Best of our wild blogs: 10 Oct 10

Did I Spot A Very Rare Damselfly?
from Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature

Another pleasant trip to MacRitchie
from Urban Forest

Nephila antipodiana
from Trek through Paradise

Back to eastern Semakau
from wonderful creation

TeamSeagrass on Chek Jawa
from teamseagrass and Psychedelic Nature

Explosion at Chek Jawa, of sea anemones
from wild shores of singapore

Butt launch!
from wild shores of singapore

Sungei Buloh bird makes Guardian's Week in Wildlife
from The Biology Refugia

Is Pasir Ris water really unsafe?
from Water Quality in Singapore

Bird Ecology Study Group links up with GreenAnswers
from Bird Ecology Study Group


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Greenies sprout new initiatives to rally support

Lin Yang Straits Times 10 Oct 10;

Environmental groups worldwide rallying to work for climate change solutions today are trying to rebrand their image and recharge the excitement lost since the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen last December.

Spearheaded by two global activist networks 350.org and 10:10, the events this year have an overarching aim to get activists working on sustainability projects within their own communities.

From installing solar panels in the Maldives to showcasing urban farming in Singapore, more than 6,600 events have been registered on 350.org's website alone.

In the run-up to the Copenhagen conference last year, the same groups triggered demonstrations around the world to put pressure on governments to agree to binding CO2 emissions reductions.

What came out of Copenhagen was a set of soft, non-binding reduction targets that disappointed many in the activist community.

Mr Wilson Ang, who is president of Eco Singapore and coordinates 350.org events locally, recalls his frustration with last year's outcome: 'A lot of young people showed up in Copenhagen, and the result was nothing.

'Now, instead of waiting for governments to act, we want people to take action on their own.'

Yet, until now, the movement had overlooked the disconnect between science and public will.

Even though scientific evidence points overwhelmingly to the existence of climate change, the general public, and many governments, have scoffed at committing to cuts in emissions out of fear that doing so would raise energy prices and slow economic growth, especially in the current economic climate.

Instead of broadcasting a message of hope, environmental groups have also used fear, explains researcher Nic Marks of London-based New Economics Foundation.

They 'have scared everybody with images of the worst-case scenario, and any psychologist will tell you that denial of taking action is the natural human protection against fear'.

Mr Marks suggests that countries like Singapore must cast energy conservation and sustainable lifestyles as positive measures for social progress, or else people will avoid doing anything and go down the road of Western-style consumerism.

Mr Howard Shaw, executive director of the Singapore Environmental Council, agrees.

Public will is low because Singaporeans have enjoyed good environmental management by the Government.

'We have been environmentally pampered since day one,' he says.

So it becomes easy to 'aspire to have the latest gadgets or the biggest car', without putting much thought into what those actions do to the environment.

After Copenhagen, a strategic consensus emerged among activist groups that the public needs positive messages on how to change their lifestyles and build a new, more sustainable world.

As a result, 350.org came up with 'Global Work Party' as this year's theme, while 10:10 tagged their event with the phrase 'A Global Day of Doing'.

The challenge is to get people 'to realise that it is within their ability to effect change with their everyday actions', explains Mr Ang.

'Hopefully, by showing these real actions, governments will start doing something.'

Headlining today's events in Singapore is a group that embodies this shift.

The Ground-Up Initiative organises Singaporeans to grow herbs and vegetables at Bottle Tree Park near Yishun, as well as plant community food gardens around the island.

The group wants Singapore to become more sustainable by growing more food locally.

Group members are coordinating a carnival to showcase their work, and have invited more than 50 other vendors to demonstrate their sustainability initiatives.

The group's founder, Mr Tay Lai Hock, wants to create a platform where Singaporeans can change their lifestyle and appreciate a closer relationship with the Earth.

'You can't address climate change without talking about consumerism, along with organic farming and living a simpler life. It's all inter-related,' he says.


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'Green collar' jobs in Singapore: 8,000 and rising

Cleantech industry expected to power ahead with a strong focus on R&D
Jessica Cheam Straits Times 10 Oct 10;

Fresh out of university and armed with a newly minted degree in mechanical engineering, Ms Chen Wan Ying had the world at her feet.

Surveying the job landscape, she wanted something that would match her interest in technology with her desire to make a difference. She found it - in wind energy.

'I wanted to do research in wind turbines to help drive down the cost of wind power, making such renewable energy more competitive and on a par with oil and gas,' she told The Sunday Times.

