NEW YORK - Kyoto Treaty RIP. That's not
the headline in any newspaper this morning emerging from the first day of the
Clinton
Global Initiative, but it could have been -- and should have been.
Onstage with former president Bill Clinton at a
midtown Manhattan hotel ballroom, British Prime Minister Tony Blair said he was
going to speak with "brutal honesty" about Kyoto and global warming, and he
did. And Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice had some
blunt talk, too.
Blair, a longtime supporter of the Kyoto treaty,
further prefaced his remarks by noting, "My thinking has changed in the past
three or four years." So what does he think now? "No country," he declared, "is
going to cut its growth." That is, no country is going to allow the Kyoto
treaty, or any other such global-warming treaty, to crimp -- some say
cripple -- its economy.
Looking ahead to future climate-change negotiations,
Blair said of such fast-growing countries as India and China, "They're not
going to start negotiating another treaty like Kyoto." India and China, of
course, weren't covered by Kyoto in the first place, which was one of the fatal
flaws in the treaty. But now Blair is acknowledging the obvious: that after the
current Kyoto treaty -- which the US never acceded to -- expires in 2012,
there's not going to be another worldwide deal like it.
So what will happen instead? Blair answered: "What
countries will do is work together to develop the science and
technology
.There is no way that we are going to tackle this problem
unless we develop the science and technology to do it." Bingo! That's what
eco-realists have
been saying all along, of course -- that the only feasible way to deal with the
issue of greenhouse gases and global warming is through technological
breakthroughs, not draconian cutbacks.
Blair concluded with a rhetorical
question-and-answer: "How do we move forward, post-Kyoto? It can only be done
by the major players coming together and pooling their resources, to find their
way to come together."
Interestingly, these words from Blair, addressing an
audience of a thousand at the Sheraton just a few blocks north of Times Square,
failed to get any pickup in the media. Even The New York
Times, published just down the street, ran a story
that dwelt on the
star power in the room, including King Abdullah of Jordan, Jesse Jackson, and
George Stephanopoulos. "Isn't this awesome?" said one participant, and
those words seemed to reflect fully the Times' take on the event.
For its part The Washington Post offered
this bland headline: "Clinton Gathers World Leaders Nonpartisan
Conference Focuses on Global Improvement," making no mention of Blair's global
warming remarks. As for TV coverage, there wasn't much of that either; on CNN
Headline News, Christi Paul said, admiringly, "former President Clinton is
still looking to get things done," noting that Clinton garnered "more than $200
million in pledges" to address world problems.
Ironically, some of those pledges concerned global
warming. The 42nd President kicked off his wonky-glitzy extravaganza
by announcing that the event would be "climate neutral." That is, the CGI --
or, more precisely, a couple of fatcats who ponied up money to get some onstage
face time with Clinton -- would "offset" the CO2 produced by this event by
"investing in renewable energy projects in Native American lands and in rural
Nigerian villages." But such eco-pious symbolism aside, the real news of the
conference so far has come from Blair.
The Prime Minister, has long been pushing, of
course, for a binding international treaty on climate change. It's one part of
the Euro-lefty agenda he has traditionally kept faith with. In
a
policy-setting speech in September 2004, for example, he laid out an
ambitious agenda, declaring that "Kyoto is only the first step but provides a
solid foundation for the next stage of climate diplomacy."
Indeed, the widely held view was that Blair would
"cash in" his geopolitical chits -- that is, those he gained with George W.
Bush over his support for the Iraq war, in order to get the Texan to sign on to
some form of Kyoto. But
even
before the Gleneagles G-8 summit in July, it seemed pretty clear that Bush
was not going to go along with Blair's deal; in fact, Bush rebuffed Blair.
Nonetheless, as recently as a September 4 op-ed
in
The Financial Times, Blair still
sounded optimistic, declaring, "We made substantial progress on climate change
at Gleneagles." But now Blair has buried Kyoto a little bit deeper. One of
these days, the press will notice.
And there was some potentially significant news from
Condi Rice, who was also onstage all this time, sitting with
Clinton and Blair in an Oprah-like format. Speaking of world energy policy for
the future, Rice said, "Nuclear Power is going to have to
be part of the mix." Imagine that -- Nuclear Power! That's been the Bush
administration view all along, of course, but the W. folks haven't gotten very
far in resuscitating the industry. Yet if Blair is starting to show realism on
Kyoto, he and other leaders around the world will see that nukes have to be
part of the energy solution.
Indeed, Rice added, "France
generates something like 80 percent of its electricity from nuclear power."
That's probably the first time in ages that a Bush administration official has
had anything positive to say about France. Rice
acknowledged "proliferation risks" from nuclear power, but made it a clear that
something had to be done. "In the fast-developing world," she concluded, "we
have to find a way to leverage all power [sources]."
For his part, Clinton was his usual self,
declaring to Rice, "In general, I agree with you about that" -- without ever
saying what he was agreeing about. And the 42nd President gave no
reaction to Blair's provocative Kyoto revisionism.
In fact, nobody seems to have reacted to what Blair
said. But that's OK. TCS readers have this significant scoop. And as for the
rest of the world, it will soon understand that Blair has effectively pulled
the plug on Kyoto.
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