Thursday 18 October 2012

Russia hints plans to quit Kyoto Protocol

Russia on Thursday hinted that it may refuse to sign up to a new round
of targeted carbon cuts that could see the Kyoto environmental
protection treaty extended beyond its end of 2012 expiry date.

"One has to admit that we never got any real commercial gain from the
Kyoto Protocol," news agencies quoted Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev
as telling a government meeting.

"That does not mean that we have to try and drag it (the treaty) out
any further," Medvedev added.

European diplomats at the May G8 summit in France said that Russia
along with Japan and Canada had confirmed plans not to join the second
round of carbon cuts.

Russia ratified the treaty in 2004. It has since argued that its terms
harm developing nations.

Medvedev noted that he had said on repeated occasions in the past that
"if the world community fails to agree on Kyoto, we would wave it
goodbye."

He said he was thinking of extending the treaty's terms with EU nations alone.
"But considering our uneasy relations with the European Union, I am
not sure how likely this scenario will be," he said.

A range of EU nations are probing Russian energy natural gas giant
Gazprom for price-fixing and other unfair practices under its new
Energy Charter Treaty.
Medvedev did not explain his reasoning beyond the mention of Russia's
failure to tap into the profits it could have earned had it sold other
nations unused carbon emission credits from its domestic producers.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Welcome to 2024

 Hello readers, It is noteworthy to say "welcome to 2024". From daily business insights to groundbreaking news, our blog has evolv...