The 25-year-old research and development engineer for Danish wind power giant Vestas' Asia-Pacific headquarters in Singapore is one of the 8,000 clean technology, or 'cleantech', workers here. Collectively, they are also known as Singapore's 'green collar' workforce.

The figure, disclosed by the Economic Development Board (EDB) for the first time, signals a turning point for Singapore's nascent cleantech industry. It is expected to power ahead and provide some 18,000 jobs by 2015.

Cleantech refers to green technologies such as solar or wind power which seek to minimise their environmental impact.

EDB's director of cleantech Goh Chee Kiong told The Sunday Times that out of the anticipated 18,000 jobs, 3,000 will come from research and development, 'which gives you an indication of the innovation intensiveness of the industry'.

The rest will range from manufacturing to skilled engineering positions, project managers and finance professionals, he said.

On top of that, the Building and Construction Authority is seeking to train about 20,000 workers in the building industry - converting such blue collar workers into a green workforce able to design and run green buildings.

'There is a distinct trend that we are hearing and sensing from younger Singaporeans - that many of them would like to work in industries related to sustainability and climate change, and such a growing green collar workforce would fulfil that aspiration,' said Mr Goh.

Mr Andrew Xiao, 25, chief production engineer for Alpha Biofuels, is another such graduate who consciously chose to join a cleantech firm. The firm converts waste oil, such as cooking oil, into biodiesel for energy.

'The key focus for me was to find a job that helped to transform our economy into a more sustainable one - that's why I joined Alpha,' said Mr Xiao, who oversees the biodiesel production floor.

Although he did consider the more alluring prospect of working for a multinational cleantech firm, he said he was glad he joined a smaller firm.

'I seem to get a lot more exposure than my peers who joined the big firms. The pay is competitive and I'm learning a lot.'

The direct honours graduate, with an environmental engineering degree from Nanyang Technological University, hopes to set up his own cleantech firm one day.

Cleantech jobs may be popular with young graduates, but they are also increasingly appealing to mid-career professionals who want a change of environment but hope to capitalise on their existing skills, noted Mr Goh.

In the case of Mr Choo Thian Siong, 33, his skills as an architect in his former job were applied to his current one: solar research.

He is now working for the Solar Energy Research Institute of Singapore (Seris) as a research scientist involved in building integrated photovoltaics and energy efficient buildings. He joined Seris about two months ago after gaining a Masters of Environment degree from the University of Melbourne.

'My job at Seris enables me to apply what I've learnt into building designs through private sector collaborations,' he said

Singapore's growing green collar workforce will eventually serve its economy well, noted Credit Suisse's Asian chief economist Joseph Tan.

'This sector will be increasingly important for Singapore. There is a renewed awareness of environmental issues here and globally. Globally, the cleantech industry is rapidly growing,' he said.

Apart from its contribution to Singapore's gross domestic product, advances in clean technology will also help Singapore become more competitive, he added.

'This will enable our economy to be much more efficient, cutting down waste and helping businesses and individuals reduce cost.'


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Tharman on "immense challenge" of smart urban planning

Daniel Ryntjes Channel NewsAsia 9 Oct 10;

WASHINGTON: Singapore's Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam has delivered the keynote address at a Washington conference designed to encourage world decision makers to make smarter decisions on urban planning.

Mr Tharman was speaking as finance ministers gather in Washington for a series of meetings at the IMF and World Bank and with the G7 and G20 groups of nations.

Singapore is partnering with the World Bank to encourage developing nations to create smart and ecologically orientated cities as officials deal with rapid urban growth.

The World Bank calls urbanization the defining phenomenon of this century, with the developing world being at the centre of this demographic transformation from rural life.

The challenges this creates and the possible solutions are being discussed at the
Singapore-World Bank Conference on Urban Development in Washington.

"Our challenges on poverty alleviation are not necessarily just in rural areas. It's going to be in urban areas, for much of the world. So we can't afford to sit back and not take a strategic view about how the World Bank should be transforming itself as well," said Janamitra Devan from the International Finance Corporation, which is a member of the World Bank Group.

During his keynote address at the conference, Minister Tharman said Asia needs to get to grips with the task ahead.

He said: "The next 15 to 20 years will be years of immense challenge for Asia because of the magnitude of urbanization that's going to take place in South East Asia, India, China, especially."

Some of Singapore's top urban-planning professionals went to Washington to share some of their best practices in areas like housing, sustainable industrial development, water and waste management.

