ASHINGTON - A group of global lawmakers signed a resolution Thursday urging a
new agreement limiting greenhouse gas emissions by 2009 to succeed the Kyoto
protocol, which is set to expire in 2012.
Boats on the Huangpu River in Shanghai, China. Shanghai,
Guangzhou and other large coastal cities in China could face "unimaginable
challenges" if global warming continues and the oceans keep rising,
according to state media. [AFP]
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The resolution reached after a
two-day forum on global warming attended by lawmakers from about 20 countries,
including members of Congress, urged the Group of Eight industrialized countries
to commit to the 2009 deadline when they next meet in June.
On Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country holds the
rotating presidencies of the G-8 and the European Union, outlined her priorities
on global warming in a video address to the forum. Merkel has agreed to convene
an international meeting on climate change in May to prepare for the G-8 summit
in the German resort of Heiligendamm June 6-8.
Lawmakers attending the forum held on Capitol Hill said that after hearing
from US lawmakers who attended that they sensed a political shift in Washington
toward greater cooperation with other countries on combatting global warming.
"I've detected a really quite remarkable change here on climate change," said
Elliot Morley, a British member of Parliament who chaired the forum.
A senior State Department official told the attendees Thursday that the US is
committed to working with other countries on the issue.
"We share with other countries the goals of reducing greenhouse gas emissions
and introducing new, cleaner technologies," said State Department Undersecretary
Paula J. Dobriansky.
Dobriansky outlined steps taken by the US in reducing emissions but made no
mention of the Kyoto treaty, which the US has refused to endorse since it was
negotiated in 1997.
President Bush has made clear that his administration will not agree to the
kind of mandatory emission caps required under Kyoto because the administration
believes the restrictions will harm US businesses.
Thirty-five other industrial nations, who have endorsed the pact, agreed to
cut their global-warming gases by 5 percent on average below 1990 levels by
2012.