COP15 – Day 11 Roundup

After the Danish COP presidency was forced to give up on creating consensus around a draft text for a political climate deal, negotiations broke the deadlock Thursday and continued on a two-track basis

Sarkozy: Failure in Copenhagen would be a catastrophe

European leaders expressed themselves in no uncertain terms when addressing fellow heads of state and governments attending the penultimate day of the UN climate conference in Copenhagen.

Kyoto proponents win first round

The Copenhagen negotiations broke the deadlock on Thursday and are now moving forward on a two-track basis that maintains the integrity of the Kyoto protocol.

Uphill struggle for ambitious deal

The Danish Presidency has given up on its ambition to create consensus on a text that would form the basis of a global political deal to combat global warming, reports a Danish daily.

China willing to detail emission effort

According to Vice Foreign Minister He Yafei China is ready for “dialogue and cooperation that is not intrusive, that does not infringe on China´s sovereignty”.

The US insists on transparency

In partnership with other countries, the US will try to mobilize 100 billion dollars a year for climate aid by 2020, according to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The US insists that funding will only be granted if developing countries allow for full transparency of their emissions.

China signals hope for deal

China was reported to signal an operational accord out of reach. Now China´s climate change ambassador says China has not given up hope for a deal.


COP15 agree on procedure

At Thursday noon, the delegates at the UN climate conference decided to continue the climate talks in two tracks, one on the Kyoto Protocol, another on the Climate Change Convention

Obama won´t break new ground at summit

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.

Emissions pledges do not match needs

Emissions cuts offered so far at the Copenhagen summit will lead to global temperatures rising by an average of three degrees, a confidential UN analysis obtained by The Guardian reveals.

Click here to read more on these and other COP15 news headlines

Source: COP15

The liveeco team

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