Mr Tharman said: "But the challenge of providing reasonably high quality, high density living, organizing cities so as to allow for economic innovation and growth is an immense challenge. And we can either succeed or fail, and we can easily fail, if we don't go about this without sufficient pre-thought and planning."

After recently leaving her job as Indonesia's finance minister, Sri Mulyani Indrawati is now a managing director at the World Bank and she endorses the example Singapore is providing to developing countries.

She said: "Singapore has become a leader among developing and developed countries cities in its effort towards achieving economic growth and at the same time maintaining social harmony and environmental sustainability."

Singapore is now engaged in explaining how the city-state was transformed and providing expertise to developing nations on how to plan and execute smarter cities.

But Minister Tharman said Singapore is still learning from other nations as well.

He said: "We are not a model of something that has reached perfection. We are merely a model of constant learning and adaptation and trying to make the best use of the ideas that we find in the world around us."

The conference also touched on the joint Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-City currently in development in northeast China as a test bed for future urban solutions.

- CNA/ir

Planning 'vital' for Asia's growing cities
Tharman warns breakneck pace of development could go awry without a long-term overview
Chua Chin Hon Straits Times 10 Oct 10;

Washington - The rapid urbanisation of Asia and the developing world could easily go awry if the breakneck pace of development is not integrated with long-term planning and best practices from around the world, Singapore's Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam has said.

Speaking at a forum here last Thursday on how Singapore's experience in sustainable development could be replicated or customised for developing countries, he added that the challenge for Asian policymakers would be particularly pronounced, given that the urbanisation process is taking place within a relatively shorter time frame.

'The next 15 to 20 years would be of immense challenge to Asia, because of the magnitude of urbanisation that is going to take place in South-east Asia, India and China,' Mr Tharman said at the forum, which was jointly held by the World Bank and International Enterprise Singapore, the agency spearheading the development of Singapore's external economic wing.

'The task of providing reasonably high-quality, high-density living, and organising cities so as to allow for economic innovation and growth, is an immense challenge,' he added.

Experts believe that the world will have 26 mega-cities by 2025, each with a population of more than 10 million. Many of them will be in booming Asian countries like China and India, which are undergoing rapid development.

It has been estimated that 70 per cent of the Chinese population and 46 per cent of the Indian population will live in an urban environment in the next two decades, leading to heightened pressure on resources and the need for better ways to control congestion and pollution.

Touching on Singapore's experience in managing urbanisation over the years, Mr Tharman said the chief lesson learnt was the importance of long-term, integrated planning.

Without thorough planning, it would be hard to find a good balance between the competing and often conflicting needs for housing, transportation, industrial activity and a clean environment.

'Planning ahead before the need becomes urgent is written into the culture of every government agency (in Singapore),' said Mr Tharman. 'If you don't plan ahead, it is hard to find the right trade-offs.'

Another key feature of Singapore's approach towards urbanisation is in letting the market decide how best to allocate scarce resources, like land and water, whenever possible.

But in areas where market forces are inadequate, such as public housing or pension funds, policymakers have to intervene in order to maintain greater societal balance, he noted.

Added Mr Tharman: 'We are not a model of something that has reached perfection, but merely a model of constant learning and adaptation that tries to use the best ideas from around the world.'

Officials from Singapore's Urban Redevelopment Authority and Public Utilities Board also shared their experience with about 100 World Bank officers from Asia and Africa at the conference.


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Pricing biodiversity loss to push green agenda in Malaysia

Evangeline Majawat New Straits Times 9 Oct 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: Putting a price on biodiversity loss could significantly push the green agenda forward internationally and locally, according to experts.

Speakers at the Malaysian Nature Society's (MNS) international conference on tropical biodiversity said placing a monetary value on ecosystem services would "open up" politicians and policymakers' eyes to the adverse impact on biodiversity.

This could force them to take more concrete measures to protect the ecosystem.

BirdLife International chief executive officer Dr Marco Lambertini said most countries had failed to turn commitment into positive impact.

"What is of real value, like water, is not highly priced," he said at the two-day conference here.

He said if biodiversity was taken to be a "natural bank", it would be in the red and heading towards bankruptcy.

The Asean Centre of Biodiversity estimates ecosystem services to be valued at RM7.26 billion (US$2 billion).

However, its executive director Rodrigo Fuentes stressed that the extent of the valuation of ecosystem was limited.

"Take for example, the value of bees in the agro-system. We know that bees have a big value as pollinators. So, what is their real value?


