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Science

UN climate talks at crossroads on how to fight global warming

About 190 nations were at a crossroads about how boldly to combat global warming on the final day of United Nations talks in Lima on Friday amid fears that low ambition could undermine a UN climate summit in Paris next year.

Delegates from about 190 nations meeting in Lima, Peru

Smokestack coming out of a chimney.
About 190 nations met in Lima, Peru, for United Nations talks on how to combat global warming. On the 12th and final day, talks are expected to run overnight into Saturday. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

About 190 nations were at a crossroads about how boldly to combat global warming on the final day of United Nations talks in Lima on Friday amid fears that low ambition could undermine a UNclimate summit in Paris next year.

The Dec. 1-12 talks, which opened with hopes for new momentum after a climate deal between China and the United States last month, focused on the scope of pledges that countries are due to make early next year to tackle warming.

Those national pledges, due by an informal deadline of March 31, 2015, will be the building blocks of a global deal to be agreed in Paris in December 2015 and meant as a step toward reversing rising world greenhouse gas emissions.

Options discussed in Lima range from obliging nations to publish a vague outline of their carbon plans on a UNwebsite to making all provide detailed projections in tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions that will be reviewed by experts.

"There's the good, the bad and the ugly," said Alden Meyer, of the Union of Concerned Scientists, who said "ugly" would mean only vague action and "good" would be detailed accounts. Delegates say the talks may well run overnight into Saturday.

Warmest year on record expected for 2014

Under the deal announced with the United States, China has promised its emissions will peak around 2030, for instance, but may not give the exact numbers and opposes the idea of a review by other countries.

The United States favours a review but is not insisting that countries should be willing to toughen their plans if challenged. The European Union and many developing nations want detailed accounting by all and a strong review.

Leaders who are in office today won't be accountable.- Samantha Smith, of the WWF conservation group

"We have agreed to find the balance between the several options," German Environment Minister Barbara Hendriks said.

This year is set to be the warmest on record, and scenarios by a UNpanel of scientists indicate that the world should get on track to slash emissions to a net zero before 2100.

Marlene Moses of Nauru, chair of the Alliance of Small Island States, which fears rising sea levels, criticized China's reluctance to give full information.

She said that China was saying: "'We'll show you our cards but don't read them'. ... We are being asked to sign on to an agreement that puts us underwater. That's not fair to us."

Samantha Smith of the WWF conservation group said there was a rising risk of only weak action since the Paris accord is due to enter into force only from 2020.

"Leaders who are in office today won't be accountable," she said.