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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Copenhagen negotiators struggle to save talks

Copenhagen negotiators struggle to save talks

Activists from Climate No Borders demonstrate on 14 December in Copenhagen
There are only days left before the conference closes on Friday

Climate change negotiators have been working through the night in Copenhagen to try to rescue plans for a global agreement from collapse.

Heads of state start to appear in the Danish capital later in the day, ahead of a hoped-for signing on Friday.

But several issues remain to be solved ahead of the summit's climax.

Correspondents say suspicions among poor countries that rich ones are ganging up on them - which prompted a walk-out on Monday - remain strong.

They say that with the end of the conference looming, the general hope is that minds will increasingly become concentrated and real concessions emerge from both sides.

THE WEEK AHEAD
Tues 15 Dec - Prince Charles delivers a speech on the dangers of deforestation; UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown arrives
Weds 16 Dec - Ministerial teams take over negotiations as the high level segment begins
Fri 18 Dec - More than 100 world leaders, including Barack Obama, attend closing session

In one hopeful sign, China has indicated it will not accept any money from a fund being set up by the West to help poorer nations tackle climate change.

A senior Chinese source told BBC News that China will not accept a single dollar.

The possibility had upset many in the United States, who feel Beijing is now well-enough off to pay to clean up its own act.

Chinese deputy foreign minister He Yafei said in Copenhagen that Beijing was committed to achieving a good outcome.

China's willingness to make a deal pleases the rich West, but alarms some poor countries, says the BBC's environment analyst Roger Harrabin.

They fear China will strike a compromise with other big players that will not be strict enough to protect the most vulnerable nations from climate change, our correspondent adds.

Deep distrust

Developing nations staged a five-hour walkout on Monday, only returning after their key demand - separate talks on the Kyoto Protocol - was met.

COPENHAGEN LATEST

  • Talks suspended when developing countries withdraw co-operation
  • Ocean acidification threatens food supplies, the UK environment secretary warns
  • Danish police detain 968 people at a rally near the summit
  • A draft final text calls on richer nations to cut emissions by 25-45% from 1990 levels by 2020
  • EU leaders make a 7.2bn-euro pledge to help poorer nations cope with climate change
Updated: 20:10 GMT, 14 December

The bloc, which represents countries vulnerable to climate change, has been adamant that rich nations must commit to emission cuts beyond 2012 under the Kyoto Protocol.

They have been arguing for a "twin track" approach, whereby countries with existing targets under the Kyoto Protocol (all developed nations except the US) stay under that umbrella, with the US and major developing economies making their carbon pledges under a new protocol.

But the EU and the developed world in general has promoted the idea of an entirely new agreement, replacing the protocol.

Talks were halted most of the day, until conference president Connie Hedegaard of Denmark assured developing countries she was not trying to kill the Kyoto Protocol.

'Catastrophic failure'

The White House said President Barack Obama, who is due to address the conference on Friday, was "committed to pursuing an accord that requires countries to take meaningful steps".

But spokesman Robert Gibbs acknowledged there was a great deal of work to be done.

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"There's no doubt that there are issues that will remain outstanding for quite some time," Mr Gibbs said.

UN chief Ban Ki-Moon, speaking to reporters in New York before he was to leave for Copenhagen, warned that "time is running out".

"If everything is left to leaders to resolve at the last minute, we risk having a weak deal or no deal at all. And this would be a failure of potentially catastrophic consequence."

Campaign group Greenpeace said the summit had five days "to avert climate chaos".

Emissions targets so far offered by Western leaders such as Mr Obama amounted to "peanuts", the group added.


Africa

Page last updated at 07:39 GMT, Tuesday, 15 December 2009






Activists from Climate No Borders demonstrate on 14 December in Copenhagen
Climate negotiators work overnight in Copenhagen to try to rescue a deal and end a rift between rich and poor countries.

Officials are searching for Eritrea's national football team after they failed to return home following a tournament in Kenya.

France hands over five ancient frescoes to Egypt, which had broken off ties with the Louvre museum in an ownership dispute.

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Page last updated at 08:33 GMT, Tuesday, 15 December 2009






A man wounded the explosion near a hotel in Kabul on 15 December 2009
A suicide bomber strikes in the Afghan capital, killing at least five people and wounding several others.

A near-total shutdown is held in Indian-administered Kashmir in protest over an investigation into the deaths of two women.

At least 16 policemen have been killed by suspected militants in two attacks in Afghanistan, officials say.

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Middle East

Page last updated at 08:15 GMT, Tuesday, 15 December 2009






Black smoke billows at the scene on one blast in Baghdad
A series of car bombings has hit the centre of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, killing at least four people, police say.

Dubai announces it has been given a $10bn handout from UAE neighbour Abu Dhabi to help it pay off its debts.

France hands over five ancient frescoes to Egypt, which had broken off ties with the Louvre museum in an ownership dispute.

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Former UK PM backed Iraq war regardless of WMD
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Americas

Page last updated at 07:27 GMT, Tuesday, 15 December 2009






President Obama speaking to members of the financial industry
President Barack Obama tells US bankers to increase business loans, and warns them not to thwart regulatory reform.

A Nasa satellite designed to uncover hidden cosmic objects takes off from an air force base in California.

A court in the US state of Delaware jails an Iranian man for five years for plotting to procure and smuggle arms to Iran.




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Europe

Page last updated at 08:45 GMT, Tuesday, 15 December 2009






A Greek man sells tissues outside closed store
Greece's prime minister unveils a series of spending cuts, warning that the country is at risk of "sinking under its debts".

Climate negotiators work overnight in Copenhagen to try to rescue a deal and end a rift between rich and poor countries.

Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi will stay in hospital until at least Wednesday after an attacker broke his nose, doctors say.


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Business

Page last updated at 08:17 GMT, Tuesday, 15 December 2009






BA plane
British Airways says it is exploring all options, including possible legal action, to stop a planned 12-day Christmas strike by cabin crew.

Kraft warns Cadbury shareholders
Kraft Foods warns Cadbury's shareholders they will be "taking a risk" if they support Cadbury as a standalone company.

Wells Fargo to repay US bail-out
US bank Well Fargo says it will pay back the $25bn emergency funding it received under the Troubled Asset Relief Program.




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Page last updated at 08:44 GMT, Tuesday, 15 December 2009






Chimney over Copenhagen (AFP)
Negotiators at the UN climate talks in Copenhagen fight to make up lost time.

A Nasa satellite designed to uncover hidden cosmic objects has blasted off from an air force base in California.

Scientists have been surprised to observe octopuses picking up coconuts and "running" away with them.

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MARKET DATA - 08:46 UK

FTSE 100
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Dax
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Cac 40
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Dow Jones
10501.05up
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Data delayed by at least 15 minutes

Football match Southampton Burnley

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FROM OTHER NEWS SITES
Reuters UK Africa protest hits UN climate talks in final week - 5 hrs ago
Mail Online UK Gordon Brown dashes to Copenhagen climate change talks in bid to seal deal - 9 hrs ago
Telegraph African nations resume Copenhagen talks - 15 hrs ago
Guardian.co.uk Climate change talks 'not on track' - PA - 29 hrs ago
Ananova Climate change talks 'not on track' - 31 hrs ago


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