Some are at war, others
recovering from natural disasters and some are simply ideologically opposed to
the climate deal taking shape in U.N. talks outside Paris. Only 11 countries haven't
submitted pledges for the envisioned agreement, including conflict-ridden
Syria, reclusive North Korea and socialist Latin American countries who say
it's up to the West to clean up the world's carbon pollution.
"Those
who caused the problem need to solve the problem," said Paul Oquist,
Nicaragua's U.S.-born climate envoy.
Associated Press report continues:
U.N.
officials say they have received pledges covering 184 of the 195 countries that
are parties to the U.N. convention on climate change, representing nearly all
of the world's carbon emissions. (The U.N. counts the European Union as a
separate party in addition to its 28 members so the total number of parties is
196).
Even
though the proposed targets collectively don't add up to what scientists say is
needed to avoid dangerous levels of warming, the fact that so many countries,
including some of the poorest, have made pledges represents a sea-change in the
U.N. talks, which previously only asked rich countries to take action against
climate change.
Nicaragua
is among the holdouts. While rapidly expanding renewable energy at home, the
Central American nation refuses to submit a target in the international talks,
arguing that the current approach of letting countries decide themselves how
much to cut climate-warming carbon emissions won't work.
"The
approach that will work is historic responsibility," Oquist told The
Associated Press, calling for a system that would compel rich nations that have
polluted the atmosphere since the industrial revolution to make much deeper
cuts than they have promised so far.
Others
have skipped the climate pledges for different reasons.
North
Korea is isolated from the rest of the world and doesn't actively participate
in the climate talks. Syria is in the midst of a devastating civil war. Libya
remains violent and unstable after the uprising against dictator Moammar
Gadhafi in 2011. Nepal, normally a keen participant in the U.N. climate talks,
is recovering from a powerful earthquake earlier this year.
"Yes,
there are a few countries left," U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Janosz
Pastor told the AP. "Some of them are in war situations. Some others, for
whatever national reasons, have not been able to complete their work."
U.N.
agencies have helped dozens of developing countries prepare their climate
action plans. Of the more than 40 countries getting help from the U.N.
Development Program, only East Timor wasn't able to get their pledge in on
time, said Yamil Bonduki, a UNDP official who has been involved in that effort.
The
biggest countries not to present pledges yet are Uzbekistan and Venezuela, a
major oil producer which often blasts the West for not doing more to fight
global warming. On Thursday, Venezuela's minister of eco-socialism, Guillermo
Barreto, said the country is withholding its pledge until it knows what
commitments wealthy countries will put down in the agreement.
"We
reserve our right to submit it after we know how will be the outcome of this
conference," he told reporters on the sidelines of the Paris talks.
The
other countries that haven't presented pledges are Panama, St. Kitts and Nevis
and Tonga, U.N. officials say.
Some
countries have done so against all odds. Afghanistan presented a climate pledge
despite years of internal conflict. One of the latest submissions came from
Niue, a poor Pacific island nation with just over 1,000 people. It pledged to
boost renewable energy to 80 percent of its electricity generation by 2025,
providing it gets international assistance.
"On the whole this has
been an amazing, very positive development," Pastor said.
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