MARRAKECH-Delegates
from over 170 nations will be settling
down to business this week in this picturesque
Moroccan city. Their task is to add meat
to the skeleton that is the Kyoto Protocol,
the treaty adopted in December 1997 to
combat the threat of global warming.
As
has become increasingly clear over the last four years,
the pledges made at Kyoto to reduce manmade emissions
of greenhouse gases were just that - statements of
intent. Details on how to make the complicated arrangement
workable have been left to follow-up conferences in
Buenos Aires, The Hague, and Bonn. The road has been
a rocky one. Washington, the driving force behind the
global warming issue during the Clinton administration,
has rejected the treaty under President Bush.
In an effort to keep other key industrialized
nations-notably Russia and Australia-from breaking
ranks, the European Union made far-reaching concessions
in Bonn last July that would enable industrialized
countries to meet their emissions-reduction targets
with a minimum of economic pain.
By
far the biggest concession was the EU's willingness
to allow
signatories to broad use of carbon "sinks" in
reducing their emissions. Sinks are forests,
croplands, and grazing lands that soak up atmospheric
carbon. Russia and Australia, like the US and
Canada, abound in sinks and Moscow and Canberra
remain eager to use their natural resources to
get credit for reducing carbon emissions. As
the world's largest exporter of coal, Australia
has a long history, and a substantial economic
stake, in the burning of fossil fuels.
Russia's situation is even more delicate. Since
the fall of communism and the collapse of the
Soviet Empire, Russia has been undergoing a wrenching
transformation to a free-market economy. With
another frigid winter just a few weeks away,
asking the long-suffering Russian people to make
sacrifices for the sake of combatting global
warming isn't something Moscow is eager to do.
On the contrary, the Russians appear determined
to use their economic weakness to gain political
advantages in Marrakech. On October 29, Russia
said it wanted its credits for sinks doubled
to 34 million metric tons. Rejecting the Russian
request will not be easy; Moscow could simply
threaten to join Washington in turning its back
on Kyoto.
Though this may be little more than a bluff,
the treaty's supporters, particularly in the
EU, can't be sure. And it's not a risk they want
to take. With Washington out of the Kyoto game,
Russia is key. For the Kyoto Protocol to enter
into force, 55 countries responsible for 55 percent
of greenhouse gas emissions must ratify it. Should
Russia refuse to ratify, Kyoto's 55-percent requirement
becomes unattainable.
And, even more so than Australia, Russia is
an unlikely recruit in any war against fossil
fuels. The country is a major exporter of natural
gas, particularly to Germany, and has enormous
reserves of crude oil under Siberia's icy tundra.
For a nation striving to regain its place among
the world's power elite, fossil fuels may have
a lot more to offer than a global warming treaty.
Russia's huge oil reserves and America's expertise
in extracting crude oil, even from the most hostile
environments, make for a potent combination,
one that ultimately is at odds with Kyoto's anti
carbon focus.
Further complicating the business at hand in
Marrakech is the US-led war on terrorism. Responding
to the attacks of September 11 has so preoccupied
Washington that the US delegation in Marrakech
will not be presenting any plans to reduce greenhouse
gases at home. What's more, the war could lead
to increased strategic cooperation between Washington
and Moscow. Neither Russia's geography nor its
history allows it to be indifferent to terrorism
based in the Middle East. In the rough and tumble
world of geopolitics, priorities are subject
to change. Pro-Kyoto Britain and anti-Kyoto America
have put their differences on climate change
aside and joined forces against the Taliban in
Afghanistan. Moscow, too, is in the midst of
reordering its priorities. In any event, the
Russians will have a strong hand to play at Marrakech.
Bonner R. Cohen is a senior fellow at the Lexington
Institute in Arlington, Virginia.
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