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----- Original Message -----
From: William Affleck-Asch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: List, Ecofeminist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Globally, Mobilize
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2001 8:30 AM
Subject: [mobilize-globally] Reuters: EU, U.S. Talk on Environment But Stay Deadlocked
(News)


http://ca.news.yahoo.com/010523/5/59ny.html

Wednesday May 23 11:48 AM EST

EU, U.S. Talk on Environment But Stay Deadlocked
By Eva Sohlman

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - The European Union and the United States remained
deadlocked on environmental policies on Wednesday after their first high-level
meeting since Washington issued a controversial new energy plan last week.

"The situation is unchanged. We disagree on the climate issue," Sweden's
Environment Minister Kjell Larsson told Reuters after meeting U.S. Director of
the Environmental Protection Agency Christine Todd Whitman.

Sweden holds the EU's rotating presidency.

He said the new energy plan -- criticized by the EU for promoting use of fossil
fuels oil and coal and for doing too little to promote conservation -- made it
impossible for the United States to return to a global pact to curb global
warming.

President George W. Bush had already rejected the 1997 Kyoto protocol in March,
stating it was too costly and unfair that developing countries were not
included in the pact.

Whitman, in Stockholm where she signed a U.N. treaty to outlaw 12 toxic
chemicals, said she was disappointed by the outcry at the energy plan and said
Bush would prove himself a leader in combating pollution.

"I was a little surprised at (criticisms of) the energy plan...It was a little
disappointing because...I don't think people have really read it," she told
reporters before meeting Larsson.

"I think that as we move forward they will see that in fact this president is
very committed to these environmental goals and is someone who will be a leader
in this area," she added.

She said the energy plan would not push up U.S. emissions of greenhouse gases.
The separate Kyoto protocol calls on industrialized states to cut their
emissions of carbon dioxide by an average five percent from 1990's levels by
2012.

"I'm very disappointed that we can't continue to work globally within the Kyoto
process," Larsson said earlier. The EU says the plan will aggravate global
warming and does little to encourage conservation.

Washington has won little credit in Stockholm for signing the U.N. convention
with almost 130 other nations on Wednesday to outlaw or minimise use of a
"dirty dozen" persistent organic pollutants (POPs).

Rick Hind, a campaigner for the environmental watch-dog group Greenpeace, gave
Whitman a T-shirt saying "TOXIC PATROL" immediately after she signed and called
for the elimination of all POPs in the United States within a generation. Hind
told Reuters Whitman had pledged to do so.

Whitman told reporters that Bush would soon be ready to outline his alternative
plans for combating global warming after he ditched the 1997 Kyoto pact.

But she stopped short of confirming whether he would unveil the plan at a
meeting with European Union leaders in Sweden next month.

Canada, the first nation to sign and ratify the POPs treaty on Wednesday, also
predicted that U.S. CO2 emissions would increase as a consequence of the new
energy plan, which could raise demand for energy imports from Canada.

"The largest energy relationship in the world is between Cananda and the United
States," Canadian Environment Minister David Anderson told Reuters, saying
Canada exported oil and gas and other energy worth $52 billion a year to its
neighbor.

"Despite any increase in energy sales to the United States...we will
nevertheless meet our Kyoto commmitments of minus seven percent of 1990s
levels," he said.

Among critics of the U.S. energy plan, the head of the U.N. forum on climate
change, Jan Pronk, described it as "a disastrous development" and said it would
contribute to push up world temperatures.


Copyright  2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
Copyright  2001 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.

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