The session in Bonn was meant to build on a deal struck
in Durban, South Africa, in December, but the talks were faltering
heading into the penultimate day amid disputes over what, exactly, was
agreed on last year.
Delegates were struggling to reach consensus on the
agenda for future talks under the new Durban Platform, with China and
others reluctant to close existing negotiating tracks that make clear
distinctions between the responsibilities of developed and developing
nations.
"There is distrust and there is frustration in the
atmosphere," Seyni Nafo, spokesman for a group of African countries,
told The Associated Press.
The two-decade-old negotiations have had limited
success in creating a global regime to rein in the emissions of
heat-trapping gases which a big majority of climate scientists say are
warming the Earth, with potentially devastating consequences for poor
countries ill-prepared to deal rising sea levels, floods and other
effects of a changing climate.
Actions taken and pledged so far fall well short of
what the U.N. experts say is needed to achieve the stated goal of
preventing global temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees
Fahrenheit (1.2 degrees Celsius) above current levels by the end of this
century.
The only existing binding treaty, the 1997 Kyoto
Protocol, was shunned by the U.S. because it doesn't impose any
emissions targets on China, thus leaving out the two biggest carbon
emitters on the globe. After Canada, Japan and Russia dropped out, the
treaty's second commitment period covers only about 15 percent of global
emissions.
After
painstaking negotiations in Durban, countries agreed to create a new
pact by 2015 that would take effect five years later and include both
developed and developing countries.
But the European Union said that package of decisions
was at risk of unraveling because of the bickering at the conference in
Bonn, which is supposed to lay the groundwork for a bigger climate
summit in Qatar, at the end of the year.
"We are very concerned that the spirit of cooperation
that prevailed in Durban has not carried over into this session," EU
delegate Christian Pilgaard Zinglersen told the conference Wednesday.
The EU claims China and other developing countries are
backsliding on commitments made in Durban to conduct future talks on
emissions cuts within the new platform.
Developing countries accuse the U.S., EU and other
industrialized nations of trying to evade commitments made under
previous negotiating tracks and shift responsibilities for tackling
climate change to the developing world.
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