Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
bjbjLULU JUDY WOODRUFF: Next, governments around the globe grapple with what to do about
climate change. Ray Suarez has the story. RAY SUAREZ: Negotiations dragged on for nearly
36 hours past the deadline in Durban, South Africa. In the end, leaders at the 17th United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change mostly agreed to keep talking. Among the decisions
they did make, the delegates extended the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, set to expire at the
end of 2012, for five years, called for a new binding accord to be created and ready
to be implemented by 2020, and set up a Green Climate Fund. It would use public and private
money to help developing nations combat the impacts of climate change. Here to discuss
what came out of Durban and the future of global climate talks are Nathan Hultman, director
of environmental policy for the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland.
He is also a fellow at the Brookings Institution and was in Durban for the conference. And
Samuel Thernstrom, senior climate policy adviser for the Clean Air Task Force, a non-profit
group dedicated to reducing air pollution through private sector collaboration, among
other things. He is a former member of the White House Council on Environmental Quality
during the George W. Bush administration. Well, Nathan Hultman, did the delegates head
back to their planes in Durban to held home feeling that they had accomplished something
significant? NATHAN HULTMAN, University of Maryland School of Public Policy: I think
they felt like they accomplished something significant. They did pull out an agreement
of sorts at the end. It was an agreement, as you mentioned, to keep talking and hopefully
to conclude a new treaty by 2015 that would take effect by 2020, although I think we can
reasonably ask the question of how important that kind of an agreement might be in terms
of actually deploying technologies that might protect the climate. RAY SUAREZ: Samuel Thernstrom,
did they accomplish much? SAMUEL THERNSTROM, Clean Air Task Force: I think the headline
story out of Durban is probably not about what was important. The agreement to extend
Kyoto and continue negotiations for a successor agreement I think is probably not going to
have that much effect at the end of the day on the global climate. What is somewhat more
encouraging is that there's been a move towards engaging with some of the practical realities,
instead of the pie-in-the-sky pledges that somehow never seem to be kept. There's been
some progress on actually working out the details of how to advance the development
of innovative technologies that will enable the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions
over the long run. So, for example, one of the important developments out of Durban that
I think hasn't gotten much attention was that the clean development mechanism, the financing
mechanism established under Kyoto that funds clean energy projects in the developing world
previously didn't include -- funding wasn't extended to carbon capture and sequestration
projects, that is, technologies that take the carbon dioxide out of primarily coal-fired
power plants and captures it and sequesters it underground. The CDM was reformed in Durban
so that it would allow financing for CCS projects. And I think those very hands-on, practical
steps forward to engaging with the problem and to helping us development the environmental
technologies that we need may prove to be important in the long run. RAY SUAREZ: And,
Nathan Hultman, poorer countries both in Cancun last year and Copenhagen the year before had
said, we need help. We can't afford to implement the technologies that would be necessary to
blunt the effects of climate change where we live. NATHAN HULTMAN: And just building
off this previous comment, the negotiations at Durban did make progress on some potentially
smaller, more mundane issues. So, for example, there's a green climate fund, like you mentioned,
that's supposed to leverage up to $100 billion a year for new financing for projects to address
reduction of emissions in developing countries and also to help them adapt to the climate
changes that we expect to see. There's also a new technology mechanism that was again
conceived in the Cancun agreements last year, but made operational through some of the decisions
that were taken at Durban. And that will potentially leverage innovation across a number of different
development contexts, ideally to help researchers and technical experts in developing countries
connect with each other, and stimulate that kind of innovation that we want to see happen
in the near term in order to reduce emissions globally. RAY SUAREZ: The argument continues
between heavily industrialized countries and industrializing countries, the poorer developing
countries, saying, look, we may be the emitters of the future, but you guys, Europe, North
America, created this problem so you should bear the burden. By keeping China and India
in the talks, did they accomplish something substantial there? SAMUEL THERNSTROM: It's
hard to say whether what was accomplished was substantial. I think we will have to see.
I think what's important for people to appreciate, though, is that, beyond Durban, the divide
between the developing and developing -- developed and developing nations is breaking down somewhat,
so that not all of the important action on climate change is occurring in this international
negotiated framework, but in fact what we see now is that a lot of American companies
that have some of the most important innovative climate friendly technologies, such as carbon
capture and sequestration, as I just mentioned, are taking those technologies to China to
actually develop them now and commercialize them in China's rapidly growing energy markets.
And so while the Durban negotiations are an important opportunity for nations to come
together and make collective agreements about those questions, I think there's a strong
argument to be made that the most important international collaboration on technology
innovation around climate is actually occurring voluntarily and on a nation-to-nation and
business-to-business relationship. RAY SUAREZ: But they stopped the clock, didn't they, Nathan,
to keep China and India engaged? NATHAN HULTMAN: Well, China and India have been engaged in
different ways. Under, for example, the Cancun agreements of last year, there's an opportunity
for any country to report its own domestic commitments in an international context and
have those commitments be verified and monitored in the international sphere. And that actually
helps create a norm that emissions reduction is something that countries want to aspire
to. And it also creates transparency, so that different countries can look to each other,
see what the level of ambition is in their competitor countries or their peer countries,
and China and India have been engaged in that way, though they haven't been previously,
for example, in Kyoto, required to make emissions cuts with an international treaty. RAY SUAREZ:
In some of the previous conferences, some of the world's biggest political personalities
were on hand, Lula da Silva of Brazil, President Obama, Hillary Clinton, Jacob Zuma of South
Africa, on and on and on, a who's who in international big country politics. This time, it was left
to the diplomats. Did that make a difference, one way or the other, bad or good? NATHAN
HULTMAN: Yes, I mean, I think that to some degree having some meetings where the very
high-profile leaders of the world maybe aren't involved allows progress on some of the more
mundane, some of the more nuts-and-bolts elements of climate policy that are, again, important.
Sometimes, if it's a meeting that aspires to an international treaty, a new kind of
approach, it can help to have the world leaders there, because they can make that final push
to make the treaty happen. We saw that happen in Copenhagen, for example, with President
Obama's involvement. And we have seen that happen in the past, even way back to Kyoto,
when a number of world leaders were involved. But, at this one, yes, there were -- it was
much more a ministerial discussion, and there was progress made on a number of fronts. RAY
SUAREZ: Samuel Thernstrom, just before the broadcast, Canada announced it was pulling
out of Kyoto, even as Durban celebrated finding a way to extend it and give new life to the
treaty. Is this an important development for a big, big industrial country? SAMUEL THERNSTROM:
It's not a surprising development. Canada was widely expected to do that, because Canada
has not met its Kyoto targets and, if they had remained within the Kyoto legal structure,
would have been obligated to pay some $6 billion to $7 billion in penalties for failure to
meet those targets. And so most people expected that, that Canada would be looking to protect
its financial interests there. That's not surprising. RAY SUAREZ: Doesn't this show
some weakness, Nathan Hultman, in the Kyoto protocol? NATHAN HULTMAN: The Kyoto protocol
is reaching its end stage. And I think that might be a good thing. It might enable us
to move on to what may be a more productive set of treaties or set of agreements that
can again see these technologies implemented in a more real way. RAY SUAREZ: Nathan Hultman,
Samuel Thernstrom, thank you both. SAMUEL THERNSTROM: My pleasure. NATHAN HULTMAN: Thank
you. h= w gdi_ gdi_ :pi_ urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags place urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags
country-region urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags City urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags
PlaceType urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags PlaceName Normal Microsoft Office Word Title
Microsoft Office Word Document MSWordDoc Word.Document.8