-Caveat Lector-

"U.S. Environmental Protection Administrator Christie Whitman said Tuesday
the United States supported other countries' ratification of the deal. But
she said the agreement was not appropriate for the United States, which is
taking other action to limit climate change."  (Chemtrails? --SW)

Russia to Ratify Kyoto Protocol

Tue Sep 3,12:07 PM ET

By ALEXANDRA ZAVIS, Associated Press Writer

As negotiators finished a global plan to tackle poverty and save the
environment, Russia said Tuesday it will soon ratify the Kyoto Protocol (
news - web sites) — a move that would bring the key climate change agreement
into effect.

Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov was among a series of leaders at the
World Summit urging action on Kyoto. He said his country planned to ratify
the agreement "in the very near future," but did not specify when.

Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien said Monday he would submit the
protocol to his Parliament to consider ratification, and China announced
Tuesday it had already ratified it.

"Different countries have different conditions, however, we should all
endeavor to take responsibility for the whole world," said Xie Zhenhua,
China's minister of environmental protection.

The United States has been relentlessly criticized for its rejection of the
1997 Kyoto deal, which requires industrialized countries to reduce greenhouse
gases blamed for global warming ( news - web sites). But the accord can still
come into effect if Russia joins the European Union ( news - web sites) and
Japan in ratifying.

Once the accord is in effect, the nations that have signed on — more than 70
so far — will be obliged by law to implement the emissions cuts it sets. The
United States, which rejected the accord last year, would not be so required.


U.S. Environmental Protection Administrator Christie Whitman said Tuesday the
United States supported other countries' ratification of the deal. But she
said the agreement was not appropriate for the United States, which is taking
other action to limit climate change.

The movement on the Kyoto Protocol came after negotiators in Johannesburg
late Monday reached agreement on their nonbinding action plan for sustainable
development. In one provision of that plan worked out in a compromise with
the United States, nations backing Kyoto "strongly urge" states that have not
done so to ratify it in "a timely manner."

On the sidelines of the summit, Iraq said it was ready to discuss a return of
U.N. weapons inspectors, but only in conjunction with ending sanctions and
restoring Iraqi sovereignty over all its territory.

"If you want to find a solution, you have to find a solution for all these
matters, not only pick up one certain aspect of it," Iraqi Deputy Prime
Minister Tariq Aziz said after a 20-minute meeting Tuesday with U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan ( news - web sites).

Annan urged Aziz to comply with U.N. Security Council resolutions, which call
for the unconditional return of inspectors, his spokeswoman said.

Fifty heads of state and other dignitaries were addressing the World Summit
on Tuesday. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell ( news - web sites) was to
address the summit Wednesday — closing day — on behalf of President Bush (
news - web sites), who has been criticized for not attending.

Late Monday, negotiators resolved the last main sticking points in a 70-odd
page action plan covering energy, clean water, biodiversity, health and
sanitation. Most of the items were geared to helping the world's poorest
people without polluting.

Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai praised the plan as a strong blueprint.


"The test is whether governments, along with civil society and the private
sector, can pursue the commitments that are in the document," he said.

After losing its push to set targets in the plan for increasing the use of
wind and solar energy, the European Union said Tuesday it would form a
coalition of "like-minded countries and regions" willing to commit to such
timetables.

EU Energy Commissioner Margot Wallstrom said the initial response from
countries in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean had been positive.

Many developing countries had sided with the United States and Japan against
including the targets in the summit's plan, arguing they were a rich
country's luxury.

After more than a week of tough bargaining, the agreed text includes a
commitment to "urgently" increase the use of renewable energy sources but
says cleaner use of fossil fuels is also acceptable.

The text also urges countries to reform subsidies that favor industrialized
countries or are harmful to the environment and commits to halving the 2
billion people living without proper sanitation by 2015.

The plan emphasizes the need for good governance to achieve sustainable
development but does not make it a condition for receiving aid as advocated
by the United States, diplomats said.

"It may seem on the surface that the text does not do as much as some people
would like, but it is very significant," Whitman said.

But at least one country said it still had concerns.

Canada said it would continue to press for language requiring the provision
of health care in a way consistent with human rights. Without it, the
delegation worries that protection against harmful cultural practices like
genital mutilation might be weakened.

A host of civic and environmental groups also condemned the compromises,
calling some of them a significant step backward from previous commitments.

"Economic interests were allowed to maintain their primacy over other global
priorities," said Kim Carstensen, deputy head of WWF International's summit
delegation.

U.N. officials were combining the different sections of the plan into a
document for adoption by the summit. World leaders were also wrapping up a
political declaration in which they commit to building a "humane and caring
global society in pursuit of the goal of human dignity for all."
j
------------------------
"There was no malfeance involved. This was an honest
disagreement about accounting procedures. ... There was no
malfeance, no attempt to hide anything."

President GW Bush, White House press conference, Washington,
D.C., July 8, 2002



Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
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