US Wins 1st Place Fossil for Dec 7
China Today by Wang Song, December 8, 2011 Adjust font size:
The United States of America earns the 1st place Fossil on December 7.
The US is in complete denial – other country delegates inside the Indaba could not believe their interventions. Having put forward a proposal for a treaty before Copenhagen, the US now seems to have taken a complete u-turn on the issue of legally binding commitments. We are just at the start of a 'critical decade' (according to a United Nations Environment Programme report) in which we must increase ambition, peak and decline and the USA – the largest historical emitter - turns up with a mandate to only discuss commitments in the next decade. Nine more years of talks? This is completely irresponsible as this is only making other high emitters sit back and do nothing.
The United States of America and the European Union win the 2nd place Fossil. The US-EU supported the deletion of Fast Start Finance paragraphs (Paragraph 18 and 19) from the updated amalgamated Long-Term Cooperative Action text. This implies that they are not serious about the past commitments made by their head of states on provision of finance to the most vulnerable countries to cope with the impacts of climate change. Not only is it a breach of trust, but also shows lack of leadership from them to take climate action seriously.
About The Fossil of the Day Awards
The Fossil of the Day Awards were first presented at the climate talks in 1999, in Bonn, initiated by the German NGO Forum. During UN climate talks, CAN members vote daily for the countries judged to have done their 'best' to block progress in that day's negotiations.