"I think not everything can be (given) a monetary value. But for that which we can't, surrogate measures are in place."

However, valuation could be the push factor for politicians to seriously commit to the green agenda.

Science adviser to the prime minister, Prof Dr Zakri Abdul Hamid, said monetary value "excites" politicians.

"At the end of the day, it would be (what) do they tell their constituents... why should they protect the environment and for what?"

The conference entitled "Challenges and solutions for tropical biodiversity" is part of MNS's 70th anniversary celebrations.

Update Existing Policies, Legislation To Protect Malaysia's Biodiversity
Bernama 9 Oct 10;

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 9 (Bernama) -- Existing policies and legislation in relation to biodiversity should be reviewed, updated or replaced to reflect contemporary realities, the Raja Muda of Perak Raja Dr Nazrin Shah told an international biodiversity conference on Saturday.

Sharing his thoughts at the Malaysian Nature Society International Conference, he believed there was a need to incorporate the economics of biodiversity and the multi-million dollars worth of services it provided, into decision-making process.

Raja Nazrin, who was very encouraged by the comprehensiveness of Malaysia's National Policy on Biological Diversity and the recent adoption of the Common Vision on Biodiversity (2009) and enactment of the Wildlife Conservation Act 2010, said that well-planned policies and well-crafted legislation were crucial ingredients in protecting biodiversity.

In his address entitled 'Safeguarding Malaysia's Biodiversity For Our Future', he said that limited finances, inadequate expertise and poor governance practices would lead to haphazard implementation and lax enforcement.

"Of course, policies and laws are only as effective as their implementation and enforcement. There must also be sufficient resources to efficiently regulate, manage and protect our natural spaces," he said.

Raja Nazrin also reminded that the responsibility of conserving biodiversity should not remain with government agencies and non-governmental organisations.

"I believe that corporate bodies are well placed to make a significant contribution. Businesses have the ability to produce technological innovations and deliver the means for genuine progress in sustainable development.

"When a well-run business applies its vast resources, expertise and talents to problems that it understands, feels strongly about and has a stake in, it can make a greater impact than any other institution," he said.

Noting that Malaysia was one of the few mega-diverse countries in the world, Raja Nazrin urged Malaysian to 'think global and act local' in tackling the biodiversity issues faced in the country.

He said by developing and supporting local solutions to these issues, Malaysia could contribute to the knowledge base of replicable solutions for other parts of the world to adapt and apply.

Raja Nazrin also hoped to see more cutting-edge research on tropical biological diversity issues produced by Malaysian educational institutions.

-- BERNAMA


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Goal set for capping emissions from international aviation

Yahoo News 9 Oct 10;

MONTREAL (AFP) – The International Civil Aviation Organization has set a goal of capping emissions from international aviation beginning in 2020 while gradually improving fuel efficiency.

The UN agency approved the "aspirational" goal, which is not binding on any of its 190 members, in a final resolution late Friday of a meeting here of its general assembly.

The organization also unanimously supported a comprehensive aviation security strategy that calls for identifying and preventing new forms of attacks, streamlined security checks, and helping states improve their capabilities in this area.

President Barack Obama issued a statement Saturday praising the security declaration as "a historic new foundation for aviation security that will better protect our world from evolving terrorist threats."

On the environmental side, IAOC reaffirmed a goal of improving fuel efficiency by an average two percent a year through 2050.

It also said its members agreed to "work together to strive to achieve a collective medium term global aspirational goal of keeping the global net carbon emissions from international aviation from 2020 at the same level."

The goal was not binding on any individual state and the resolution included a host of caveats such as the "special circumstances" of developing countries, the maturity of aviation markets and sustainable growth of the industry.

In a press release, the ICAO acknowledged that some member states expressed reservations about the resolution but said its passage nevertheless made ICAO the first UN agency to lead a sector in "a globally harmonized agreement for addressing its CO2 emissions."

"It is a major achievement," said Helen Kearns, spokeswoman for the European Commissioner for Transportation Siim Kallas.

"Contracting states will have to submit to ICAO how they intend to reach their target," she told AFP in Brussels.

"Second, it does not prevent anybody to go further and faster and acknowledges certain parties would do so," she said, adding "EU can go ahead."

Kearns said the resolution endorses a European plan for imposing a carbon emissions tax starting in 2012 on flights destined for or originating in Europe, which has drawn legal challenges from US airlines.

