Arctic natives seek global warming ruling (AP) Updated: 2005-12-08 20:22
On Wednesday, the Inuit group submitted a petition to the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights, an investigative arm of the Organization of American
States in Washington, "seeking relief from violations resulting from global
warming caused by acts and omissions of the United States" �� the world's biggest
emitter of greenhouse gases.
The northern natives �� 63 petitioners are named from all Inuit regions �� seek
a declaration that their human rights are being violated, putting political
pressure on the U.S. government to reduce emissions.
The Montreal meeting, attracting almost 10,000 delegates, environmentalists,
business representatives and others, is the first annual U.N. climate conference
since the Kyoto Protocol took effect last February, requiring 35 industrialized
countries to curb emissions of carbon dioxide and five other gases that act like
a greenhouse trapping heat in the atmosphere.
Among major developed nations, only the United States and Australia reject
that agreement, worked out in 1997 in Kyoto, Japan, and designed to produce an
average 5 percent reduction of emissions below 1990 levels by 2012.
Under the protocol, the Kyoto nations must begin talks now on emissions
controls after 2012.
Canadian Environment Minister Stephane Dion, looking for a compromise route
that would draw the United States into the emission-controls regime, this week
proposed a plan for "discussions to explore and analyze approaches for long-term
cooperative action to address climate change," with a deadline for agreement by
2008.
But the Bush administration rejected the Canadian bid, saying it prefers to
deal with other governments on a bilateral or regional basis, and it favors
voluntary approaches. Chief U.S. delegate Paula Dobriansky pointed to
$3-billion-a-year U.S. government spending on research and development of
energy-saving technologies.
"We also believe firmly that negotiations will not reap progress, as
indicated, because there are differing perspectives," said Dobriansky, a U.S.
undersecretary of state.
President Bush rejected the Kyoto Protocol in 2001, saying limiting
fuel-burning would crimp the U.S. economy, and complaining that fast-growing
economies of developing countries such as China and India weren't targeted under
the 1997 accord.
Dion suggested acceptable language might still be found
to get the Americans on board. Closed-door talks "have been frank and
productive," he told delegates at Wednesday's open session. "There is an urgent
need to send a signal to the world about the future."
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