UK Wants G8 to Be G13 with Brazil Included

UK Prime Minister Tony Blair is calling for the G8 group of industrialized nations to admit five developing nations to the group in order to tackle climate change and other global issues.

Leaders of the five nations – Brazil, China, India, Mexico and South Africa – will attend part of this weekend’s G8 summit in St Petersburg, Russia.

Blair’s government warned July 13 that climate change could devastate much of Africa, negating any benefits from aid packages agreed at last July’s G8 meeting in Scotland.

Blair says a ‘G13’ would be more effective at negotiating a successor to the Kyoto Protocol on climate change than the considerably larger UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, which counts 189 parties.

"There is no way we can deal with climate change unless we get an agreement that binds in the US, China and India," Blair told The Guardian newspaper. "We have got to get an agreement with a binding framework."

"There is no point in thinking [the United States] is going to enter a binding commitment to change the structure of the US economy without China and India being part of the deal."

But according to Saleemul Huq and Camilla Toulmin of the International Institute for Environment and Development, the 13 nations must realize that their efforts to tackle climate change have "been woefully small in relation to the scale of the problem".

"This global issue cannot be left to the leaders of a handful of countries to decide behind closed doors, however powerful or populous they may be," they said in an article published yesterday by OpenDemocracy. "It must involve citizens and civil-society groups from countries around the world."

Saleemul Huq chairs SciDev.Net’s advisory panel on climate change.

SciDev – www.scidev.net

Tags:

You May Also Like

With 2 Million Kids Working Brazil Promises End to Child Labor

Since 1996 the Brazilian government has been able to rescue 930 thousand working children ...

For First Time Presidential Candidate Rousseff Appears in the Lead for October Election

Brazil’s presidential candidate Dilma Rousseff leads in vote intention with 38% compared to 35% ...

Brazil’s Unrelenting March to Conquer the Arab World

Chicken was among the first to arrive. One container, then two, three, dozens, hundreds, ...

Brazil’s Answer to Global Crisis: US$ 50 Billion Dollar Auction

Brazil's Central Bank (BC) decided this Thursday, October 23, to implement a foreign exchange ...

Genocide: 76 Indians Killed in Brazil in 2007. 63% More than in 2006

At least 76 indigenous people were murdered in 2007 in Brazil. This was the ...

In Brazil, Women Have Better Schooling than Men, But Worse Wages

Brazilian women conquered more space on the labor market in 2003 and surpassed men ...

Sending Money with Brazil’s Warranty Seal

Brazilians far away from home have a new, easy and secure way of sending ...

19 Years Later, Brazilian Jury Acquits Defendant on Missionary Death

The seven jurors of the second trial related to the murder of Cimi’s  (Indianist ...

Brazil’s Oil Production: Nothing to Call Home About

Petrobras reports that total gas and oil production rose to an average 2,075,000 barrels ...

Brazilian Congress Passes 2006 Budget After Government Caves In

Almost four months late, last night a joint session of the Brazilian Congress approved ...