Obama to attend global climate summit
Last Updated: Thursday, November 26, 2009 | 11:47 AM ET
CBC News
Related
Your vote:
U.S. President Barack Obama will go to the global climate summit in Copenhagen next month, a White House official said Wednesday.
The United Nations welcomed the move, saying the presence of the U.S. leader would be crucial to advancing talks on global reductions to greenhouse-gas emissions.
"I think it's critical that President Obama attend the climate change summit in Copenhagen," Yvo de Boer, the UN's climate treaty chief, told reporters in Bonn, Germany, on Wednesday.
"The world is very much looking to the United States to come forward with an emission reduction target and contribute to financial support to help developing countries."
Obama will appear at the summit on Dec. 9 before heading to Oslo to accept his Nobel Peace Prize, according to a White House official.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper is not planning to attend, according to his office, as Canada considers the summit a ministerial event. His office said Harper would consider going if the summit turns into a full-fledged conference of world leaders.
At least 65 world leaders are expected to be there, but unlike Obama, most are expected to attend the final days of the conference, which runs from Dec. 7 to 18.
Summit unlikely to produce pact
The Copenhagen summit had long been anticipated as a potential forum for establishing a new global climate pact. But politicians around the world, including Canadian Environment Minister Jim Prentice, have signalled the meetings are unlikely to produce a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol.
The 1997 protocol only required 37 industrialized nations to cut emissions, and the lack of participation of the United States and China — the two largest emitters of greenhouse gases in the world — helped undermine its effectiveness.
The UN had hoped the U.S. under Obama would not only join a new agreement, but also help lead the way for others to participate. As a possible step in that direction, administration officials said earlier this week that the U.S. will present a target for reducing carbon dioxide emissions at the summit.
Emissions-reduction targets are already being dealt with by the U.S. Congress. A bill passed by the House of Representatives requires a reduction of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions by 17 per cent from 2005 levels by 2020, while a bill before the Senate seeks a 20 per cent reduction over the same time period.
The European Union has urged other developed countries to match its more ambitious pledge to cut emissions by 20 per cent from 1990 levels by 2020, and has said it would cut up to 30 per cent if other developed countries follow suit.
The Conservative government in Canada has pledged to lower greenhouse gases 20 per cent from 2006 levels by 2020. That objective has drawn criticism from opposition leaders for being calculated not on fixed emissions, as the European targets are, but on an intensity basis, meaning emissions would be tallied relative to the economic output of various industries.
With files from The Associated PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Greece passes new austerity deal amid rioting
- Greek lawmakers have approved harsh new austerity measures demanded by bailout creditors to save the debt-crippled nation from bankruptcy, after riots in Athens and other cities left stores looted and burned and more than 120 people hurt. more »
- Quebec town 'heartbroken' after killing of woman, sisters
- A small Quebec town is in mourning Sunday after a Quebec man was charged with killing his nieces and his mother, who were found dead in their family home. more »
- Houston autopsy results withheld by police
- Whitney Houston was found in a hotel bathtub but it'll take weeks to determine precisely how she died, a Los Angeles coroner's official says. more »
- Musicians who died before their time
- The growing list of musicians who have died young. more »
Latest Technology & Science News Headlines
- Ancient Antarctic lake may harbour microbial life
- If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake 3.2 kilometres beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest and harshest places, and it will offer hope that life exists beyond Earth. more »
- B.C. killer whale habitat protection ruled a legal duty
- The federal minister of fisheries has no discretion when it comes to protecting the critical habitat of B.C.'s southern resident killer whales, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled. more »
- Game developer seeks $400K, makes $1M in a day
- Videogame studio Double Fine went on the website Kickstarter to raise $400K US in a month to develop a new game. They reached that target in a matter of hours. more »
- McGill asbestos study review criticized
- A group of anti-asbestos activists and scientists are criticizing McGill University's plans for an internal review of a major asbestos research study that has been called into question. more »
Bob McDonald's Blog
Glacier Discovery Walk: Will the visitor centre enhance the view? Feb. 10, 2012 3:17 PM Environment minister Peter Kent has announced the construction of a new Glacier Discovery Walk and visitor centre on the Icefields Parkway in Jasper National Park. It raises the issue of how to balance commercial development in our National Parks against the preservation of the last refuges of wilderness.
Quirks & Quarks
- February 11: Inside the Mind of a Neandertal Feb. 10, 2012 4:01 PM Can we get inside the mind of a species that's been dead for 30,000 years? A new book, How to Think Like a Neanderthal, suggests we can. The authors reconstruct a creature like us in many ways, but with important differences.
Latest Features
- Adele wins best album, best record Grammys
- Houston autopsy results withheld by police
- Quebec town 'heartbroken' after killing of woman, sisters
- Greece passes new austerity deal amid rioting
- Northern lights viewed from space
- Manitoba man dies after falling off moving SUV
- Doors blocked in fatal Manitoba trailer blaze
- Pop queen Whitney Houston dies at 48
- Former Stanley Park petting zoo goats feared slaughtered

