U.S. Backs Kyoto Alternative
Joins Five Countries In Pact Limiting Greenhouse Gases
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(AP / CBS)
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In a move to counter the Kyoto Protocol that requires mandatory cuts in so-called greenhouse gas emissions, he is making the technology pitch as part of a partnership with five Asian and Pacific nations, including China and India. The idea is to get them to commit to cleaner energy production as a way to curtail air pollution that most scientists believe is causing the Earth to warm up.
The administration announced late Wednesday that it has reached an agreement with the five countries to create a new partnership to deploy cleaner technologies whenever possible to produce energy.
The agreement does not bind any of the countries to specific emission reductions, adhering to the Bush doctrine that dealing with climate change should be voluntary and not imposed by mandatory reduction targets and timetables. White House officials also dismissed suggestions that the diplomatic initiative was aimed at undercutting the Kyoto accord, noting that several of the participants also embrace Kyoto.
Neither China nor India were covered by the Kyoto agreement.
The new pact, which also includes as participants Japan, South Korea and Australia, was viewed by senior White House officials as a significant step toward establishing a framework in which rapidly emerging industrial countries will be encouraged and helped to produce cleaner energy as a way to keep climate-changing chemicals out of the atmosphere, especially carbon from fossil fuels.
Mr. Bush called it a "new results-oriented partnership" that he said "will allow our nations to develop and accelerate deployment of cleaner, more efficient energy technologies to meet national pollution reduction, energy security and climate change concerns in ways that reduce poverty and promote economic development."
"The fairness and effectiveness of this proposal will be superior to the Kyoto Protocol," Australian Prime Minister John Howard Howard told reporters in Sydney. His nation also refused to ratify Kyoto.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman will seek to move the issue forward in meetings with their counterparts in the partnership this fall.
"We are hopeful this will create a complimentary framework (to Kyoto)," said James Connaughton, chairman of the president's Council on Environmental Quality. He said it was not meant to replace it.
The United States rejected the 1997 Kyoto pact, which requires reductions by industrial nations of greenhouse emissions. Mr. Bush said earlier this month he recognizes that human activity contributes to a warmer Earth, but he continues to oppose the Kyoto treaty that all other major industrialized nations signed because developing nations weren't included in it.
Mr. Bush prefers to address climate change through voluntary actions and by emphasizing development of new technologies that reduce emissions and capture carbon.
As the new partnership develops, it will "harness in significant and greater ways the investments necessary to ... reducing greenhouse gases" through technology transfers and exchange of ideas, Connaughton said.
The six countries pledged "enhanced cooperation" to address the climate change issue through development of less carbon intensive technologies, including clean coal and civilian nuclear power when outlining their energy needs.
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