国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Li Xing

Coping with US craft at Copenhagen

By Li Xing (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-12-18 06:57
Large Medium Small

Two groups of journalists - one from the United States and the other the United Kingdom - were already discussing the previous day's events when I reached the media center of the UN climate change conference, or COP15, at 7:30 am on Wednesday. And I couldn't help overhear their conversation, because they were discussing the conflicts of opinions between the US and China.

I've been to a few international conferences before, but never has China been so closely tied with the US. Never before have speeches by Chinese and American climate change negotiators been highlighted so much.?

The New York Times front-page lead headline was blunt: "China and the US hit strident impasse at climate talks".

People eager to see a "fair, ambitious and legally binding" climate change deal think its outcome depends on not only the US, but also China.

During the midnight train ride from the Bella Center, the conference venue, to Central Station, I was even asked if there was a way to reduce the mistrust between the US and China so that they could compromise and help move the negotiations forward.

I also got a statement from Washington-based Natural Resources Defense Council on Wednesday with the key message: "The US and China each need to do one more thing to give one another, and rest of the world, the confidence to move forward in Copenhagen." That is, the US must assume the leadership "to help the world's most vulnerable", while China commits itself to "transparency and performance".

As an ardent environmentalist, I believe it is high time China took upon the duty of reducing its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and encouraging its urban residents to cut down their carbon footprint.

Although the dramatic rise in the number of private cars is fueling the economy, China should now prepare to stop tapping growth potential on the dirty path that developed countries have traveled. It should start to blaze new trails for green and sustainable development. But for that China needs new technologies and cooperative projects.

In fact, quite a number of American companies are doing just that. Among the Americans working in China to develop clean or renewable energy, Thomas R. Conlon from Hawaii has done a great deal to promote wind energy in villages in the central and northern parts of the country.

But it is disappointing to see that the US has neither committed itself to stringent GHG cuts nor is it willing to contribute to the projected adaptation funds to assist people in poorer countries to cope with global warming. Although US President Barack Obama has made a pledge, America as a country can always go back on it on the pretext of its Congress not approving of it.

US climate change envoy Todd Stern and its climate change negotiator have been very outspoken. The US wants China and other emerging economies to commit to legally binding emission reduction targets. It also wants to force them to accept some kind of international mechanism to measure, report and verify their emission-cut efforts.

Other American officials have helped fan the flame. Word leaked out that, while meeting with Chinese youth representatives in Copenhagen, US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke tried to teach them that they should turn off the lights when not needed.

Perhaps he doesn't know that the building that glows the most, powered by powerful lights, throughout the night in Beijing is none other than the new American embassy. One foreign envoy once told me that the building was the "ugliest" because it wasted the most energy.

As far as energy consumption and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are concerned, the US has little to be proud of. An average American's carbon footprint is four times more than that of a Chinese. The US was the largest GHG emitter for decades. It has a huge amount of CO2 debt to pay.

In a word, the US should not play the China card in order to shirk its own responsibilities.

E-mail: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn

汶上县| 塘沽区| 香港| 平度市| 仁化县| 通许县| 东乡县| 额尔古纳市| 邳州市| 泾源县| 绵阳市| 含山县| 博客| 大邑县| 三明市| 漾濞| 平果县| 乌海市| 中超| 玉林市| 长岭县| 岗巴县| 泉州市| 玛沁县| 利辛县| 陕西省| 休宁县| 射洪县| 永和县| 兴宁市| 吐鲁番市| 青川县| 荃湾区| 柘荣县| 惠水县| 深州市| 霞浦县| 邛崃市| 历史| 阜宁县| 蓬溪县|