The International Air Transport Association also hailed the resolution as "historic."

"For the first time, we have globally agreed aspirational goals to stabilize emissions," said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA's director general. "This is a good first step that prepares the way for future achievements."


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US, China blame each other for slow climate talks

Tini Tran, Associated Press Yahoo News 9 Oct 10;

TIANJIN, China – Modest progress at U.N. climate talks Saturday was overshadowed by a continuing deadlock between China and the United States, clouding prospects for a major climate conference in Mexico in less than two months' time.

Marred by an atmosphere of mistrust, negotiations have made limited headway as the world's two largest emitters of greenhouse gases blamed each other for holding up talks.

Chief U.S. negotiator Jonathan Pershing said he was disappointed by the resistance of China and other developing nations to a major issue: allowing the monitoring and verification of their efforts to curb the greenhouse gas emissions that are blamed for global warming.

"We have made very little progress on the key issue that confronts us," he said. "These elements are a part of the deal. The lack of progress on these gives us concern about the prospects for Cancun."

Meanwhile his Chinese counterpart, Su Wei, hit back, charging developed countries with failing to commit to substantial reductions in carbon emissions while making unfair demands of developing nations. He accused the U.S. of using the transparency issue to avoid its own responsibilities to cut emissions and provide financing and technology to poor countries.

"After five years of negotiation, we have seen slow or no progress. The developed countries are trying every means possible to avoid discussion of the essential issue — that is emission reductions," he said.

The public rift over long-standing divisions between rich and poor nations threatens to jeopardize the possibility of progress at the Cancun meeting.

Delegates from more than 150 nations have been negotiating in China's northeastern city of Tianjin for the past week, working to lay the groundwork for the meeting in Mexico that starts Nov. 29.

The U.N. talks aim to secure a binding deal to curb greenhouse gases that cause global warming, but countries disagree on how to split the burden of emission cuts and how to verify them. The talks are intended to find a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol, which legally mandated modest emissions reductions and expires in 2012.

Since a binding global deal is largely out of reach for this year's meeting, negotiators have been focusing on less contentious initiatives that can lay the foundation for a legal framework that could be approved later, possibly in South Africa in 2011.

On their final day of talks, negotiators said modest progress had been made on establishing a climate fund to help poor nations, drawing up guidelines on sharing technology and deforestation issues, but expressed frustration at the overall gridlock.

"We have over the last week seen some progress but progress was slow and uneven," said EU negotiator Peter Wittoeck. "We think that a big effort will still be needed to crystallize options ... in Cancun.

Environmental groups were divided in their assessment of the week's talks, with many openly criticizing the bickering and posturing that characterized negotiations.

"At times, it has been like watching children in a kindergarten," said Wendel Trio, international climate policy director with Greenpeace.

However, others were less pessimistic, arguing that the detailed work of putting together draft proposals for Cancun has moved forward.

"We have heard of a lot of division and argument, but much of that has been performance and part of the negotiations here. Behind the scenes, they have been getting down to work this week," said Julie-Ann Richards of Climate Action Network.

Expectations had not been high coming into these negotiations, but U.N. climate chief Christiana Figueres said that despite disagreements, progress had been made in Tianjin.

"This week has got us closer to a structured set of decisions that can be agreed to in Cancun. Governments addressed what is doable in Cancun, and what may have to be left to later," she said.

Last year's U.N. climate summit in Copenhagen disappointed many environmentalists and political leaders when it failed to produce a legally binding treaty on curbing the greenhouse gases.

Scientists have warned that global warming could lead to widespread drought, floods, higher sea levels and worsening storms. Even a 3.6-degree-Fahrenheit (2-degree-Celsius) temperature rise could subject up to 2 billion people to water shortages by 2050, a U.N. panel has said.

___

Associated Press Writer Joe McDonald contributed to this report.


Climate talks marred by bickering, progress on finance
* China dismisses U.S. criticism of its climate policy
* Negotiator says comments exposes U.S. inaction
* Talks in northern Chinese city draw to a subdued close
* U.S. negotiator sees elements of deal under threat (Updates throughout with results from talks)
Chris Buckley Reuters AlertNet 9 Oct 10;

TIANJIN, China, Oct 9 (Reuters) - China hit back on Saturday at U.S. claims it was shirking in the fight against climate change, likening the criticisms to a mythic pig preening itself.

Frustration between the world's two top carbon polluters overshadowed week-long U.N. talks seeking progress on the shape of a new climate pact, with negotiators making some progress on financing but failing to dispel fears the process could end in deadlock.

