Opening a new front at climate talks here,small island nations today sought to junk the 1997 Kyoto protocol by floating their draft which India vowed to resist as it sees it as an attempt to bracket developed and developing nations together on legally-binding emission cuts.
Led by Tuvalu,the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) circulated a draft — Copenhagen Protocol — that calls for amendments to the Kyoto Protocol,binding emerging developing nations with more responsibilities.
Today we have put forward a proposal for a legally binding agreement to secure the twin objectives of survival of the Kyoto Protocol to strengthen the UNFCCC with a new Copenhagen Protocol that can be adopted here in Copenhagen, said Ambassador of Grenada,Dessima Williams.
We believe our proposal provides a fresh way of looking at how existing proposals from many different countries can be assembled into a coherent legal form while maintaining the continuation of the Kyoto Protocol and the primacy of the UNFCCC, Ambassador of Cape Verde,Antonio Lima,said.
Unhappy with the move,India said it will not accept any changes or extension to the Kyoto Protocol,which is the only legally-binding document that imposes emission reduction targets on industrialised countries,excluding the US.
Indias Environment Secretary Vijay Sharma said the new proposals amounted to bracket together rich countries and emerging economies and weaken legal obligations of developed nations under Kyoto protocol.
India views the small nations move as a strategy of the European Union to weaken the Kyoto Protocol and get out of the commitments made in the document.
We want the standing of the Kyoto Protocol to be maintained, Sharma told reporters here. We are looking to making the roots of the Kyoto Protocol stronger and go deeper into emission cuts for the developed countries. Contending that time was inopportune to look at new issues,he said we have an existing mandate on which we are working and we must complete that. We have deadlines under the Bali Action Plan,which mandates that developed countries have to take legally-binding cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.
The draft proposals of Tuvalu and the AOSIS are inconsistent and in conflict with convention provisions pertinent to equity and common but differentiated responsibilities,he said.
Many of these proposals are bracketing the Annex 1 (countries mentioned under the Protocol that should take cuts) and non-Annex 1 countries and may be allowing Annex 1 to abandon Kyoto, Sharma said.
While Tuvalu asked India and China to take emission cuts like other developed countries,the AOSIS requires the two countries to report on their national voluntary measures,Envoy of Dominica,Crispin S Gregoire,said.
Tuvalu wants very specific cuts from India and China and Brazil,which are major emitters from developing countries….
we dont get into discussions but we say that everybody has to contribute specifically, he said.


