Jakarta (ANTARA News) - A number of countries attending an informal meeting on 
climate change in Bali last February emphasized the urgency of rebuilding trust 
in the runup to the Mexico Climate Change Summit late this year.

"The greatest challenge facing all countries towards Mexico is to rebuild 
trust," Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa told the press 
after chairing an informal ministerial level meeting on climate change in Nusa 
Dua, Bali Province, on February 26, 2010.

Many participants recognized there was lack of confidence and trust during the 
Copenhagen climate conference last year, the minister said.

Therefore, on the sidelines of the 11th Special Session of the United Nations 
Environment Program (UNEP) Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment 
Forum, held in Bali, Feb. 24-26, the Indonesian government as the host of the 
meeting, initiated an informal meeting on climate change as part of 
preparations for the planned Mexico conference. 

The UNEP environment minister meeting was attended by around 1,000 participants 
from 130 countries, including 35 ministers - the largest environmental 
ministerial level meeting after the Copenhagen conference. 

The ministers and the heads of delegations in the meeting agreed that the next 
Mexico conference should focus on rebuilding trust and implementation of 
existing agreements.

Mexico will host the 16th Conference of the Parties (COP 16) to United Nations 
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and Sixth Session of the 
Conference of the Parties Serving as Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto 
Protocol (COP-MOP 6) in Cancun, from November 29-December 10, 2010.

In order to rebuild trust and regain political momentum to restart the 
negotiations, the process of negotiation towards Mexico must be open, 
transparent and inclusive so that every country`s voice could be heard, 
Minister Natalegawa said.

However, according to Natalegawa, Indonesia did not want to blow up the trust 
deficit issue and believed that dialogs on climate change must involve all 
parties, including those having different opinions.

All parties should meet more often and Indonesia was ready to facilitate the 
meetings, the minister said.

Negotiations must be carried out under the Copenhagen Accord and two ad-hoc 
working groups, namely the Ad Hoc Working Group on Further Commitments for 
Annex I Parties under the Kyoto Protocol (AWG-KP) and the Ad Hoc Working Group 
on Long-term Cooperative Action under the Convention (AWG-LCA), he said.

"It`s also crystal clear, that there is an urgent need to make good programs on 
climate change issues," the minister said.

In a separate press conference, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate 
Change (UNFCCC) Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer also emphasized the importance 
of transparent and inclusive processes towards the Mexico climate change 
conference, in order to regain confidence. 

Another important aspect towards Mexico was how to put real implementation 
architectures on issues such as transfer of technology, mitigation, adaptation, 
and financing, de Boer said.

Countries such as Japan, the US and Europe had agreed that financing could be 
channeled through existing institutions such as Adaptation Funds under Kyoto 
Protocol, World Bank, ADB (Asian Development Bank), or bilateral donor 
agreements, in order to avoid a lot of time waste and bureaucracy, he said.

De Boer, who would resign following the Copenhagen conference which was 
considered to have failed to achieve a binding agreement on emission cuts, said 
short-term financing worth US$30 billion should be mobilized immediately to 
help poorer countries ease carbon emissions and shore up defenses against 
climate change.

Environment Minister Gusti M Hatta on the sidelines of the Bali ministerial 
meeting said the delegates from Mexico were happy that the gathering was held 
in Bali so they could learn the country`s success in holding big meetings.

The Mexican delegation in a statement issued in the Bali meeting stated the 
next climate change conference would continue the work done at the Copenhagen 
Conference and ensure the implementation of the Convention now, up to, and 
beyond 2012, in accordance with the Bali Road Map.

"It is the intention of Mexico as incoming President of the 16th Conference to 
work with all the Parties and to promote understandings that pave the way for 
the adoption of an agreed outcome," it said.

Stressing the need for trust rebuilding, UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner 
at the conclusion of the Bali meeting voiced optimism as the gathering had 
enabled ministers to find a collective voice again after the "great 
frustrations" in Copenhagen.

He described the meeting as the first test of whether a multilateral system was 
capable of convincing member states to make joint decisions, after the 
Copenhagen climate change conference was considered to have shown a `trust 
deficit` between developed and developing countries.

"The ministers responsible for the environment, meeting just over a month after 
the climate change conference in Copenhagen, have spoken with a clear, united 
and unequivocal voice," Steiner said.

An expert at the Bali meeting said the Copenhagen Conference had lacked 
leadership such as the one demonstrated by Indonesia when hosting the United 
Nations Climate Change Conference 2007 in Bali. 

Learning the lessons from the Copenhagen Conference`s failure, both developed 
and developing countries should remember what Lydia Baker of Save the Children 
said after the Copenhagen meeting in 2009 : world leaders had "effectively 
signed a death warrant for many of the world`s poorest children. Up to 250,000 
children from poor communities could die before the next major meeting in 
Mexico at the end of next year."(*)

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