Suva, Fiji
Temp: 81 °F / 27.2 °C
Wind: 0.0 KMH
Mostly Cloudy
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
November 27, 2009 10:18:11 AM

The Commonwealth is trying to shape the direction of upcoming climate talks in Copenhagen by inviting top outside leaders to a weekend summit here, host Trinidad said on Thursday.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen have all been invited because "there was some concern about the way negotiations were going ahead of Copenhagen next month," Prime Minister Patrick Manning said.

He told a news conference he put the three extra seats at the table after consulting with Britain and the United Nations -- and was "aware of talk" of US President Barack Obama also being invited, though that ultimately went nowhere.

The aim of including the other speakers was to bolster the weight of a political statement from the Commonwealth -- whose 53 nations account for a third of the planet's population, or two billion people -- ahead of the December 7-18 UN climate change talks in the Danish capital, he said.

"We feel it can have some influence on the way decisions go in Denmark," he said.

His statements reflected international concern that the climate change meeting could fall far short of its goal of fixing substantial greenhouse gas emission cuts.

Those doubts, sharper several weeks ago when the invitations were extended, have been allayed a little by Obama saying on Wednesday he would attend Copenhagen, and China pledging on Thursday to cut carbon dioxide emissions by up to 45 percent in 2020, based on per unit of gross domestic product calculated at 2005 levels.

However the practical contribution the world's two biggest greenhouse gas polluters will make to the bottom line of any treaty remained questionable, especially as both the United States and China face strong domestic pressures to favor their national economies over the environment.

Obama's offer to curb US emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020 is conditional on approval from a reluctant US Congress, while an official statement in China stressed the "enormous pressure and special difficulty in controlling greenhouse gas emissions" it faced.

The Commonwealth summit is the last major gathering of world leaders before the UN climate conference in Copenhagen.

Organizers said it was important because it gave underrepresented countries a chance to speak alongside richer or more powerful nations.

"It allows the world's small countries to have their voice heard," Commonwealth secretariat spokesman Eduardo del Buey told AFP.

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, the titular head of the Commonwealth, will open the Trinidad summit early Friday before handing the microphone over to other officials, including Ban, Sarkozy and Rasmussen.

She arrived in Trinidad's capital of Port of Spain on Thursday, just after Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Ban was expected later Thursday.

Sarkozy was to fly in from another climate change conference in the northern Brazilian city of Manaus on Thursday that turned out to be something of a flop.

The Manaus meeting had been designed to bring together the heads of state of the countries encompassing the vast Amazon forest -- including Guiana, a South America territory administratively considered a part of France.

But in the end only three of the nine presidents turned up: Sarkozy, Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and Guyana's President Bharrat Jagdeo.

The leaders of Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela all canceled, most citing scheduling problems, and sent their foreign ministers or other, more junior officials instead.

* Get the latest weather on your phone. Txt VLWH to 333 now

Post a Comment
Bookmark and Share
Posted Comments
No comments, but you can post the first comment!
LOCAL
Urgent need for shelter in islandsThe National Disaster Management office is right now working on the provision of tents, which is the immediate need in cyclone-hit islands.
SPORTS
Futsal playoff shifts BOG tournament datesThe Fiji Football Association has confirmed that the dates of the Battle Of the Giants tournament scheduled to be played in Ba will be shifted.
BUSINESS
BSP assures new customers of continuityThe Bank of South Pacific in Fiji has assured customers of the former Colonial Bank of Fiji that there will be no operational changes following BSP’s takeover of Colonial.
ENTERTAINMENT
Jolie, Depp in Venice for film shootJohnny Depp and Angelina Jolie were in Venice on Wednesday for the shooting of "The Tourist," a movie by Florian Henckel Von Donnersmarck, the director of German hit "The Lives of Others".
OFFBEAT
US lawmakers wowed by bullet trainUS lawmakers voiced awe Wednesday at taking a ride on Japan's sleek bullet trains, with one congressman saying he felt like he was in a videogame.
FIJIAN
Tekivu na vuli e na ciwaSa vakadeitaka na minisitiri ni vuli ni na tekivutaki tiko na vuli e na ciwa na kaloko na vei mataka, ka sega e na walu.