23 Nov 2009
The Danish hosts of next month's Copenhagen climate change summit have revealed that more than 65 world leaders have accepted an invitation to attend the meeting, significantly bolstering the chances of a robust political deal being agreed.
Earlier this month, Danish prime minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen formally invited leaders from 192 countries to attend the UN meeting to agree a successor to the Kyoto Treaty, arguing that the presence of countries' leaders would increase the chances of a deal being reached.
Speaking over the weekend, Danish officials confirmed that leaders from at least 65 nations had accepted the invitation, including from the UK, Germany, France, Spain, Japan, Australia and Brazil.
The leaders of the world's three most polluting nations, US president Barack Obama, Chinese president Hu Jintao, and Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh, have not confirmed their attendance, although Obama said earlier this month that he may attend.
"If I am confident that all of the countries involved are bargaining in good faith and we are on the brink of a meaningful agreement and my presence in Copenhagen will make a difference in tipping us over the edge, then certainly that's something that I will do," he told Reuters in an interview.
Officials are hopeful that, with so many leaders already confirmed, pressure will increase on others to follow suit. The presence of world leaders is also expected to boost the chances of some form of deal being brokered, with few leaders likely to relish the prospect of returning to their electorates empty handed.
In addition, the long-running negotiations were given a further fillip yesterday when more reports emerged suggesting the US could table provisional emission targets at the Copenhagen summit.
According to reports in The Observer newspaper, US chief negotiator Todd Stern has confirmed that talks are underway in Washington that could result in targets being announced in Copenhagen. These would then be confirmed next year through the passage of the climate change bill currently working its way through the Senate.
"What we are looking at is to see whether we could put down a provisional number that would be contingent on our legislation," the paper quoted Stern as saying. "We are looking at that, there are people we need to consult with."
The target is expected to aim for emission cuts of between 14 and 20 per cent below 2005 levels by 2020. Such cuts are unlikely to impress many environmentalists, who argue that they would be insufficient and would represent a negligible reduction on 1990 emission levels. However, any binding targets from the US would still be hailed as a breakthrough by many negotiators and may prove sufficient to encourage other large polluters such as China and India to sign up to any deal.
The news came as another major business group today called for a robust deal to be agreed in Copenhagen.
The Combat Climate Change group, which includes BP, Gazprom, General Electric, Unilever, Vattenfall and more than 60 other large firms, urged negotiators to deliver a clear deal that will unlock much of the low-carbon investment required from the private sector.
Speaking in an interview with the Financial Times, Lars Josefsson, chairman of the group and chief executive of Vattenfall, said that a deal was essential for stimulating investment in clean technology.
"Of the money required to implement a deal, the vast majority – about 80 per cent – will come from the private sector," he said. "That can only come when there is a stable legal framework."
He added that business leaders may well prove more effective at drawing up a legal framework than politicians. "If we were to ask business leaders to sit down and make a global agreement, I'm sure that within a relatively short time they would be able to do it because they are less constrained by national politics," he said. "It is very important to get business more engaged because it has the knowledge of the market economy and how investments are made."
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