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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Nations round on US, allies as UN climate talks wrap up
By Patrick GALEY
Bangkok (AFP) Sept 9, 2018

Australia to ditch climate targets bill after PM ousting
Sydney (AFP) Sept 9, 2018 - Australia's new prime minister will not revive plans to embed carbon emissions targets in law, a thorny issue that triggered the ousting of his predecessor in a party coup.

Scott Morrison won a Liberal Party ballot to replace Malcolm Turnbull -- a moderate who struggled to get his conservative colleagues to support the National Energy Guarantee (NEG) -- as leader in late August.

Australia is considered one of the world's worst per capita greenhouse gas polluters, and is a heavy user of coal-fired power.

Morrison, who is to the right of Turnbull, said the proposal to help the government meet its Paris Agreement pledge was "dead" and his government would focus instead on lowering soaring electricity prices.

"The NEG is dead, long live reliability guarantee, long live default prices, long live backing new power generation," he told the Weekend Australian on Saturday.

"Next week we will be putting to rest the issue of the legislation... it won't be proceeding."

Canberra said it would still work to reduce Australia's emissions despite a lack of laws to enforce the Paris target.

The ruling Liberal-National coalition -- as well as previous Labor governments -- have struggled to introduce climate policies over the past decade amid political infighting and turbulence.

Former Labor PM Kevin Rudd's flagship carbon-trading scheme, which aimed to cut emissions by between five and 25 percent of 2000 levels by 2020, was shelved in 2010.

Rudd's Labor successor Julia Gillard, faced with a hung parliament, later introduced a carbon pricing scheme in exchange for support from two independents.

The Liberals' Tony Abbott, who defeated her in national elections in 2013 and who famously called climate change "absolute crap", repealed the scheme a year later.

Abbott's government later agreed to cut emissions by 26 percent by 2030 as part of the Paris Agreement, although he has since railed against the commitment he made.

Abbott was also a major critic of his successor Turnbull, who in mid-August was forced to shelve plans to enshrine the NEG in law to appease the right, but was still ousted days later.

Developing countries rounded on the United States and its allies at emergency climate talks Sunday, accusing the world's richest nations of stalling on a deal aimed at preventing runaway global warming.

Experts from around the world wrapped up discussions in Bangkok geared towards creating a comprehensive rulebook for countries to implement the landmark Paris Accord on climate change.

But talks foundered over the key issue of how efforts to limit climate change are funded and how contributions are reported.

Delegates representing some of Earth's poorest and smallest nations said on the final day of the summit that the US and other Western economies had failed to live up to their green spending commitments.

"Developed countries are responsible for the vast majority of historic emissions, and many became remarkably wealthy burning fossil fuels," said Amjad Abdulla, the head of a negotiating bloc of small island states.

"Yet, we face devastating climate impacts and some of us could be lost forever to rising seas" without progress on the Paris deal by the end of the year, he added.

The Paris deal, struck in 2015, aims to limit global temperature rises to less than two degrees Celsius and to below 1.5 degrees if possible by the end of the century.

To do this, countries agreed to a set of promises, including to establish an annual $100-billion fund to help developing nations react to our heating planet.

But the details of the final rulebook are subject to intense debate.

The US and other developed economies want less oversight on how their funding is gathered and more flexibility over how future finance is structured.

But developing nations insist they need predictable and open funding in order to effectively plan their fight against the fallout from climate change.

A senior climate negotiator, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told AFP Sunday that the US and other rich nations were asking poorer ones to trust them to self-regulate climate financing.

"We want to do our bit, but how can we trust them? Show us the money," the negotiator said.

Delegates ended talks Sunday with an agreement to hand over technical discussions to a panel of experts, who will continue to meet before the COP 24 kicks off in Katowice, Poland, at the start of December.

Patricia Espinosa, the UN's climate change secretary, told reporters progress had been made in Bangkok "on most issues" but that "no issues have been fully resolved yet".

The issue of climate finance was "very difficult and politically sensitive", she added.

"For Katowice to be successful, work needs to speed up and political will needs to be intensified."

- Paris deal 'on brink' -

The Bangkok talks were organised as an emergency negotiating session after little progress was made at previous rounds towards a final rulebook.

Under the timeframe set in Paris, the guidelines must be finalised by the end of 2018.

While delegates made some headway on areas such as new technology and carbon markets, activists said the US -- with Western acquiescence -- had stonewalled momentum on the key funding issue.

Harjeet Singh, global lead on climate change for NGO ActionAid, said Sunday the Paris deal was "on the brink".

"Developed countries are going back on their word and refusing to agree clear rules governing climate finance," he told reporters.

"If they remain stuck in their positions and fail to loosen their purses, this treaty may collapse."

- 'Unimpressed by politicians' -

The US under President Donald Trump will leave the Paris process in 2020, but multiple delegates in Bangkok told AFP it was still actively hindering progress in talks.

One senior negotiator said the US was "poisoning" the atmosphere of trust that led to the Paris accord.

Activists also called out the European Union, Britain and Australia for falling into line with Washington's position.

A State Department official told AFP US negotiators would "continue to actively participate in ongoing climate negotiations -- including negotiations to develop guidance for implementation of the Paris Agreement -- to protect and advance US interests".

Alden Meyer, director of strategy and policy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said the rate of climate change was rapidly outstripping the political effort to curb it.

"As this summer's devastating wave of heatwaves, wildfires, floods, and other extreme weather events across the world makes abundantly clear, the Earth's climate system is unimpressed by politicians' rhetoric."


Related Links
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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Think pink for a better view of climate change
New Haven CT (SPX) Sep 07, 2018
A new study says pink noise may be the key to separating out natural climate variability from climate change that is influenced by human activity. Not familiar with pink noise? It's a random noise in which every octave contains the same amount of energy. Pink noise is found in systems ranging from earthquakes and electronics to biology and stellar luminosity. Compared to the more familiar white noise, pink noise has more low-frequency components. Writing in the journal Physical Review Letter ... read more

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