Obama
won’t break new ground at summit
A
warning to delegates in Copenhagen: If you're looking for
President Barack Obama to cave to pressure and deepen US
efforts to curb greenhouse gases, don't bet on it.
17/12/2009 - A warning to delegates in Copenhagen: If you're
looking for President Barack Obama to cave to pressure and
deepen US efforts to curb greenhouse gases, don't bet on
it.
Obama,
like most world leaders, is constrained by tough politics
at home. And that makes it tougher for the summit to produce
meaningful pollution cuts.
US
officials stressed Wednesday that when Obama travels to
the climate conference in Denmark this week he won't bring
anything to the talks beyond Washington's already stated
goals: to commit to reducing greenhouse gases by 17 percent
from 2005 levels by 2020 and to pay a "fair share"
into a 10 billion US dollars fund to help developing countries
deal with climate change.
Developing
countries have called on the United States and Europe to
make much deeper cuts in the short term — by at least
34 percent from 2005 emission levels by 2020. Those are
reductions far beyond what members of Congress — even
those supporting climate legislation — say they will
accept.
"We
don't want to promise something we don't have," Todd
Stern, chief of the US delegation to the climate conference,
told reporters this week in Copenhagen. He said he did not
anticipate any change in the US commitment.
Said
Democratic Rep. Edward Markey, a co-author of a climate
bill already passed by the House of Representatives: The
president "is not going to go further. ... The words
he is going to use are the same words he has been using
for the last two weeks."
White
House press secretary Robert Gibbs, too, kept a tight hold
on expectations for the summit. Noting that there are remaining
disagreements among delegates, he said the president "is
hopeful that his presence can help" produce "a
strong operational agreement, even as we work toward something
even stronger in the future."
In
Copenhagen, Stern, the U.S. delegation head, declared: "Our
commitment is tied to our anticipated legislation. We don't
want to promise something we don't have."
At
the same time, administration officials said — and
are arguing in meetings in Copenhagen — that the U.S.
is doing more to reduce the climate change threat than getting
legislation passed by Congress.
In
recent days, the White House has choreographed a series
of announcements and events in Washington designed to highlight
those efforts — from tax breaks for renewable energy
manufacturers to the president visiting a home remodeling
store to declare it is "sexy" to better insulate
your home.
The
White House distributed a memo noting that the economic
recovery program contains 80 billion dollars to help promote
clean energy development including money for renewable energy
projects, nuclear power plants, more fuel efficient motor
vehicles and commercial development of carbon capture technologies
to be used at coal burning power plants.
Da UNFCCC