Bali Climate Conference Roundup, Day 11

Day 11. One left. Spotlight's on US obstruction, and guess what? The talks are on the verge of collapsing.
Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer warned that the whole house of cards is in danger of falling to pieces. Here's his not so veiled warning to the US if that happens:
Everybody, including the United States, has come here with the stated desire to formallly launch negotiations. And I think it would be incredibly difficult for any politician to leave here and go back home and explain that he or she has provided no political answer to what the scientific community hs been saying. That's what's at stake for everyone, including the United States.
More details here:
A few hours later he expressed optimism on the issue of technology transfer. Nearly solved, he said. Here's more from his press conference, "Concern Turns to Optimism:"
Al Gore was in Bali, ripping the US administration to shreds. He called on the delegates to move forward without the US:
"You can feel anger and frustration, and direct it at the United States of America," said Gore.
"Or you can make a second choice, you can decide to move forward and do all of the difficult work that needs to be done and save a large open blank space in your document and put a footnote by it that says this document is incomplete."
"Over the next two years, the United States is going to be somewhere it isn't right now. You must anticipate that."
Bush v. Gore, take II? UN Dispatch certainly thinks so. It also gives a useful rundown of how the US managed to strip away all hope of progress:
- Refused to allow any reference to scientific evidence that rich nations should cut greenhouse gas emissions by 25 to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.
- Demanded striking draft language in the draft calling for "sufficient, predictable, additional and sustainable financial resources" to help poor nations adapt to climate change, saying it is vague.
- Opposed asking the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change for an updated report prior to the 2009 climate meeting, saying it was too much, "a huge amount of work for the IPCC."
- Rejected requests by developing nations such as China and India for industrialized countries to provide more money to ease the transfer of clean energy technology overseas and by poor nations to help them slow deforestation.
The EU has threatened to boycott Bush's "major economies" meeting next month in Hawaii if Bali doesn't end in a deal.
In other news, another member of the US shadow delegation made his Bali entrance: New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. He touted a carbon tax over cap-and-trade, again. And he had some harsh words for the US Congress and the presidential candidates. Interesting tactic for a man supposedly uninterested in the top job:
Let me say something nice about the president, because everybody criticizes him. I don’t think he’s been as supportive of the environmental measures as he should have been. But Congress deserves an enormous share of the blame. They don’t want to face this issue.
I don’t see any of the presidential candidates on either side willing to stand up and say corn ethanol is not an intelligent energy policy. It may be a good agricultural policy to help farmers but it is a bad way to try to improve the environment because it does the reverse. I don’t see anyone from a coal state or an automobile state stand up and say, we should tax carbon or we should force manufacturers to reduce pollution.










