|
Indonesia looks to build trust in climate deal
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
The Jakarta Post
Indonesia has proposed informal climate talks ahead of this year’s
Mexico conference to restore the already fading trust among rich and
developing nations in order to reach a binding treaty on emission cuts.
The first meeting will be held in Bali on Friday on the sidelines of a
ministerial forum attended by more than 100 ministers.
“The key now is to restore the fading trust among delegates from rich
and developing countries. Otherwise, a deadlock remains a very possible
outcome in Mexico,” the executive director of the National Council on
Climate Change (DNPI), Rachmat Witoelar, told The Jakarta Post on
Tuesday.
Indonesia, Rachmat said, proposed to the UN to host an informal meeting
to resolve pending issues on a long-term agreement on emission cuts
before the Mexico summit in December. The UN has given its approval.
After the Bali meeting, climate talks delegates will be invited to meet
in April in Bonn and hold another meeting in September.
“Relying only on official UN schedules will not be enough to resolve the
pending issues, mainly emission cut targets,” he said.
The UN will hold its official conferences in Bonn in June and in Mexico
in October.
The summit, which will decide on whether to agree on a new binding
treaty on emission cuts, will be held in December in Mexico.
Many remained pessimistic that the binding protocol on emission cuts can
be reached in Mexico after failure in Copenhagen, despite the presence
of more than 100 heads of state at the negotiations.
The executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) unexpectedly announced he would be stepping down in July,
making negotiations more difficult in Mexico.
Rachmat said developing and poor countries had so far blamed rich
nations for being arrogant in negotiations, including in Copenhagen last
year.
“The rich nations, on the other hand, underestimate developing
countries. There must be a way out to break this distrust as soon as
possible,” he said.
Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa is scheduled to be the main speaker on
informal consultation on climate change on Friday.The meeting, held in
Nusa Dua, Bali could be reminiscent of the UN’s success in producing the
Bali road map in 2007.
The Bali road map requires countries to agree on a new binding treaty in
2009. In that conference, delegates gave a standing ovation after US
negotiators expressed their readiness to join the Bali road map.
Director of the campaign department of the Indonesian Forum for the
Environment (Walhi), Teguh Surya, hailed the Indonesian government’s
initiative to rebuild trust among climate talk delegates.
“The idea is good as long as Indonesia can ensure countries return to
two-track negotiations under the UNFCCC’s Ad Hoc Working Groups,” he
said. (The Jakarta Post) |