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“The
Sydney Declaration is really just a Sydney distraction from real action
on
climate change,” Greenpeace energy campaigner Catherine Fitzpatrick
said.
“The
failure of this APEC to produce meaningful progress on climate change
confirms
that the place to do this is at the Kyoto negotiations in Bali in
December.”
Ms
Fitzpatrick said the Sydney Declaration’s non-binding aspirational goal
of
reducing energy intensity by at least 25% by 2030 would mean business
as
usual. In most APEC countries energy
intensity would improve by this amount by 2030 anyway – but overall
emissions
would continue to rise, she said.
“Bali is where the world will set the agenda for a
strong mandate on climate change, setting in place agreements on
binding
targets and timetables to cut greenhouse gas emissions.”
“Today
APEC leaders supported the Australian Government in little more than a
political
stunt. They have professed concern about climate change while agreeing
to no
real action to move forward.
“If
this is the platform for future climate action then the world is in
trouble,”
Ms Fitzpatrick said.
“While John Howard billed APEC as “the
most
important gathering of leaders to discuss climate change since the 1992
Rio
Conference,” in reality it has failed to deliver on climate change.
On forests, Ms Fitzpatrick warned that the inclusion of the words “all types of forest” would not stop the logging of old growth native forests to be replaced by plantations – ancient forests which is currently being lost.
September 08, 2007
September 08, 2007
The full declaration is on the Prime Minister's website:
http://www.pm.gov.au/media/Release/2007/Media_Release24541.cfm
Cindy Baxter, 0407 284 916