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Obama called Indian PM ‘Mr Guru’ at Copenhagen

News4u-News Desk-Beijing, (PTI) “Mr Guru” was how US President Barack Obama greeted Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during the Copenhagen Climate Summit, which showed the degree of respect he has for the Indian leader, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said today.

“President Obama has certainly got the right instincts on India. I know for fact, when Obama was in negotiating room, three times he mentioned word Guru when he referred to our PM.

Your Prime Minister is our Guru,” Ramesh, who is here on a visit, told an interactive session with the members of Foreign Correspondent Club.

At the end of the negotiations the US had with BASIC countries — Brazil, South Africa, China and India — the first person Obama went to was Singh and said: “Mr Guru what will we do?”

The BASIC countries hammered out the Copenhagen Accord, which has now been recognised by over 100 countries.

Barack Obama called Indian PM Mr Guru at Copenhagen

Barack Obama called Indian PM 'Mr Guru' at Copenhagen

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India stands by Copenhagen Climate Change Accord: Ramesh

News4u-News Desk-India on Tuesday said it has decided to formally back the Climate Change Accord hammered out in Copenhagen last year joining over 100 countries that have already “associated” with the pact.

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh in a suo-motu statement in the Lok Sabha said India has agreed to being listed in the preamble of the Accord subject to certain conditions.

India was the last major emitter yet to formally endorse the agreement.
“Listing in Chapeau (preamble) of the Accord implies that we participated in the negotiations on the Copenhagen Accord and that we stand by the Accord,” he said.

India has conveyed three conditions for its name being listed in the preamble.
India has made it clear that the Accord is a political document and not a legally binding one; the Accord is not a separate track of negotiations outside the UNFCCC and the purpose of the Accord was to bring consensus in the existing and ongoing two-track process under the UNFCCC, Ramesh said.
“The Accord could have value if the areas of convergence reflected in it are used to help the parties reach agreed outcomes under the UN multilateral negotiations in the two tracks,” he said.
Ramesh said India had agreed to listing under the Chapeau after “careful consideration” and believed that the decision reflected the role it had played in giving shape to the Copenhagen Accord.
Brazil, South Africa and China, other members of the four-nation BASIC group, have already agreed to such a listing and communicated their association to the UN Framework Convention Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Ramesh said besides the BASIC countries, many other countries from the G-77 and China group have also associated themselves with the Accord.

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh

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PM briefs President on Copenhagen Summit

News4u-News Desk-Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday called on President Pratibha Patil and briefed her on the deliberations at the UN climate summit in Copenhagen.

The meeting lasted for about 40 minutes, a Rashtrapati Bhavan spokesperson said. 

The climate change conference had taken note of a US-brokered non-binding deal with India and three other emerging economies which was rejected by several poor nations. 

The Prime Minister also briefed the President about the just concluded session of the Lok Sabha and also various issues of national and international importance, the spokesperson said.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

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Copenhagen Accord does not affect sovereignty: Govt

News4u-News Desk-The Government on Tuesday rejected Opposition charge of compromising with the country’s interests at Copenhagen climate meet, insisting that the Accord will in no way affect India’s sovereignty. Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh, while informing the Rajya Sabha on the outcome of last week’s Climate Summit, however, admitted that the government had digressed from its pre-Copenhagen assurance on one aspect, allowing provision for “international consultation and analysis” rather than just informing the UNFCCC about domestic mitigation programmes. “I plead guilty. I moved from information to consultation. Yes, there has been a shift,” Ramesh said responding to Leader of Opposition Arun Jaitley’s contention that government had digressed from its commitment on reporting of mitigation actions on climate change. Equating the Copenhagen Accord with Sharm-el Sheikh Indo-Pak Joint Statement, Jaitley said the government was trying to interpret the Accord differently by engaging in “spin doctoring”. The minister argued that India had to be flexible as it, along with China, Brazil and South Africa, did not want to be “responsible for failure” of the meet and be “blame boys”. At the same time, he asserted that the provision for “international consultations and analysis” would not affect India’s sovereignty as guidelines for it had to be evolved. “These clearly defined guidelines will ensure that the national sovereignty is respected,” he said, adding India will ensure that the consultative process is not “intrusive”. Allaying fears on the provision of consultations, Ramesh said India had decades of experience on such discussions with IMF and WTO and no sovereignty has been eroded. “We should not fear the word consultations… There is no great sell-out.. The guidelines will be decided by 194 countries,” Ramesh said, adding India will ensure that the “guidelines do not lead to inspectors coming in.” During the suo-motu statement and the subsequent reply to queries by members in presence of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Ramesh also assertively argued on other aspects of the Copenhagen Accord like ‘peaking’ of emissions, financing and technology transfer. While seeking clarifications, BJP, CPI(M) and CPI dubbed the Copenhagen Accord as “disappointing”, “a compromise document” and “an attempt to jettison the Kyoto Protocol and Bali Action Plan.” Jaitley questioned the mention of peaking of emissions in the Accord as well as the provision for reporting which he felt would bind India and consequences would not be good. CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury said “we have opened up windows for the possible jettisoning of the Kyoto Protocol”. On peaking of emissions, Ramesh noted that the Accord does not mention any particular year. He, however, asserted that peaking of emissions would have to take place some time in the 21st century, otherwise “there will be no 22nd century”.

