Germany & US to cooperate on climate change
Germany and the United States agree to cooperate on climate change
During their meeting in Mainz on February 23
President George W. Bush and Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
agreed to pursue a program of joint actions on cleaner and
more efficient energy and climate change. They also
discussed a range of international issues in continuation of
the meeting they held in Brussels the previous
day.
Despite differing assessments of the two
governments regarding the effects of the Kyoto Protocol,
which went into effect on February 16 without US support,
Germany and the United States agreed to cooperate more
closely in undertaking practical efforts to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. Speaking at a joint press
conference after his meeting with President Bush, Schröder
referred to this as a very significant step forward.
The energy sectors of the two countries are to be modernized and the use of environmentally friendly technologies promoted. Germany and the United States want to work internationally for the prevention of climate change, among other things in partnership with the G8 countries under the Action Plan for Science and Technology for Sustainable Development.
Independent of this, the German government continues to view the Kyoto Protocol as the central framework for international efforts aimed at preventing climate change.
Chancellor Schröder and Foreign Minister Fischer met President Bush at the US military airbase in Frankfurt, accompanying him from there to Mainz for a red-carpet, honor-guard reception at the Elector's Castle, followed by political talks. Their meeting focused on the problem of global climate change as well as a range of international issues, in continuation of the meeting they held the previous day in Brussels.
Joint discussion of
divergent interests
Schröder said both
governments take the view that there is a need to discuss
international and transatlantic issues more openly and more
intensively in the NATO framework and, as such, he sees no
need to take back anything expressed in the proposal for an
alliance reform first put forward two weeks ago at the
Munich Security Conference.
He noted that differences of opinion on Iraq have been relegated to the past, adding that Germany has an interest, together with the United States, in seeing the development of a stable and democratic Iraq. He said the German government is contributing to this effort by providing debt relief for Iraq as well as training Iraqi military and police personnel in the United Arab Emirates. "We are willing to expand these efforts," Schröder announced.
President Bush praised Germany's contribution to the reconstruction of Iraq as well as its involvement in Afghanistan and in the fight against international terrorism. He referred to Germany as a partner of the United States in the pursuit of peace and freedom.
Working
for a diplomatic solution in Iran
The Iranian nuclear program was a subject of discussion in Mainz, just as it had been the previous day at the meetings held by NATO and the EU. "We share the view that the objective of getting Iran to forego nuclear weapons needs to be achieved by diplomatic means," Schröder said, adding that both sides will have to give something in the process.
President Bush noted that the diplomatic efforts had only just begun and that "Iran is not Iraq".
Schröder welcomed the fact that the American government is once again actively engaged in promoting the Middle East peace process, saying that this is an indispensable factor if the process is to succeed.
After visiting an American military base in Wiesbaden Bush flew on to Bratislava, Slovakia for a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Germany and the
United States have agreed to pursue joint actions on
cleaner and more efficient energy, development and climate
change with a view to bringing economic growth and
environmental protection into greater harmony with one
another. In a joint declaration the two sides expressed
their commitment to the objective of environmentally
friendly growth at the international level: "We are
particularly committed to working with developing countries
to help them meet their own development and poverty
reduction priorities, which requires increased access to all
forms of cleaner, more abundant, and more affordable modern
energy sources, including renewable and efficiency
technologies." The United States and Germany want to make
their own energy consumption more efficient and to modernize
heat and power production systems as much as possible. The
United States rejects the 'Kyoto Protocol', an international
agreement that considerably strengthens national commitments
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions under the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate
Change.