Obama heads to climate talks
By ConnPolitics.tv Staff on Dec 17, 2009 | In News, President Barack Obama | 12 feedbacks »
Washington (AP) – With global climate change talks at a critical juncture, President Barack Obama flew to Copenhagen on Thursday to join more than 110 other world leaders looking to push an interim agreement across the finish line.
Obama will be on hand for the final day of the two-week, 193-nation U.N. climate conference. But U.S.-China acrimony, a bitter divide between rich and poor nations and dissatisfaction with the U.S. emissions-reduction pledge clouded prospects for any agreement.
Sending presidents across the ocean to spend capital and time on an undetermined outcome is unusual. Schedules for foreign trips and international leader gatherings are usually set in advance in excruciating detail. Agreements are almost always inked ahead of time, with all but the signatures filled in.
Not so for this trip.
Not only was it unclear as Obama set off what the conference would produce, it wasn’t certain how the president would spend his approximately nine hours there Friday. He was attending plenary sessions, and expected to hold some one-on-one sideline talks. But much of his time was purposely left fluid, and his brief remarks to the assembly were barely in draft stage before he departed.
This high-stakes jaunt is eerily similar to Obama’s first Copenhagen trip, when he unsuccessfully appealed for the 2016 Summer Olympics to be held in his adopted hometown of Chicago.
Obama initially said he would stop in during the conference’s opening days. That way, his appearance would come on his own terms, with less hazard. But he abruptly changed his mind just before the conference started Dec. 7, deciding instead to go on the last day, when most other leaders would be there. hat decision was more consistent with Obama’s campaign promise to provide bold leadership on climate change. It also significantly increased the political risk.
Obama now is more vulnerable to being blamed for any failure. He could end the year with a glaring “incomplete” on yet another signature priority. He could make it even harder to pass hard-fought climate legislation precariously pending in Congress. He could be seen as weak if putting his prestige on the line fails to bring results – again.
Thursday’s offer from the U.S. to help raise $100 billion a year starting in 2020 to get poorer nations started on converting to clean energy and recovering from climate damage offered some hope. China responded by going some way to meet a firm U.S. demand that Beijing and other developing economies make cuts in emissions growth that are open to international verification.
There has been much hope in Copenhagen that Obama would arrive with a new proposal and salvage the talks. That’s not likely.
For one thing, the U.S. emissions-reduction commitment purposely mirrors the legislation before Congress, which calls for 17 percent reduction in pollution from 2005 levels by 2020 – the equivalent of 3 to 4 percent from 1990 levels and only a tiny fraction of offers from the European Union, Japan and Russia. Even that target was hard-won in a skittish Congress, and Obama has decided he can’t go further without potentially souring final passage of the bill, approved in the House but not yet considered in the Senate. He also could imperil eventual Senate ratification of any global treaty that emerges next year.
Obama also will not be putting a specific dollar amount on Washington’s promised “fair share” contribution into a short-term, $10 billion-a-year fund for developing countries, said a White House official involved in the talks. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to more freely describe the administration’s thinking.
12 comments
Every 40 years we need to clean up after the last generation.
That does not give us a licence to mess up and leave a mess for the next generation.
We need to make provisions for recorses for the next generation to clean up certian things.
This generation is fully aware of the consequences of dumping in our waters and poisioning our air,and gardens.
Scince we are aware we are guilty,if we let this continue.
The future generations will look back and say they poisioned our sweet water they cut down our green trees the food they feed their children was the cause of our disease.
And they knew it.
(Quicksilver
Messenger
Service,put it in a song.)
Do we want to go down in history remembered for that.
No.
God help us all,help each other come up with a solution.
~Peace Glenna~
However, if Obama can exert leadership to get China and India to do more, that would be worth the expense to send him there.
And each of these clowns, Obama,with AF 1 and the support planes,twice over that way in a week, Clinton, Pelosi, Gore etc all flying over on their own planes. Remember a few months back when these very same politicians were so indignant when the auto execs flew only a short distance to DC?
Limousine liberals, "Do as I say, not as I do",,,
Nothing like leading by example.
Now why not a Tele-conference, you know, using the new technology to go green etc....
The preachings of the Al Gore and the media pundits who accept his theory as settled science live in a false bubble. Much like they did during the inquisition when they executed or arrested scientists who did not model science to their liking.
I'll bet the Al Gore nor the media can not explain the model and experimental results that concluded what green house gases are and how much temperature changes in relation to the concentration of gas in our atmosphere.
Just the they did to theones who insisted the world is round.
You're advanced age makes you funnier by the day pops....
Leave a comment
| « Moore threatens Conn. boycott | Lawmakers prep for health care reform » |