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The United States is "very interested" in the Indian proposal to create a global network of climate technology centres and thinks it deserves to make it to a UN climate change agreement scheduled for later this year.
The US President's Deputy Special Envoy for Climate Change Jonathan Pershing said in a UN conference that there was "enormous opportunity for common work" between India and the US over efforts to combat climate change.
The Bonn conference, which ended Wednesday without accord on key issues, was the first of several organised by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in the lead up to a December summit where countries will try to agree to a final climate deal.
Pershing said that the US negotiators are planning to conduct a series of bilateral talks with the Indian business leaders to explore how they can be involved in proposals seeking to foster technological solutions to the problem of climate change, caused by greenhouse gases emitted in the process of industrial production.
The Indian proposal submitted to the UNFCCC on Monday seeks to set up a series of Climate Innovation Centres, each focusing on developing a key technological product that would help the countries to overcome the consequences of emission of greenhouse gases or adapt to the impact of climate change.
Pershing said, "I think the US is very interested in that deal. There may be ways to facilitate that in the agreement."
The Indian delegation to the talks, led by the Prime Minister's Special Envoy Shyam Saran, highlighted technology transfer as one of the prime demands of the country, arguing in support of the proposal that "technology is the only way to achieve the high-impact changes required."
The Indian proposal also calls for a more lenient global patents regime - or Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) - on grounds that negotiators privately said resemble those cited some years ago to help loosen patents over life-saving drugs in the fight against HIV/AIDS.
As per the proposal, "In order to enable the widest diffusion and transfer of cutting edge climate technologies, it is important that we review the international IPR regime to balance rewards for innovators with the greater good of humankind".
As the conference came to an end after 10 days of negotiations, Pershing said the US was "impressed by the commitments and actions being taken by large developing countries like India, China and Indonesia.'
"If we look at their domestic programmes, they have already begun to take significant steps forward on climate change.
"Significant efforts are underway in India. We see programmes on renewables, land management, programmes that address adaptation right now, in advance of any action or formal commitments by the Convention parties" - countries that are signatories to the UNFCCC.
Pershing's comments came when the meeting was concluded marked by major differences between the demands made by industrialized and developing countries.
Developing countries want to see contribution by the wealthy industrialized nations. They want them to pledge much deeper cuts in the emissions of their greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide. In return, the industrialized countries say that major developing countries such as India and China must also commit to cuts and open up their climate change programmes to international scrutiny.
Developing countries say their emissions are not as much as those of the developed world, in fact when calculated on a per capita basis, their emissions are nothing before the developed nations.
They also poinedt out that the entire UN climate change negotiating process is based on the fundamental principle that industrialised countries, who are mainly responsible for causing climate change, must move before developing countries. The Hindu
April 11, 2009
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