Tuesday, 2 October 2007, 4:35 pm
Pacific island nations spotlight perils of climate change during addresses to UN
Developing countries must be allowed to make voluntary commitments to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions under any new global agreement to deal with the effects of climate change, the Deputy Prime Minister of Tuvalu told the General Assembly today.
Tavau Teii, who is also his country's Natural Resources and Environment Minister, said the international summit being held in Bali, Indonesia, in December, "will be very important" in determining how and whether the world can respond successfully to the impact of global warming.
Any agreement emerging from the Bali summit should reconfirm the importance of the Kyoto Protocol concerning greenhouse gas emissions and encourage States Parties to make new and substantial emissions reductions, he said at the annual high-level debate of the General Assembly.
Mr. Teii said newly industrialized countries and States with economies in transition should be encouraged to take on pledges to reduce their emissions.
A new negotiation process under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) should also be agreed, he said, to set up a legal agreement allowing developing countries to make voluntary commitments to reduce their emissions.
"Under this arrangement we envisage that developing countries will be able to take voluntary commitments to reduce emissions from the energy, transport and forest sectors. These commitments would be linked to appropriate incentive mechanisms."
Mr. Teii also said it was important that any reductions in emissions from deforestation should not come at the expense of the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities.
Vanuatu's Foreign Minister George Andre Wells said a rapid reduction in gas emissions must take place within the next 10 to 15 years.
"It is a reality that, if it is not addressed urgently, will have irreversible effects on the agriculture and tourism sectors which constitute the core pillars of development of many of our island economies."
Mr. Wells said the effect of climate change - such as rising sea levels - on agriculture production, water quality and infrastructure development was of critical importance to his nation.
"For many small island States and least developed countries (LDCs) meeting the challenges of climate change will only add additional stress to their financial, human and institutional capacities."
Mongolia's Foreign Minister Enkhbold Nyamaa told the high-level debate that climate change was already having an impact on nations large and small, coastal and landlocked - like his own.
Desertification has become rampant in Mongolia, he said, with pastures supporting the semi-nomadic lifestyle of many locals dwindling and becoming more fragile.
Extreme weather conditions have also become more common in recent years, particularly droughts and the phenomenon known as "dzud," a cold winter with heavy snowfalls.
Any agreements that succeeds or supplants the Kyoto Protocol "should be flexible and diverse, taking into consideration circumstances in each country," Mr. Nyamaa stressed.
"It must include all the major emitters and achieve compatibility between environmental protection and economic growth by utilizing advances in technologies to the greatest extent possible."
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