Negotiators urged to speed up climate pact talks
Delegates at the start of marathon climate talks in Thailand on Monday were told to speed up "painfully slow" negotations as they struggle to settle on the outline of a tougher pact to fight global warming.
Delegates at the start of marathon climate talks in Thailand on Monday were told to speed up "painfully slow" negotiations as they struggle to settle on the outline of a tougher pact to fight global warming.
The Bangkok talks, which run until October 9, is the last major negotiating round before a gathering in Copenhagen in December that the United Nations has set as a deadline to seal a broad agreement on a pact to expand and replace the Kyoto Protocol.
"Time is not just pressing. It has almost run out," Yvo de Boer, the head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, told delegates from about 180 countries.
"But in two weeks real progress can be made toward the goals that world leaders have set for the negotiations to break deadlocks and to cooperate toward concrete progress," he said.
Delegates at the talks are tasked with trying to streamline a draft legal text of a pact that would replace Kyoto.
The main text, running to about 180 pages, is filled with blanks, options and alternative wording options.
The U.N.-led negotiations have become bogged down over arguments about rich nations' targets to cut emissions by 2020, financing for poorer nations to adapt to climate change and to curb their own greenhouse gas emissions and the best way to deliver and manage those funds.
"We've talked for long enough, the world expects actions," Connie Hedegaard, Denmark's minister of climate change and energy and host of the December 7-18 Copenhagen gathering, told delegates.
De Boer later told reporters the negotiating process so far had been painfully slow.
"We must have a higher level of ambition in terms of emissions cuts by industrialized countries."In addition, we need to see more clarity here on how the process is going to make it possible for developing countries to engage," he said.
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