Forwarding from another list.

I trust you were all aware of this development, from the 'home' of the
Kyoto Accord.

Is anyone else struck by the juxtaposition of holding the current
climate change talks in Cancun, on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico and
proximate to the site of the Deepwater Horizon blowout and environmental
disaster?

Darryl

-------- Original Message --------

Japan Abandons Kyoto Protocol
December 2nd, 2010 President Bush would have been proud. Japanese Prime
Minister Kan has joined the head in the sand crowd in the USA in
refusing to go along with the Kyoto Protocol a measure enacted in Japan.
This may have more to do with tensions between China and Japan than
anything else. I wonder what the diplomatic cables on this one look like?

This is from Terraviva

Japan Under Fire for Abandoning Kyoto Pact
By Darryl D'Monte*

The timing of Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan's statement was
deliberate, NGOs say.

CANCÚN, Mexico, Dec 1, 2010 (IPS/TerraViva) - Japanese NGOs feel that
Prime Minister Naoto Kan's categorical statement in parliament on Monday
that his government would not under any circumstances be party to a
continuation of the Kyoto Protocol, which was signed in that historic
city in 1997, went "beyond irony".

Although the government's position on not proceeding with a second phase
of the protocol, which begins in 2012, has been known for a couple of
years, this is the first time that the prime minister has publicly
stated it in public. The announcement on the opening day of the U.N.
climate summit in Cancún was timed to drive home a point.

Yuri Onodera, programme director for Climate Change and Energy of
Friends of the Earth, Japan, told journalists Wednesday, "Japan's move
to drop out of the Kyoto treaty shows a severe lack of recognition of
its own historical and moral responsibility. With this position, Japan
isolates itself from the rest of the world. Even worse, this step
undermines the ongoing talks and is a serious threat to the progress
needed here in Cancún."

He told TerraViva the government's move may have arisen due to
"frustration over the process" regarding major emerging economies in
general, and China in particular, not agreeing to commit to reduce their
emissions.

The prime minister's move also came in the context of increasing
tensions between the two major Asian countries.

"Specifically regarding China, Japan has a territorial dispute. There is
also economic competition, with China surpassing Japan as the world's
second biggest economy. There is sentiment involved, I suppose," Onodera
added.

However, Onodera, who had been active with many fellow activists in
helping forge the Kyoto Protocol 13 years ago, still expects the
government to commit to combating global warming.

"Japan recognises its place in the international community," he said.
"It would like to present a good face and project itself as a consensus
builder. It is a truly significant for Japan, for its public image and
its foreign policy. It is a matter of national pride. It would not like
to be seen as dealing with this issue single-handedly."

"Many people will be watching if Japan is seen as not participating in
the process," he continued.

The government felt that substantive progress had been achieved after
Copenhagen. If its role as consensus-builder went the wrong way, Japan
would be seen as a blocker, which it would not like and the prime
minister could change its policy, he said.

He did not think that the U.S. would treat this as a precedent and cite
Japan's pull-out to justify its own hard line against the Kyoto Protocol.

"This administration is different," he felt, "it won't destroy the
process openly. I truly hope that the U.S. doesn't. The continuance of
the Kyoto Protocol is critical for underdeveloped countries to be
engaged in the process."

Asked by TerraViva whether the Japanese prime minister's statement had
any resonance in U.S. climate policy, Dr. Jonathan Pershing, a top U.S.
negotiator, said that since the U.S. was not a signatory to the Kyoto
Protocol, it was not for it to comment on this development.

However, he added that he was aware of "previous discussions" about
Japan's opposition to a continuance of the treaty, on which Japan was
"quite clear". There were now two tracks – one for continuing with Kyoto
and the other without.

"It is every country's right to take its own decision, just as it is
important for a group of countries to move forward," he said.

"Russia is also a concern in this respect," Ondera told TerraViva. "It
has made its support for the second phase of the protocol conditional on
other major emerging economies, but at the same time, it is also
flexible. Japan is moving in the opposite direction and will be isolated."

NGOs in Japan were engaging with government policies of all ministries
and mobilising the public to tackle global warming. "Recent economic
issues, including nearly five percent unemployment, had diverted the
attention of the government and opened up policies to hardline
elements," he concluded.

The U.N. climate talks in Cancún are seen as a critical test in which
the credibility of the multilateral process of the climate talks and
trust of developing countries can be reestablished, said Friends of the
Earth. Developing countries suffer from the impacts of climate change
caused by industrial countries like Japan. In spite of this, Japan had
made its intentions more than clear during the first two days in Cancún.

Friends of the Earth International has urgently demanded that Japan
reconsider its position and stop stalling climate talks, which have just
begun. All rich countries, including Japan, should agree on cutting
their emissions by at least 40 percent by 2020, without resorting to
carbon offsetting, and agree to doing this under a second commitment
period of the Kyoto Protocol, the group said.

http://ipsnews.net/newsTVE.asp?idnews=53742

--
Darryl McMahon
The Emperor's New Hydrogen Economy - eBook
http://www.iuniverse.com/bookstore/BookDetail.aspx?BookId=SKU-000037332


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