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UN Softens Tone on Poznan Outcome as Climate Meeting Draws to End

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The United Nations softened its tone on the outcome of the marathon Poznan climate talks on Thursday with the UN chief and his top climate official saying that the meeting won't come to final decisions on any major issues on fighting climate change.

"Perhaps the meeting is not to come to final decisions," Ban Ki-moon told Xinhua at a press conference here, hinting that differences still linger between parties on major issues like a long-and mid-term goal of emission cut by the industrialized nations.

Some industrialized countries like Japan, Canada and Australia are backsliding from strengthening the mid-term goal of cutting 25-40 percent emissions over the 1990 levels by 2020 by the industrialized countries, while several developing nations said the mid-term goal for emission cut is crucial to any long-term goal, which is not feasible under the current circumstances.

Elaborating on possible outcomes of the talks, de Boer said the conference is to agree on a negotiating agenda for the coming year and the intensification of negotiations, and will provide the chairs of the two working groups with the mandate to come with the negotiating text in advance. "With these, the blue-collar conference is delivered on its goals," de Boer said.

The two working groups, one on long-term cooperative action and the other under the Kyoto Protocol, are the two major platforms under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change to negotiate ways on fighting climate change.

According to the UN climate chief, the Poznan talks have also made progresses on some areas like reducing emissions from deforestation and are moving towards more practical actions on adaptation and making the adaptation fund more operational. The conference, which started on December 1, culminated on Thursday in a high-level meeting of some 145 ministers and senior representatives and four heads of state focusing on a shared vision on fighting climate change.

(Xinhua News Agency December 12, 2008)