G8 Environment Ministers’ Meeting in Kobe PDF Print E-mail
An update from Dogwood summer intern, Yishan...

More and more, our problems in the face of global warming are garnering international political recognition. Environment Ministers of the G8 countries, along with the European Commissioner on the Environment, convened last weekend (May 24th – May 26th) in Kobe, Japan as part of the run-up to the G8 Summit in July (July 7-9 in Hakkaido). Environment ministers from 10 developing countries including China, India and Brazil along with people from 8 international organizations were also invited to attend.

 

Discussion of “The Kobe Initiative” revolved around three major themes: climate change, biodiversity and the 3Rs (Reduce, Reuse and Recycle). With regards to a low-carbon society, the group expressed “strong political will” to go beyond the 2007 G8 Summit goal of halving emissions by 2050, but recognized the need for sound leadership and commitment from developed nations. Various incentives to change the social infrastructure and ways to set a price on carbon (carbon offsetting, emissions trading, tax incentives, consumer labeling) were thought to be best implemented in a country-specific manner to prevent leakage. Additionally, the need for green technologies and further research spawned the idea to form an international research network. This proposal found support in a number of nations including the UK and Italy, who will be hosting research network meetings later this year and next spring.

 

Agreement was established to provide developing nations financial support from developed countries: a technology transfer fund, best practices maps and tools to identify co-benefit generating projects, improvements upon CDM (Clean Development Mechanism, part of the Kyoto Protocol), etc. Targeted areas of improvement included forest conservation, pollution control and the 3Rs.

 

The importance of biodiversity and the 3Rs were reaffirmed and encouraged, although it could not be determined from the Chair’s Summary whether or not new initiatives had been established to further these goals. Deforestation was highlighted as a leading factor in biodiversity loss and GHG emission, and the merits of involving the private sector in conservation and connecting biodiversity with climate change were discussed. Potential future market-based strategies and regulations addressed the full product life-cycle. There was additional emphasis placed on waste reduction—Japan, China and the Republic of Korea are jointly curtailing the use of disposable plastic bags and encourage other nations to do so as well—a feat necessitating fundamental lifestyle reform.

 

The G8 Environment Ministers examined many facets of today’s environmental issues. To me, it seemed that the items in the Chair’s Summary spent more time “recognizing the importance of” or “calling attention to” problems rather than proposing real, substantial solutions. However, that may be the nature of this meeting, and hopefully, steps will be taken at the G8 Summit in July to move forward in saving our planet. Further details can be found at: http://www.env.go.jp/earth/g8/en/

 

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