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At the start of the second week of negotiations at the Climate Change Conference in
Bali, the various contact groups were intensifying efforts to maximize progress before the
arrival of Ministers for the High-Level segment beginning on Wednesday.
Talks on a future agreement continued today, and among the topics under debate was the need for
quantified national emission objectives for industrialized countries - guided by the range of 25-40%
reductions by 2020 – and the need for emissions to peak in the next 10-15 years. Parties also
acknowledged the need to strengthen existing commitments and enhance their implementation, especially
with regard to developing countries.
Further discussions focused on technology cooperation to support emission
reduction efforts. UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer said that "technology must be at the
heart of the future response to climate change.” Environmentally sound technologies and
sustainable development approaches, he said, could "help developing countries leapfrog the
carbon intensive stage of economic development.”
The inclusion of performance indicators for monitoring and evaluating techology transfer activities
was also debated today, as well as a proposal for a technology leveraging facility under the auspices
of the Global Environment Facility (GEF). Its aim would be to
turn assessments already carried out on the technology needs of developing countries into concrete
project proposals. In this context, Mr. de Boer stated that technology cooperation between developed
and developing countries - and increasingly between developing countries themselves - was neeeded
“on an unprecedented scale.”
According to estimates by the International Energy Agency (IEA), fossil fuels will remain dominant in
decades to come, accounting for between 72% and 81% of global primary energy in 2030. Mr. de Boer
stressed, however, that “we cannot afford to let the industralized countries’
climate-unfriendly growth become the global norm.” With investments and the wide deployment of
appropriate technologies such as carbon capture and storage, he said, “the fight against
climate change need not be a fight against oil, but rather a fight against emissions.”
He went on to explain that significant emission reductions can be achieved with existing technologies
or those that are closing to becoming commercially available, but that more incentives were
needed “to push technologies out of the laboratories and into the market." He added that
the carbon market was a key tool in achieving this.
Since the private sector will account for 86% of projected investments in 2030, businesses, he
said, were “the key to a low-carbon future,” underlining that appropriate government
policies were neeeded to create the right conditions for private investors. These could include
binding targets, tax incentives and policies to promote the shift to less carbon-intensive energy
sources.
According to the
Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change, markets for low-carbon energy products
are likely to be worth at least 500 billion USD per year by 2050. Mr. de Boer pointed out that
the transition to a low-carbon economy could become a platform to new economic growth, new jobs, new
manufacturing and service industries and new markets. Responding to climate change, he said, was
creating windows of opportunity, and that “instead of closing the shutters, the opportunity
must be seized.”
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