Su Wei, a senior Chinese climate change negotiator, swiped at comments from top U.S. climate envoy Todd Stern as the climate change talks drew to a close in the north Chinese city of Tianjin.

Stern, in remarks at a U.S. university, said Beijing could not insist rich nations take on fixed targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions while China and other big emerging nations adopt only voluntary domestic goals.

Su countered that Stern's claims were a diversion from the United States' failure to make big cuts in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases causing global warming.

Su likened the U.S. criticism to Zhubajie, a pig in a classic Chinese novel, which in a traditional saying preens itself in a mirror.

"It has no measures or actions to show for itself, and instead it criticises China, which is actively taking measures and actions," Su said of the United States.

The talks in Tianjin reached firmer agreement on funding for poor countries hit by global warming, green technology transfers, and other steps intended to build momentum for more high-level treaty talks in Cancun, Mexico, from the end of next month.

Cancun is meant to be the stepping stone to a legally binding deal next year that would lock in governments into reducing greenhouse gas pollution holding heat in the atmosphere and threatening to tip over into dangerous global warming.

Officials and activists in Tianjin said they were frustrated that more was not agreed in sessions that often dwelt on procedures. Talks on protecting carbon-absorbing rainforests languished.

NEED FOR SPEED

"We're moving in the right direction, but we certainly need to put our foot on the accelerator," said Julie-Anne Richards of the Climate Action Network, which monitored the talks.

Progress this week should lead to some decisions in Cancun, said Wendel Trio, Greenpeace International climate policy director, but he pointed to the bickering that has dominated the Tianjin meeting. "At times it has been like watching children in a kindergarten," he said.

The jabs between Beijing and Washington exposed a rift likely to keep dogging talks: to what extent China should be regarded in treaties as an emerging economy free of fixed greenhouse gas reduction goals.

The first phase of the Kyoto Protocol, the U.N.'s main weapon against climate change, ends in 2012 and what follows from 2013 is under contention.

The Protocol makes an either-or distinction between rich countries, which take on fixed targets to cut emissions, and developing countries, including China. The U.S. is not a party.

Nearly 200 governments failed to agree last year on a new legally binding deal. A meeting in Copenhagen last December ended in bitter exchanges between rich and developing countries and created a loose accord with many gaps.

Stern accused Beijing of sliding away from the Copenhagen Accord and said it established that China should be treated much like other big polluters.

China has said it will not accept such a change.

China also demands that advanced economies, responsible for most of the industrial pollution fuelling global warming, must commit to deep cuts in emissions, giving poorer societies more room to grow their economies and greenhouse gas output.

The top U.S. negotiator in Tianjin, Jonathan Pershing, demanded China and other big emerging nations expose their domestic emissions goals to tighter international scrutiny and put them in a new binding pact that succeeds Kyoto.

"These elements are at the heart of the deal and the lack of progress on them gives us concern," Pershing told reporters.

"The danger we face now is that the essential balance that allowed progress to be made is in jeopardy." (Editing by David Fogarty)

UN climate talks in China end without breakthrough
Roger Harrabin BBC News 9 Oct 10;

UN climate talks in China have ended without a major breakthrough and with angry words about the US from Beijing.

At the talks in Tianjin, China blamed the US for failing to meet its responsibilities to cut emissions and for trying to overturn UN principles.

The US accused China of refusing to have its voluntary energy savings verified internationally.

But there was some progress toward the next round of climate talks in Mexico in November.

There are hopes that the meeting in Cancun could agree details of a fund to transfer $100bn (£63bn) a year from rich countries to help poor nations cope with the projected consequences of climate change.

That sum is described by developing nations as substantial but inadequate.
'Preening pig'

It has been the old deadlock in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin during the week-long talks.

China feels unfairly criticised by the US.

On Saturday, one of the Chinese climate negotiators reportedly accused the US of behaving like a preening pig, complaining about Beijing when Washington had done so little itself.

The head of the US delegation, Jonathan Pershing, was more diplomatic.

But he said that there could be no US signature on any binding deal that did not also bind China - America's superpower rival.

Despite general frustration at the superpower stand-off, there was some progress in Tianjin.

If the $100bn fund can be agreed in Cancun, it will prove that these talks are not dead.

If even this part of the package falls, diplomats in Tianjin are warning it will threaten the future of multilateral action between nations of the world on anything.


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