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分类: English essays |
China played a critical negotiating role in the fraught UN climate summit in Bali. Its next challenge is to satisfy the demands of the world's media.
The UN climate summit in Bali, Indonesia, in December 2007 will
probably be best remembered for the executive secretary, Yvo de
Boer, dramatically walking out of the conference hall in tears. In
less dramatic but more important ways China significantly advanced
the negotiations, with huge implications for global efforts to
tackle climate change. And it also learnt an important lesson about
itself.
Su Wei, deputy head of the Chinese delegation, took the initiative
on the first day when he proposed a working group on emissions
reductions by all developed nations. Significantly, he added that
developing countries should do more" to address climate change, and
the developed countries must provide financial resources,
technology transfer and capacity-building".
It was the first time China had proposed substantive undertakings
by developing nations. The proposals had been approved by the State
Council and the country's highest leaders.
This change in China's attitude won wide praise. "Many developing
countries, united in the G77 plus China, have come to Bali with
considerable ambition and are showing flexibility," said Hans
Verolme, director of WWF's global climate change programme.
China's proactive stance was rooted in its domestic efforts to
reduce emissions. China has "pledged to reduce energy
consumption… by 20 per cent over five years", wrote UN
secretary-general Ban Ki-moon in the Washington Post, "not far
removed, in spirit, from Europe's commitment to a 20 per cent
reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020."
With 40 members, the Chinese delegation in Bali was the largest
from any developing county. At the Kyoto negotiations in 1997, by
contrast, there had been fewer than ten delegates.
"We had so few people, but so many topics to talk about, that we
couldn't get the chance to sleep during the last two days," said Lu
Xuedu, an official from the Ministry of Science and Technology.
"Fortunately, now climate change has become a very important issue
for the Chinese government."
The delegation also included some non-government members, including
Professor Zou Ji of China's Renmin University. Since 2000 he has
worked with China's national climate change office under the
National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), to deal with
technology transfer.
When the negotiations on technology ended in the early hours of 12
December, Zou expressed deep disappointment. "China needs finance
to fight climate change, but we need technology more," he said. "We
are not here to beg. According to the convention, it's the duty of
developed parties to transfer technology to developing parties. But
some developed parties didn't show their sincerity, they are
putting the convention in a helpless situation."
Xie Zhenhua, head of the Chinese delegation and NDRC's
vice-chairman, explained that China is trying to lower energy
consumption per unit of gross domestic product. But it lacks clean
technology and cannot afford the high prices charged for it. What
is needed is an international technology transfer system to help
developing countries get technologies at a reasonable price, he
said.
But there are significant obstacles. Alexander Karsner, assistant
secretary of the US Department of Energy, pointed out that most of
these technologies are owned by private US companies, and
Washington must protect their intellectual property rights.
When the draft summit text asked developing countries to make
"measurable, reportable and verifiable" cuts in their greenhouse
emissions, China and the G77 (a coalition of 132 developing
countries) argued that technology and financial support from
developed countries should also be"measurable, reportable and
verifiable".
At the last moment, the US delegation compromised and accepted a
new text agreeing this point. The Bali Roadmap was born. "The US is
still not taking the right position, but it is now on board", Su
Wei commented at the time.
China's commitment, along with other developing countries, to
discuss adopting "measurable, reportable and verifiable" measures
to slow its emissions is not equivalent to developed nations'
undertakings on binding emissions cuts, said Yu Jie from the China
office of the Heinrich Böll Foundation. "But it will undoubtedly
bring huge pressure to bear on China's economies and
societies".
So China was instrumental in securing an agreement the developing
world could accept. But how did China explain its position?
During his fortnight in Bali, Professor Zou was often interviewed
by both Chinese and other journalists. Some members of the
delegation, though, are still not used to talking to the media. The
foreign press was very keen to interview Chinese representatives,
but the delegation had no spokesperson to deal with them.
Gao Feng, director of the legal affairs department of the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change, is also former head of the
Chinese delegation. He felt that China's public relations strategy
left room for improvement.
Indeed, the world is largely unaware of the China's work in dealing
with climate change and cutting emissions and energy consumption.
It has "done a lot, but talked little," admitted Su Wei.
Before leaving Bali the delegation spent time discussing the need
for better foreign media communication and the importance of
providing accurate information. So journalists covering the next
summit, in the Polish city of Poznan, may find the Chinese
delegation more open to them, and more convinced of the need to
explain their country's position at every stage of the
talks.
Hujun Li is a reporter for China's Caijing Magazine. He wrote this article as a result of a fellowship awarded by the Climate Change Media Partnership - a collaboration of Panos, Internews and IIED which support journalists from developing countries to investigate climate change issues.
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http://www.panos.org.uk/?lid=20526