With Trump’s return, the EU must provide reliable climate leadership
The U.S. election results mean that the EU must take on the global leadership role in climate action and significantly strengthen the defense of Euro...
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Publish date: April 30, 2008
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Ricardo Lagos, president of Chile from 2000 to 2006, was in Oslo this weekend and met with both Bellona’s president Frederic Hauge, and CEO of Hafslund, Christian Berg. In one month the three will open the international Climate Conference 08 (CC8) in Norway.
“This conference could not have come at a better time,” said Lagos.
The international climate negotiations are set to end in a new global climate agreement in Copenhagen 2009. The main goal of CC8 is to provide input for these negotiations.
Technology and finance
The theme of CC8 is “Technology and finance in climate cooperation.” Technology and means of financing are two of the central issues in the negotiations towards a new climate agreement to replace the first commitment period of the Kyoto-protocol, which expires in 2012.
One of the key issues to be discussed at the conference is how rich countries may contribute to the development of new technologies for – among other things – carbon capture and storage and renewable energy, and how poorer countries may utilize these technologies.
China and India
“The great question is China and India. Today high emission countries like China and India have no goals for emissions reduction. How can we include these countries,” said Lagos.
“Based on the experiences we have gained from Kyoto, we know it is difficult to include these nations. That is why this conference is so important, giving an opportunity to discuss technology and financing.”
UN special envoys
The Club of Madrid is an organization for former heads of state from democratic countries. Ricardo Lagos is the current president. Among its members are former US President Bill Clinton, former Irish Prime Minister Mary Robinson, and former Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland.
Lagos and Brundtland are both UN special envoys for climate change, and are attending CC8 this summer. The third envoy is former South Korean Secretary of State Han Seung-soo.
A key task for the special envoys is to inform the international climate negotiations about feasible solutions to the climate issue.
United forces
The Club of Madrid has joined forces with Bellona and Norwegian energy company Hafslund to organize the CC8 conference at Hafslund Manor in Sarpsborg, south of Oslo, on June 5th and 6th this summer.
One hundred specially invited guests from political and business circles, NGOs and universities will participate, among them Lord Nicholas Stern, author of the Stern report, Argentine Environmental Minister Romina Picolotti, and former Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson.
Lagos looks forward to coming to Norway and says he is happy to be cooperating with Bellona.
“Instead of just complaining, Bellona has ideas and finds technological solutions to the environmental problems,” said Lagos.
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