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Emily.

 Global climate talks

 Global warming crisis may mean world has to suck greenhouse gases from air

As Bonn talks begin, UN climate chief warns of temperature goals set too low 
and clock ticking on climate change action


Fiona Harvey, environment correspondent guardian.co.uk, Sunday 5 June 2011 
18.10 BST

The world may have to resort to technology that sucks greenhouse gases from the 
air to stave off the worst effects of global warming, the UN climate change 
chief has said before talks on the issue beginning on Monday.

"We are putting ourselves in a scenario where we will have to develop more powerful 
technologies to capture emissions out of the atmosphere," said Christiana Figueres, executive 
secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. "We are getting into very risky 
territory," she added, stressing that time was running out.

The UN climate talks starting on Monday in Bonn, which run for the next two 
weeks, will try to revive the negotiations before the next climate conference, 
taking place in Durban, South Africa, in December. But little progress is 
expected, as the negotiating time is likely to be taken up with details such as 
rules on monitoring emissions.

Figueres tried to inject a greater sense of urgency into the proceedings by 
pointing to research from the International Energy Agency that found that 
emissions had soared last year by a record amount. The strong rise means it 
will take more effort by governments to curb emissions.

Figueres told the Guardian in an interview that governments should act now to save money: 
"We add $1 trillion to the cost [of tackling climate change] with every year of 
delay."

However, as the latest talks begin, the world's leading climate change official 
has upset governments by insisting that the aim of the negotiations ought to be 
to hold warming to less than 1.5C. That would be a much tougher goal than that 
set by governments last year, which seeks to limit the temperature rise to no 
more than 2C – the safety threshold, scientists say, beyond which warming 
becomes catastrophic and irreversible.

"In my book, there is no way we can stick to the goal that we know is completely 
unacceptable to the most exposed [countries]," Figueres said.

The difference between the two goals may not seem great, but since it has taken 
more than 20 years of talks for countries to agree on the 2C limit, many are 
unwilling to reopen the debate. Delegates are conscious that wrangling over 
whether to stick to 1.5C or 2C was one of the main sources of conflict at the 
Copenhagen climate summit in 2009; the hope has been that talks can move on to 
other issues such as how to pay for emissions curbs in poorer countries.

The UK's Department of Energy and Climate Change said: "Countries agreed in 
Copenhagen they would revisit the adequacy of the 2C goal in 2015. With the climate 
change negotiations seemingly stagnant, the focus now needs to be on doing what has 
already been agreed."

Other parties agreed. "This is an extraordinary intervention," said one 
official, who could not be named.

Figueres said that she had the support of the world's least developed 
countries, most of Africa, and small island states.

Another factor casting a pall over this year's talks, which are intended to forge a new 
global treaty on climate change, is criticism of the South African government, which will 
host the Durban talks. No interim meetings have yet been set up, and countries have 
complained of disorganisation and a lack of enthusiasm. But Figueres said: "South 
Africa has been very carefully listening, trying to understand where there are 
commonalities and where the weaknesses are."

She also predicted the US would play a strong role in the talks, despite the Obama 
administration facing Republican opposition in Congress to action on emissions. 
"It's very evident that the legislative body in the US has disengaged, but … the 
administration continues to be engaged." she said.

But Todd Stern, chief negotiator for the US, called for participants in the talks to 
"roll up their sleeves and be constructive."



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