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh

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Conference of Parties recognises the Copenhagen accord

News4u-News Desk-UN climate talks on Saturday avoided failure  by formally acknowledging a new US-led accord for combating global warming despite opposition from several nations.

PM Manmohan Singh said regardless of the outcome of the summit India is committed to voluntary emission cuts.

Final decision at the 193-nation talks that stopped short of endorsing the deal and the conference of the parties takes note of the Copenhagen accord.

Leaders of the BASIC group have taken a stand based on their common interest and the interests of the poor and small developing nations.

Earlier, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said that vast majorities of countries do not support any negotiations or dilution of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Addressing his counterparts at Copenhagen climate summit, he said that Kyoto protocol should continue to stand as a valid legal instrument.

Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao has said that people of India want good relations with China.

Addressing mediapersons after a meeting of Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on the sidelines of the Copenhagen summit, Ms Rao said that China respects India on the basis of equality and the China-US joint statement on South Asia does not target India.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

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Conference of Parties recognises the Copenhagen accord

News4u-News Desk-UN climate talks on Saturday avoided failure  by formally acknowledging a new US-led accord for combating global warming despite opposition from several nations.

PM Manmohan Singh said regardless of the outcome of the summit India is committed to voluntary emission cuts.

Final decision at the 193-nation talks that stopped short of endorsing the deal and the conference of the parties takes note of the Copenhagen accord.

Leaders of the BASIC group have taken a stand based on their common interest and the interests of the poor and small developing nations.

Earlier, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said that vast majorities of countries do not support any negotiations or dilution of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

Addressing his counterparts at Copenhagen climate summit, he said that Kyoto protocol should continue to stand as a valid legal instrument.

Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao has said that people of India want good relations with China.

Addressing mediapersons after a meeting of Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on the sidelines of the Copenhagen summit, Ms Rao said that China respects India on the basis of equality and the China-US joint statement on South Asia does not target India.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

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PM back after attending Copenhagen Summit

News4u-News Desk-Prime Minister Manmohan Singh returned home after attending the UN Summit on Climate Change inCopenhagen where a US-brokered deal with India and other emerging countries that places no legally-binding emission cuts on developed countries ran into trouble.

Dr Singh delayed his departure by about five hours to hold negotiations with leaders of China, Brazil and South Africa.

The Prime Minister had made it clear at the conference that future negotiations on tackling the menace should be based on equitable burden sharing as enshrined in the Kyoto Protocol and Bali mandate.

The deal between the US and BASIC (Brazil, South Africa, India and China) bloc is apparently a gain for developed countries which are required under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol to take legally binding emission cuts.

The Protocol expires on 2012 and the 194-nation Conference of Parties (COP) of the United Nations has apparently failed to get a word on its extension.

Indian negotiators — Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh and Prime Minister’s Special Envoy on Climate Shyam Saran — acknowledged that the deal is not done until it is approved by the plenary. However, Ramesh claimed it was “a good deal.”

But angry delegates of many countries like Tuvalu, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Venezuela and Cuba slammed the US-BASIC deal for showing them great “disrespect” by leaving them out of the drafting process and imposing their document on vast majority.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

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Last-ditch efforts to salvage climate talks, PM back at venue

News4u-News Desk-The world summit on climate change went down to the wire tonight with negotiators guided by heads of government making vigorous attempts to come out with a deal on fighting the challenge of global warming.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who was scheduled to leave the Danish capital by early evening, was back at the conference venue like President Barack Obama delaying their return home.

They altered their travel plans as UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon gave a call to world leaders to defer their departures by a day.

Late in the day emerged a fresh draft that spoke of bringing back the December 2010 deadline for hammering out a legally binding treaty on fighting global warming.

