High hopes for climate conference

Published: 6:26AM Monday December 07, 2009 Source: Reuters

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UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says he is optimistic the climate conference in Copenhagen will produce an agreement.

Delegates from 190 nations have descended on the Danish capital over the weekend for the UN climate change conference which starts on Monday and aims for a new global deal to replace provisions of the Kyoto Protocol expiring in 2012.

"I am very optimistic for Copenhagen," Ki-moon said in an interview with Danish newspaper Berlingske Tidende.

"We will get an agreement - and, I believe, that the agreement will be signed by all UN member states which is historic," Ki-moon said in at the UN headquarters in New York.

"We have the right political spirit," Ki-moon said.

"All heads of state and government have the same goal - to prevent global warming."

How to act to achieve that goal remains to be determined, the South Korean secretary-general said.

World leaders coming to Copenhagen will try to reach a political agreement on how to combat climate change.

Last month, Denmark upgraded the Copenhagen conference by inviting the heads of state and government of all 192 UN member states, hoping to gain the political clout for a deal.

So far 105 world leaders have accepted the invitation, including US President Barack Obama, Chinese leader Wen Jiabao and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Ki-moon said that Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen had done well to aim for a political agreement in Copenhagen, saying the idea had "given dynamism to the negotiations."

"With so many heads of state and government gathered, we will obviously enter an agreement, first a political agreement and immediately after that a legally binding document," Ki-moon said. "I am convinced that we will."

Ki-moon also said that UN member nations had recognised the conclusions of the scientists on the UN climate panel.

"Climate change is real, and it is happening now at an even faster pace than we believed just a few years ago. The meeting in Copenhagen is entirely the right moment to deal with it from the knowledge that we have."

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