Obama hopes climate deal will rally world for change

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BEIJING – President Obama, with China’s leader at his side, lifted his sights Tuesday for a broad accord at next month’s climate conference that he said would lead to immediate action and “rally the world” toward a solution on global warming.

Obama and President Hu Jintao talked of a joint desire to tackle climate change but failed to publicly address the root problems that could unravel a deal at the 192-nation conference in Copenhagen: how much each country can contribute to curb greenhouse gases and how the world will pay the billions of dollars needed to fight rising temperatures.

Hu said nations would do their part “consistent with our respective capabilities,” a reference to the now widely accepted view that developing nations – even energy guzzlers such as China, India and Brazil – should be required to set goals only for reining in greenhouse-gas emissions, not accept absolute targets for reducing emissions like the industrialized countries.

Nonetheless, the symbolism of the world’s two largest polluters pledging no half-measures in an agreement during the Dec. 7-18 conference took the sting out of the admission by Obama and other leaders over the weekend that Copenhagen would be only a way station rather than the endpoint envisioned when negotiations began.

Obama administration officials acknowledge that the Copenhagen talks are not expected to produce a final legal agreement, putting that off until next year. The administration sought to make clear Tuesday that Obama expects the talks to produce something more than “an agreement to have an agreement” at a future date.

“We need numbers on the table in Copenhagen,” said Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen, speaking to the top negotiators meeting for informal consultations. He said the agreement should be “concrete and binding on countries committing to reach targets, to undertake actions, and to provide agreed finance.”

Using language that went further than before, Obama said the aim of the summit “is not a partial accord or a political declaration, but rather an accord that covers all of the issues in the negotiations, and one that has immediate operational effect.”

He said an all-encompassing agreement “would be an important step forward in the effort to rally the world around a solution to our climate challenge.”

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