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'India's concerns on non-binding emission cuts met at Summit'

India"s concerns on non-binding emission cuts have been met at the Copenhagen summit though the climate deal does open a window for a new legal treaty that may kill Kyoto Protocol based on principle of equity, a top government climate expert said today. - Shifting the goal-posts - PM back after attending Copenhagen Summit - US, BASIC struck deal; developing nations oppose it - Australian PM says climate talks nearly collapsed - Obama lauds India for setting forth mitigation efforts - PM sticks to Kyoto Protocol Rejecting allegations that India has succumbed to US pressure at the historic meet, Rajni Ranjan Rashmi, Joint Director in Environment Ministry, maintained that the way the direction of the talks were going at the Danish capital, India was expecting nothing but equity. "And equity has been ensured by limiting temperature level to 2 degree Celsius which has been agreed by all the nations, both developing and developed nations," Rashmi, who was part of the Indian delegation at the 12-day meet, told PTI today. The official, while admitting that it was not a win- win situation for India since it was a global accord with positives and negatives in it, said "No binding commitments have been imposed upon the developing nations. This has been a major success for India as promised (by the government) in Parliament. "Also, survival of Kyoto Protocol has been ensured despite persistent attempt by the European Union to junk its mandate of equity but differentiated responsibilities," he said on the outcome of the Summit. The third major achievement for India was that it managed to avoid global emission cuts of 50 per cent by 2050 as demanded by the US and other developed nations. "Hence, while the Summit set a commitment to limit global warming to two degrees Celsius, it did not spell out the important global emission targets for 2020 or 2050 that are the key to holding down temperatures," he said.


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