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U.S. Touts Its Moves To Curb Warming

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Published: December 13, 2007

BALI, Indonesia - The United States insisted Wednesday that it has been taking steps to tackle rising temperatures and that many of its actions to promote energy efficiency and switch to cleaner technologies have been going unnoticed by the rest of the world.

U.S. delegates on the sidelines of a U.N. conference on climate change said America has spent more than any other country - $37 billion - since 2001 on climate change-combating activities and has been working to boost the use of cleaner technology and help jump-start negotiations for an agreement that will replace the Kyoto protocol in 2012.

"We are so serious about this that we are pushing to conclude the negotiations within two years, by end of 2009," said Jim Connaughton, chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality. "We also are serious enough that we are putting a major investment into technologies that we need tomorrow: how to produce power from coal with low emissions; how to power vehicles with low emissions. These are enormous undertakings, and we have to be more aggressive with them," he said.

Since the conference began last week, the United States has been on the defensive over its refusal to accept emissions reduction targets of 25 percent to 40 percent. The European Union and other governments say the figures are based on sound science and necessary to rein in global warming.

The United States said it did not want to prejudge negotiations by agreeing to targets and maintained there are other options to lowering emissions. But most environmentalists listening Wednesday came away unconvinced.

They said the U.S. presentation - which promoted ramping up energy efficiency, nuclear power, renewable energy and biofuels to reduce climate change - failed to include necessary emission reduction targets or talks to set a price for carbon dioxide pollution.

They accused the Bush administration of hypocrisy for promoting cleaner energy options while threatening to veto a bill passed by the U.S. House that includes requirements that electric utilities produce 15 percent of their power from solar, wind and other renewable energy sources.

"The presentation was an impressive display of a variety of important initiatives, but the parts don't add up to a meaningful whole if there is no leadership," said Kevin Knobloch, president of the Union of Concerned Scientists.

"What the United States desperately needs to do at these talks is make it very clear that we are ready to accept responsibility for our historic and current emissions and then help the rest of the world to the next round of binding commitments."

Alexander Karsner, the U.S. assistant secretary of energy, said such criticism ignored what the United States is already doing.

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