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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Frustration mounts as time runs out at climate talks
By Mariette LE ROUX
Bonn (AFP) Oct 21, 2015


Poll: 76 percent of Americans say climate change is happening
Austin, Texas (UPI) Oct 20, 2015 - Slowly but surely, attitudes about global warming among the American public are beginning to more closely reflect those held by scientists.

The latest results from the University of Texas, Austin Energy Poll show that more than three out of every four Americans think "climate change is occurring" -- 76 percent of respondents. Even the majority of Republicans now acknowledge global warming, with 59 percent saying the climate is changing.

The latest results reveal the largest consensus since political scientists at Texas started polling on the subject in 2012 -- and a 68 percent increase since last year.

"This groundbreaking public opinion poll measures and reports biannually (October and April) on consumer opinions and attitudes toward energy consumption, pricing, development and regulation," researchers write on the homepage explaining the Energy Poll.

Among the drivers of climate change implicated by believers, deforestation, coal, oil and natural gas beat out natural forces (not man made), indicating that the majority of respondents acknowledge climate change as at least partially anthropogenic.

The percentage of Americans who deny climate change flat out also dropped in the latest findings, from 22 percent in 2012 to 14 percent.

Frustration ran high Wednesday at the snail's pace of talks for a climate rescue pact, with only two days left for diplomats to craft a blueprint for a year-end UN summit

With an eye firmly on the clock, diplomats in Bonn despaired at the mountain of work they face after an acrimonious start Monday cost them a day-and-a-half of negotiating time.

"I am, to be honest, very concerned," said climate envoy Laurence Tubiana of France, which will host the November 30-December 11 UN summit tasked with inking a 195-nation pact to rein in global warming.

"I don't think this way of working is going to bring us where we need to be by the end of the week and to stand a chance of success in Paris."

The Bonn meeting is tasked with forging a workable blueprint for ministers and heads of state to grind down into a global agreement meant to crown years of climate negotiations.

It would be the first accord committing all the world's nations, rich and poor, in the same arena for climate action.

The talks got off to a false start Monday when developing countries accused rich ones of "apartheid" tactics, and claimed their core demands -- especially for finance commitments -- had been excised from the blueprint.

An overnight sprint to reintroduce omitted passages saw the text swell from 20 pages to 34.

- 'There is no miracle' -

The huddle then broke up into smaller text-crafting groups, which reported back on Wednesday.

If ministers were to see the product, "probably many delegates would lose half their salaries immediately," European Union delegate Artur Runge-Metzger told a stocktaking session.

"Progress... is well below expectations," added Russian envoy Oleg Shamanov.

Analyst Alden Meyer of the Washington-based Union of Concerned Scientists said countries were merely "re-proposing their well-known national positions".

"Negotiators need to earn their pay by actually beginning to build these bridges -- not just by continuing to bring more construction materials to the building site," he said.

Switzerland's Franz Perrez said time pressure was taking its toll.

"Either parties are disappointed because we are not moving fast enough, or they are disappointed because they do not have the time to look in depth at all the proposals."

Several delegates said parties must keep talking after hours, outside the meeting rooms, if progress is to be made.

Algeria's Ahmed Djoghlaf, who jointly chairs the forum with Daniel Reifsnyder of the United States, urged diplomats to pull up their sleaves and "engage with your partner".

And the G77 bloc of developing nations, representing the vast majority of the world population, cautioned against further padding of the document.

"We need a text by the end of the week that we can take to Paris as the basis of negotiations, in which many issues are agreed," said climate envoy Nozipho Mxakato-Diseko of South Africa, which chairs the G77.

"We cannot leave it up to our ministers to do the work of negotiators. It is negotiators that need to reach consensus on most issues, leaving only the highly-sensitive political issues for ministers to resolve."

The overarching goal is to limit global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels.

But countries still disagree on how to share out responsibility between rich and poor nations for curbing greenhouse gas emissions blamed for climate change.

Scientists say pledges submitted by more than 150 nations so far add up to warming of about 3 C -- a world of potentially disastrous sea-level rise, storms, drought and disease spread.

"There is no Plan B. The only option is to achieve Plan A," said Tubiana.

"There is no miracle."


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Previous Report
CLIMATE SCIENCE
'Critical week' of climate talks back on track
Bonn (AFP) Oct 20, 2015
Negotiations for a climate rescue pact got back on track Tuesday after an acrimonious start, as France's top diplomat urged "progress" ahead of a year-end conference to seal the deal. "This week is critical," Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told senior negotiators at the five-day huddle tasked with crafting a new blueprint for the UN summit in Paris. "We are expecting from you... a new t ... read more


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