Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Australia spurns Kyoto despite warming warning - Yahoo! News

SYDNEY (AFP) - Australia will not ratify the Kyoto Protocol on climate change despite a major new report warning of catastrophe unless urgent action is taken to stave off global warming.
World Bank' name=c1> SEARCHNews News Photos Images Web' name=c3> World Bank chief economist Sir Nicholas Stern said in a report commissioned by Britain that Kyoto should be seen as a first step towards global emissions trading.
Australia, like the United States, has refused to ratify the Kyoto agreement, and Resources Minister Ian Macfarlane said the Stern report would not change the government's mind.
Australia was nevertheless on track to meet its target of greenhouse gas emissions, he said.
"Australia will be the only country in the world without nuclear energy that will reach the Kyoto target," Macfarlane told Australian television.
"The sort of things that Sir Nicholas Stern is saying has to be done in the western world are already being done here in Australia."
Stern warned that the economic fallout of global change could be on the scale of the Great Depression of the 1930s, putting the cost of doing nothing at 6.9 trillion dollars.
"There is still time to avoid the worst impacts of climate change if we act now and act internationally," he said as he launched the report in London on Monday.
Macfarlane said Australia had committed two billion Australian dollars (1.5 billion US) to lower greenhouse gas emissions, and had last week announced major environmental projects.
"(Kyoto) is a scheme which encompasses less than half of the world's emissions, and it is a scheme which will fail dismally to reach the targets," he said.
Treasurer Peter Costello said developing countries such as China and India needed to do more to curb their greenhouse gas emissions.
"There's no point in Australia meeting its emissions target if you're going to have major emitters such as China and India, which are increasing every year their emissions by more than the total of Australia's," he said.
Opposition Labor Party leader Kim Beazley said, however, that if Labor came to power it would sign the
Kyoto protocol' name=c1> SEARCHNews News Photos Images Web' name=c3> Kyoto protocol, engage in emissions trading and focus on renewable energy and the development of clean coal technologies.

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