


Dec 9 2003

Milan (Italy) 9th December, 2003 -- Ministers from all over the world arrive in Milan this week for the 9th Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change [1].

While press speculation has centred on when and whether Russia will ratify the Convention's Kyoto Protocol, the overwhelming majority of the world's governments are moving ahead and discussing the complex rules that will govern its operation.

One hundred and twenty countries, responsible for 44.2% of the world's 'greenhouse gas' emissions, have already ratified the Kyoto agreement. It is the only serious, international framework for tackling the causes of climate change.

As ministers arrive today, Friends of the Earth International and the Global Forests Coalition presented the 'Treetanic Awards', an annual recognition of the audacious attempts by timber plantation owners to benefit from the Kyoto Protocol. This year the award was presented to

PLANTAR, a Brazilian eucalypt plantation company specialising in producing charcoal for the steel industry and barbeques.

Meanwhile, the United States Government, which has rejected the Kyoto Protocol, continues to snipe in the background, running a series of side events to convince the world that it is serious about climate change. These focus on changes to the way it manages its scientific and technological research programmes. At the same time, it continues to obstruct where it can - such as on talks over the Convention's budget.

Outside the formal process, think-tanks, consultancies and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are throwing around ideas and laying out proposals for how the next phase of (greenhouse gas) emissions reductions - the so-called 'second commitment period'- should operate. Governments are expected to start talks on future commitment periods soon after Russia ratifies.

THE FORMAL AGENDA

The overwhelming bulk of the rules that will govern how Kyoto operates have already been agreed - at previous meetings in Bonn (2001), Marrakech (2001) and New Delhi (2002). Two big issues, still to be negotiated, are dominating the agenda at Milan. Firstly, countries are debating the rules that will govern which forestry projects will be eligible for emission reduction credits as part of the Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism, or CDM. (The CDM allows industrialized countries to pay for projects in developing countries that cut emissions and/or absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere via tree planting. They count emissions saved from these projects toward their own reduction targets).

Again, here, much has already been agreed. Countries can get credit for new schemes and for re-planting areas that were previously forested. Debate at Milan has focused on the detail. NGOs, and many counties, want rules to prevent the planting of genetically-modified trees or invasive alien species. They want to ensure the increases in carbon sequestered are genuine and that communities affected by schemes are properly consulted.

Secondly, countries are talking about money: the detailed objectives of and conditions for use of the Protocol's Special Climate Change Fund and the cost and distribution of contributions to the Convention Secretariat's budget. The Special Climate Change Fund provides money, among other things, to help developing countries adapt to climate change. Industrialised countries are trying to limit their contributions to it. The Convention's Budget is now largely agreed.

The US played foul by refusing to pay for work on the Kyoto Protocol - despite continuing to intervene occasionally in discussions over it. Now money for the Convention and money for the Kyoto Protocol have been split. In addition, it was decided that funding for the preparation of the Protocol will only come from voluntary contributions. This creates a budgetary insecurity that might jeopardise a quick start of the Protocol.

Ministers are expected to haggle and then compromise over the thorny points of these discussions. They will also hold three 'roundtable discussions' to air thoughts on three broad themes that will be important for the second commitment period:

FRIENDS OF THE EARTH

Friends of the Earth International representatives are lobbying on issues being discussed at COP9, through the Climate Action Network, a worldwide network of over 340 Non-Governmental Organizations working to promote government, private sector and individual action to limit human-induced climate change to ecologically sustainable levels. Events organised at COP9 by members or affiliates of Friends of the Earth International include:

Notes

[1] The high-level, Ministerial segment starts formally on Wednesday, 10th December and continues till Friday, 12th December

 

Contact details:

Friends of the Earth
26-28 Underwood St.
LONDON
N1  7JQ

Tel: 020 7490 1555
Fax: 020 7490 0881
Web: www.foe.co.uk/feedback.html



Media team