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    June 22nd, 2001 
    The logjam continues
    George W. Bush gets a hostile reaction from the
    European Union on his stubborn stand regarding the Kyoto Protocol 
    Even as the US reiterated its rejection of
    the Kyoto Protocol, the European Union (EU) has decided to implement it, with or without
    the US. "The EU will stick to the Kyoto Protocol and go for ratification, "
    announced Goran Persson, EU head and Swedish prime minister at the one day EU-US summit in
    Göteborg, Sweden on June 14, 2001.  
     
    With both sides reaffirming their old positions, the summit failed to overcome the
    differences between the EU and the US on the issue of combating climate change. "We
    are agreed that this is an important issue and that we must cooperate. But we do not agree
    that implementation of the Kyoto Protocol is the best way to achieve results. We have to
    find new channels of cooperation," said US president George W. Bush. The EU and US
    have decided to establish a high-level group to continue dialogue on the subject.
    Commissioner Margot Wallström and Swedish environment minister Kjell Larsson will
    represent the EU in the group. 
     
    At the summit, the EU extracted a commitment from the US that it will not block the Kyoto
    process at the upcoming climate change negotiations in Bonn, Germany. But this has not
    allayed apprehensions that the US might try to prevent any final agreement by dragging
    negotiations on its financial commitments under the Framework Convention on Climate Change
    (FCCC). "If the US is not prepared to join the global fight against climate change,
    it should keep away from next month's international talks on climate in Germany,"
    argued Kate Hampton, climate change coordinator, Friends of the Earth International. The
    US remains a signatory to the protocol and the convention, and can participate in
    negotiations, even though it has decided against ratifying the protocol. 
     
    To ensure that the protocol enters into force by 2002, the EU is trying to enlist the
    participation of as many industrialised countries as possible. It will send a delegation
    to key US allies like Japan, Canada and Australia, in an attempt to convince them to
    ratify the protocol. The protocol can enter into force only when industrialised countries
    accounting for at least 55 per cent of the total carbon dioxide emissions of
    industrialised countries in 1990 have ratified it. It will not be possible to fulfill this
    condition unless, apart from countries like Russia, Switzerland, Central and East European
    countries and the EU, either Japan or Canada also ratifies. At present, Japan has not
    taken a resolute stand on the issue in the eventuality of the US not ratifying the
    protocol. The EU head will meet Japan premier on June 30, 2001 to discuss the matter. The
    case of Canada ratifying the protocol without the US is even more unlikely.  
     
    In a speech before leaving for the summit and a tour of key European nations, Bush
    called the protocol as fatally flawed in fundamental ways. He said that Kyoto targets
    requiring industrialised countries to cut their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by a
    specific percentage were arbitrary and not based on science. He also complained that the
    protocol did not place similar demands on developing countries, like India and China,
    whose GHG emissions were rapidly increasing. Industrialised countries are considered
    responsible for global warming problem as, historically, they have emitted huge quantities
    of GHGs into the atmosphere on their path to economic prosperity. Moreover, there is a
    wide disparity between per capita emissions of developing and industrialised countries
    even though emissions of certain developing countries are rising. Developing countries
    argue that restraining emissions will hinder their economic development. They want
    industrialised countries to cut down their emissions first, instead of asking them to
    curtail their growth. 
     
    The speech came after a panel of 11 top US scientists declared that global warming
    was a real problem and was getting worse. The Bush administration, undertaking review of
    its climate change policy, had requested the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to give
    advise on the issue. NAS scientists, in their report, confirmed the current scientific
    thinking that the Earth's surface temperature was rising and that human activity was
    largely responsible for it. "National policy decisions made now and in the long term
    future will influence the extent of any damage suffered by vulnerable human populations
    and ecosystems later in this century," cautioned the scientists. 
     
    The EU has been sharply critical of Bush's unilateral decision in March 2001 to
    abandon the protocol. Concerned about the global impacts of climate change and saving a
    treaty negotiated over ten years, the EU has since tried in vain to persuade it to reverse
    the decision. Bush, on the other hand, has maintained that complying with the protocol
    would negatively affect the US economy. The US is the biggest emitter of greenhouse gases-
    a fact acknowledged by Bush himself. 
     
     
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