WASHINGTON - ACCESS to green technology is becoming a growing stumbling block in global efforts to fight climate change, with US lawmakers bristling at what they see as China's attempt to 'steal' US know-how.
The US House of Representatives this month unanimously voted to make it US policy to prevent the Copenhagen treaty from 'weakening' US intellectual property rights on a wind, solar and other eco-friendly technologies.
Congressman Rick Larsen, a member of President Barack Obama's Democratic Party who authored the measure, said the United States was caught between concern both over the climate and its soaring trade deficit with China.
'The US can be part of China's solution for the problems that they admittedly have with energy efficiency and emissions. And I think legitimately we want to be part of that solution - we're the two largest emitters of C02 in the world,' Mr Larsen said. 'But we need to couple being part of that solution with making it part of the solution on the trade deficit as well,' he said ahead of the measure's approval.
Representative Mr Mark Kirk, a Republican who joined Mr Larsen on a recent trip to China, said that climate change was the most contentious issue during talks with Chinese leaders. Mr Kirk said the Chinese essentially were seeking 'the stealing of all intellectual property' related to energy efficiency and climate change.
He warned that China's position could change the political dynamics in Washington, where promoters of a bill to force emission cuts say the United States stands to create millions of jobs in a new green economy.
'Right now a number of green industries like the climate change bill (are) coming out. But if an international treaty sanctions the theft of their intellectual property, then there will be hardly any green jobs built in the United States,' Mr Kirk said.
Technology transfer 'is certainly a big and important question that might be a roadblock' in global negotiations, said Mr Daniel Kessler of Greenpeace. The environmental group has called for public and private funds on climate change to be pooled into an independent global body, funded to the tune of at least 140 billion dollars a year.
But such funding may prove hard to come by. The European Union, champion of the Kyoto Protocol, has come under fire from environmentalists for declining to put a figure on climate aid, saying it is waiting to see other nations' proposals.-- AFP
http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=31646.1
No comments:
Post a Comment