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Planet's environment is focus of global climate conference
An urgent worldwide conversation about climate change began Monday on a resort island named Bali, which is part of Indonesia in Southeast Asia. Delegates from the United States and 190 other countries are trying to head off a scientific forecast of catastrophic floods and droughts, melting ice caps, disappearing coastlines and deadly heat waves.
This United Nations global warming conference is the start of negotiations for an agreement to limit fossil fuel emissions from vehicles, factories and power plants that trap heat in the earth’s atmosphere and are linked to a steady rise in average temperatures. A current international agreement, called the Kyoto Protocol, was adopted at a 1997 conference in that Japanese city (pronounced KEY-oh-TOE). It expires in 2012, so conference participants are debating a new version.
The United States has long opposed mandatory emissions cuts. China and India reject any measures that limit their booming economies or their ability to lift millions out of poverty. "If we cannot find a way to get China, India and the U.S. on board, we will have no chance of addressing the climate change issue," said Fatih Birol, chief economist at the International Energy Agency. "It will be out of the question."
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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