Climate change a 'threat,' Annan tells conference
Last Updated: Wednesday, November 15, 2006 | 11:45 AM ET
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There is a "frightening lack of leadership" on climate change and an urgent need for more effort to avoid major consequences, the UN's secretary general told an international meeting Wednesday.
"Climate change is not just an environmental issue, as too many people still believe. It is an all-encompassing threat," Kofi Annan said in Nairobi, Kenya.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan told a UN convention in Kenya on Wednesday that climate change is "an all-encompassing threat."
(Khalil Senosi/AP)
Speaking at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, Annan said global warming should be tackled on the same scale as war, poverty and the buildup of weapons.
"While the Kyoto Protocol is a crucial step forward, that step is far too small. And as we consider how to go further still, there remains a frightening lack of leadership," he said.
Delegates to the 12-day conference, which has attracted 165 countries and ends Friday, are discussing ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions after 2012, when the Kyoto Protocol expires. The U.S. and Australia are the only major industrialized countries to reject the 1997 Kyoto accord, which calls for mandatory cuts in greenhouse gases.
Annan also announced a UN plan to help Africa get funding for clean development projects, such as wind power and renewable energy.
Canada's environment minister, Rona Ambrose, spoke at the summit on Wednesday.
Ambrose has been criticized for the Canadian government's new environmental position — a focus on clean air and smog reduction rather than the wider problem of climate change.
But after arriving on Tuesday, she told reporters there is "no bad guy" on climate change. Delegates from around the world are at the meeting to engage in serious talks, and all efforts should be encouraged, she added.
"They're all here to make progress. It's really important to start talking about inclusivity."
The conference is the second meeting of the Kyoto-backed countries, and the first UN climate summit in sub-Saharan Africa.
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UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan told a UN convention in Kenya on Wednesday that climate change is "an all-encompassing threat."
