Empresas y finanzas

Australia attacks Copenhagen critics

6/11/2009 - 6:31
Puntúa la noticia :
Nota de los usuarios: - (0votos)

By James Grubel

CANBERRA (Reuters) - Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd launched a spirited attack on climate skeptics on Friday, saying a vocal minority is powerful enough to threaten a global deal at next month's Copenhagen climate summit.

Rudd said climate skeptics, deniers and opponents of climate action are active in every country, had limited the ambition of national climate change commitments and slowed progress of carbon trade laws in the United States and Australia.

"They are a minority. They are powerful, and invariably they are driven by vested interests," Rudd said in a foreign policy speech on Friday. "They are powerful enough to threaten a deal on global climate change both in Copenhagen and beyond."

Rudd, who has accepted a role to lobby for an international deal to curb greenhouse emissions ahead of the Dec 7-18 Copenhagen meeting, said those who advocate a delay on climate policy are aiming to slow commitments from individual nations.

"Their aim is to erode just enough political will that action becomes impossible," he said. "By hampering decisive action at a national level, they aim to make it impossible at an international level."

Australia wants to introduce carbon trading from mid-2011, as part its plan to curb emissions, but laws for the scheme remain stalled in parliament's Senate, with a vote due in late November.

The government, which needs seven more votes to pass the scheme, is in talks with the opposition over amendments it hopes will enable the laws to pass before the Copenhagen summit. The Opposition wants a vote delayed until after Copenhagen.

Rudd said negotiations were continuing in good faith, but criticized the opposition for delaying a final position seven times since late 2007.

"It is an endless cycle of delay, and I am sure that with December almost upon us, the eighth excuse cannot be far away, which will be to wait until the next year or the year after until all the rest of the world has acted," Rudd said.

The Australian carbon trade scheme will cover 75 percent of Australian emissions from 1,000 of the biggest companies.

Australia is the world's biggest coal exporter and accounts for 1.5 percent of global emissions, but is one of the biggest per-capita emitters due to a reliance on coal for 80 percent of electricity generation.

PUBLICIDAD

- Recibe nuestros análisis Diarios sobre Divisas, Acciones y Opciones. ¡Apúntate ya! ¡Es GRATIS!

- Opere en más de 8.000 CFDs. Infórmese y obtenga su CFD Trading Guide

- Nuevos spreads en materias primas: Oro tan sólo 0,3 puntos, Plata 0,25, Petróleo 0,35

- Opera desde 2,95 € en tiempo real con Self Bank.

elMonitor

La herramienta para el ahorrador en Bolsa

Monitor

Construya su cartera de inversión de forma clara y sencilla con las recomendaciones de elMonitor. ¡Regístrese y pruébelo GRATIS!

Alertas por email

alerta
El flash: toda la última hora
Prima de Riesgo
País Precio Puntos %
España 532,34 +23,64 +4,65%
Francia 124,04 +-7,00 +7,25%
Italia 461,90 +-15,00 +4,81%
Grecia 2.884,31 +-71,00 +2,56%
Portugal 1.063,82 -0,02 -0,22%
Irlanda 692,32 +-10,00 +1,11%

Ecotrader · Vea precios

Principales noticias:

Flecha ArribaFlecha Aabajo

Invertir en:

Renta Variable | Renta Fija | Divisas | M. Primas

Síguenos en Facebook

Evasión

casamumbaieco2.jpg

La casa más cara del mundo

27 pisos de lujo y diseño en Bombay.

Ecoprensa S.A. - Todos los derechos reservados | Cloud Hosting en Acens