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Blame game starts for world's top polluters

Developing nations balk at the idea they should cut pollution as much as wealthier countries.

By Nicole Winfield
Associated Press
Italy G8 Summit

President Obama joins Group of Eight and Group of Five leaders in L'Aquila, Italy, on Thursday for a group photo. They met to negotiate standards for worldwide carbon emissions but did not forge an agreement.

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  • Before the G-8 dinner Thursday, leaders gathered for a “family photo.” Several of the leaders mingled and chatted while they took their places, creating occasion for the notable moment of the evening: a handshake between President Obama and Libya's Moammar Gadhafi.

    Once an international pariah, the man former President Reagan once called the “mad dog of the Middle East” has rehabilitated himself in recent years – shedding a terrorist image for himself and the North African nation he has led for nearly 40 years.

    In April, Obama shook hands with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez at a Latin America summit, earning criticism from Republicans for being cozy with a leader hostile to the U.S. In that encounter, Obama was all smiles.

    This time, at the dinner hosted by Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, Obama assumed a polite expression, but not exactly a smile. And Gadhafi moved on to greet other leaders.

    Today, Obama will join his wife and daughters for a private audience with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican. Associated Press


L'AQUILA, Italy The chasm between rich and poor on how to address climate change burst into the open at the G-8 summit Thursday, showing how difficult it will be to persuade the world to make lifestyle and economic sacrifices needed to save the planet from global warming.

President Obama urged emerging economies to do more to curb global warming, while the U.N. chief demanded developed countries set an example and take more concrete steps to reduce pollution.

Especially reluctant to commit to change were two budding powers that are just now getting comfortable economically: India and China.

Obama said industrialized countries – the U.S. included – had a “historic responsibility” to take the lead in emissions reduction efforts because they have a larger carbon footprint than developing nations.

“And I know that in the past, the United States has sometimes fallen short of meeting our responsibilities. So, let me be clear: Those days are over,” he said.

But he said developing nations have to do their part, as well.

“With most of the growth in projected emissions coming from these countries, their active participation is a prerequisite for a solution,” Obama said.

Two days of negotiations between the world's major industrial polluters and developing nations failed to make any major breakthrough on firm commitments to reduce carbon emissions. While both sides said for the first time that global average temperatures shouldn't rise over 2 degrees Celsius, they didn't set any joint targets to reach that goal.

And significantly, the Group of Eight industrialized nations made no firm commitment to help developing countries financially cope with the effects of rising seas or increased droughts and floods, or to provide the technology to make their carbon-heavy economies more climate friendly.

The results indicate how difficult it will be to craft a new climate change treaty by December, when nations from around the world will gather in Copenhagen, Denmark, to negotiate a successor to the 1997 Kyoto protocol, which expires in 2012.

The comments came at the conclusion of a meeting of the 17-nation Major Economies Forum, which includes the G-8 – Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, Japan and the United States – and other emerging countries: China, which is overtaking the U.S. as the world's biggest polluter, and India, which is close behind. Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Indonesia, Australia, South Korea and the European Union also are in that club of the world's major polluters.

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