But countries like India and China were pushing for continuation of the Kyoto Protocol that obliges developed countries to take major emission cuts within a time-frame.

It is understood that the Australians, the French and the Danish have sought a review of whole process in 2016, which effectively would amount to killing the Protocol.

Addressing the high-level segment of the summit, Singh said the Kyoto Protocol should continue to stand as a valid legal instrument. Parties to the Protocol should deliver on their solemn commitments under it, he said.

“It would go against international public opinion if we acquiesce in its replacement by a new and weaker set of commitments,” he said.

Manmohan Singh talk Copenhagen

Manmohan Singh talk Copenhagen

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PM in Copenhagen; seeks to preserve areas of consensus

News4u-News Desk-With consensus eluding climate talks, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh arrived in Copenhagen with a message to preserve the areas of consensus on mitigation actions and finances and transfers of green technologies to developing countries enshrined in the Bali Action Plan.

Prior to the meeting of over 110 world leaders at the climate change conference, Singh is scheduled to meet with his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao in a bid to consolidate position of the developing countries for the plenary.

“The UNFCCC and its Kyoto Protocol embody the international agreed regime for addressing the global challenge of climate change,” Singh had said in a statement before departing for Denmark.

The 12-day 15th Conference of Parties, which concludes on Friday, is expected to issue a short communique on the need and urgency to arrest climate change instead of a political statement which could form a basis that could be the basis of a legally-binding agreement in the future.

US President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, French President Nicholas Sarkozy, are among the 110 leaders expected to attend the conference.

The developing countries have been resisting attempts by the rich nations to set aside the Kyoto Protocol, which sets legally binding greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets for the industrialised nations. The 1997 protocol also has a strong compliance mechanism built in which penalises the rich nations if they do not meet emission reduction targets agreed upon by them.

The rich nations are expected to make a Strong pitch for limiting the global temperature rise to two degrees Celsius, agreeing to achieve 80 per cent emission cuts by 2050 and push the developing countries to undertake strong mitigation actions which would see a significant deviation from the business as usual approach.

However, the above points do not mention a base year for from which the emission reductions would be undertaken but stresses on transparent verification actions for all the parties.

The group of four comprising Brazil, South Africa, India and China (BASIC) are expected to strongly oppose this proposal contending that it makes no reference to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Bali Action Plan and the Kyoto Protocol.

Though some countries have not ratified the Kyoto Protocol, the Bali Action Plan of 2007 and the UNFCCC were adopted by consensus and states. It asks nations not having ratified Kyoto to take commitments comparable to those agreed to it.

The Prime Minister is expected to stress precisely this point insisting that it was very important to preserve the areas of consensus and agree to continue negotiations based on the Bali Action Plan and the UNFCCC.

India and other developing countries have been insisting that neither would they take up legally binding emission cuts, nor accept a year by which their emissions would peak.

The BASIC countries have agreed to reduce the intensity of their emissions and indicated flexibility over agreeing to international review mitigation actions funded by international finances.

However, they do not agree any international review of their voluntary mitigation actions which are funded domestically.

Till Thursday afternoon there was no consensus on an agreement. The two negotiation groups — Adhoc Working Group (AWG) on Long Term Cooperative Actions and the AWG on Kyoto Protocol — have submitted their reports with bracketted parts which are open to discussion. t is unlikely that the COP-15 would be able to reach an agreement and negotiations are expected to continue next year.

Denmark, the chair of the conference is understood to have prepared a three-page draft on broad consensus.

The Copenhagen summit is meant to agree a global climate deal, as a basis for agreement on a full treaty next year, intended to avoid dangerous climate change and drive a shift to a greener global economy less dependent on fossil fuels.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

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Obama arriving Copenhagen to finalise

News4u-News Desk-Washington, US President Barack Obama left for Copenhagen last night to attend the summit on climate change, hoping that the meeting of the key world leaders in the last phase of negotiations would be able to seal the deal.

The President is scheduled to arrive in Copenhagen early Friday morning local time.

Obama will attend the morning plenary session of the United Nations Climate Change Conference and is expected to deliver brief address on the issue.

Later in the day, he will hold bilateral meetings with the Chinese premier, Wen Jiabao; and his Brazilian and Russian counterparts, Lula da Silva, and Dmitry Medvedev respectively.

He would also attend the afternoon plenary session.

No bilateral meeting has been scheduled with the Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, who is also attending the summit.

Subject to negotiations, Obama is expected to leave Copenhagen the same night.  PTI

US President Barack Obama

US President Barack Obama

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