China, Japan, SKorea vow to make climate talks successThe leaders of China, Japan and South Korea on Saturday said they would "work closely together" to make crucial global climate talks in Copenhagen in December a success. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao Wen Jiabao (wĕn` jyä`bou`), 1942–, Chinese political leader, b. Tianjin. Originally a geologist, he worked for the Gansu provincial geological bureau (1968–82), where he was the head of its political section, and rose to deputy , Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama Yukio Hatoyama (鳩山由紀夫 Hatoyama Yukio) (born 2 February 1947 in Tokyo) is a politician of the Democratic Party of Japan representing the 18th district of Tokyo in the House of Representatives. and South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak
Lee Myung-bak (Korean: 이명박, Hanja: 李明博, born December 19, 1941 in Hirano, Osaka, Osaka, Japan) is a former mayor of Seoul, the Republic of Korea and said they would "work closely together... to contribute to the successful achievement of the Copenhagen conference". They said that success would be based on "the establishment of an effective post-2012 international cooperation framework on climate change, consistent with the principles of the UNFCCC UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change , in particular common but differentiated responsibilities". More than 190 countries will converge in the Danish capital to try to hammer out a treaty to tackle global warming global warming, the gradual increase of the temperature of the earth's lower atmosphere as a result of the increase in greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution. that will succeed the Kyoto Protocol Kyoto Protocol: see global warming. , which expires in 2012. Rich nations have pushed emerging giants such as China and India, which had no obligations under Kyoto, to commit to binding action on reducing greenhouse gas emissions that would be in keeping with their level of development. But Beijing and other developing nations have repeatedly baulked at that request, saying industralised nations should bear the brunt of the responsibility. At global climate talks in Bangkok this week, several nations -- notably the United States, Australia and Japan -- floated proposals calling for an approach in which each country would make its own national commitments. These would be measurable and verifiable, but outside any kind of internationally enforceable compliance regime.
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