Three months of the Copenhagen Conference in December, climate change, which must draw the path of the post-Kyoto and endorse the commitments of the various countries in the reduction of greenhouse gases, the negotiations appear to be blocked and the positions of developed countries and emerging countries hardly reconcilable. The hypothesis of failure - no agreement at all - heavy consequences concern now and risk, several European countries therefore now seek a diplomatic initiative to unfreeze the situation.
The Ministers of Foreign Affairs, Danish, British, Finnish, French and Swedish meet so today in Copenhagen for, according to the Chief of Danish diplomacy, Per Stig Moeller, "engage the international diplomacy to climate challenge which has historical dimensions." "The issue is not only scientific or technical, it is also political," said Tuesday the French Minister Bernard Kouchner at Sciences po, come to explain to the students this joint initiative in the company of its British counterparts David Miliband, Swedish Carl Bildt and the Danish General Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Claus Grube. "The major difficulty is to convince developing countries of development need to share efforts to share the benefits," he said. "Twenty-seven are all more or less agree to make Copenhagen a success, but the current international institutions do not lend," he added, not without scratching the crossing the United Nations, "was not really first line in this case." The Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, organizes yet on 22 September in New York a meeting of Heads of State on the climate in the margins of the General Assembly.

"The most difficult, are not economic or technical problems, what are the political issues. It is question of fairness, responsibility for the past and the future, but also of justice, has added David Miliband. "The greatest danger, it is the"benign neglect"," in other words a "fresh recklessness," which would be an empty agreement of substance.
Honey Moon manufacturers
He urged industrialized countries to abandon the old methods of consisting of negotiations to play its hand to the last moment and to bring forward new proposals, as did the Japan, which focused this week its goal of reduction of CO emissions by 8 to 25 from 1990. Carl Bildt, on the other hand, calling Europe to play a role of "global green leader".
Illustration of this activism, the Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen, tomorrow will be India to discuss the issue with his Indian counterpart, Manmohan Singh and Rajendra Pachauri, Chairman of the Group of experts on the climate. The India fears that the fight against global warming hinders growth and refuses to, such as China, to engage on quantified CO emissions reductions, returning the ball to rich countries.
On the other hand, the honey Moon manufacturers is promising. "There is an abyss of mistrust between industrialised and developing countries." "The Brazil proposes to be a bridge between the two," said the Minister of the environment, Carlos Minc, AFP yesterday.Monday in Brasilia, Nicolas Sarkozy had announced meanwhile that he would go with President Lula Copenhagen "with a common position.The Brazil is not for autantrompre with the G77 group of 130 developing countries; what he wants, it is "move group".