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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (2048)3/29/2001 2:03:06 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Bush kills global warming treaty

Julian Borger in Washington

Thursday March 29, 2001
The Guardian

The Bush administration yesterday
appeared to end all hope of reviving the
Kyoto treaty on global warming, declaring
it had "no interest" in its implementation
and taking the first steps towards
withdrawing the US signature on the
accord.

Kyoto's death warrant, announced by
Christine Todd WHITMAN, head of the
environmental protection agency (EPA),

represented a blunt rebuff to European
hopes of establishing a global programme
to slow down the emission of greenhouse
gases, amid startling new evidence of
rapid climate change. A UN panel of
scientists assessing the threat recently
reported that average temperatures could
rise by up to 5.8 degrees celsius this
century without a serious effort to curb
emissions.

The former vice-president Al Gore signed
the Kyoto accord on behalf of the US, but
it was never ratified by the Senate. A
state department official yesterday
confirmed a report in the Washington Post
that the new administration had asked the
state department to explore ways of
formally withdrawing the US signature
from the document.

CONDOLEZZA RICE, the national security
adviser, privately told European
ambassadors last week that the US
considered the Kyoto accord "dead",
but
the German chancellor, Gerhard
Schröder, had hoped to convince Mr Bush
not to abandon the agreement altogether
when the two leaders meet today in
Washington.

"It is important that the US accepts its
responsibility for the world climate.
They
are the biggest economy in the world and
the heaviest energy consumers," Mr
Schröder told the Los Angeles Times.

Ms WHITMAN's remarks represent a snub
to the German chancellor on the eve of his
arrival. Asked whether the Kyoto deal had
any chance of survival, she told
journalists: "No, we have no interest in
implementing that treaty."


In a letter to Republican senators earlier
this month, Mr Bush said he opposed the
Kyoto deal - under which the US would
have to reduce the emission of
greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide
and methane by 7% below 1990 levels by
2012 - because it exempted developing
countries and would harm the US
economy. He said he would not impose
controls on emissions of carbon dioxide,
despite an election pledge to do so.

A European diplomat called the hardline
attitude depressing and marked a
significant divergence between European
and US views on how to deal with the
problem. It cast a pall over an international
meeting in Bonn in June, where a fresh
attempt is to be made to establish a
consensus.


European leaders had been hopeful that
the 1997 treaty could be salvaged after
Ms Whitman came to the G8 environment
summit in Trieste and signed a joint
statement on March 4 which said: "We
commit ourselves to strive to reach
agreement on outstanding political issues
and to ensure in a cost-effective manner
the environmental integrity of the Kyoto
protocol."

Ms Whitman attempted to persuade Mr
Bush to support an international
agreement on global warming. In a
memorandum to the White House
obtained by the Guardian, her office said
such a treaty would "begin to create some
certainty that climate change is a lasting
policy issue".

The White House's stance represents a
serious defeat for Ms Whitman and the
treasury secretary, Paul O'Neill. In a
memo for Mr Bush on February 27, Mr
O'Neill said that the accumulation of
greenhouse gases was "a very big
problem"
and that the emissions controls
laid down in the Kyoto treaty did not go far
enough.

Amy Kreider, director of the global
warming campaign at the US National
Environmental Trust, said: "This is no way
to conduct policy.

"IT LOOKS LIKE AMATEUR HOUR AT THE WHITE HOUSE AS REGARDS FOREIGN POLICY."

guardian.co.uk