TOYAKO: If this year’s G-8 summit achieved anything, it was to reinforce two truisms: the problems of the age, such as global warming, are extraordinarily complex and the Group of Eight alone cannot resolve them.

Viewed in that light, it was always unrealistic to expect the G-8 to pull a rabbit out of the hat and miraculously settle the summit’s main issue how to curb greenhouse gas emissions that scientists say are warming the planet to dangerously high levels.

As such, it’s a good bet that the 2009 meeting will rehash the same arguments on climate change that dominated the three days of talks that ended on Wednesday on the verdant northern Japanese island of Hokkaido.

That is especially the case as the next G-8 summit, in Italy, will be a year closer to the December 2009 UN conference in Copenhagen that, negotiators hope, will agree on a pact to replace the Kyoto Protocol that expires in 2012. Why show your hand before you have to?

But that does not mean this summit was a waste of time. The main job of the G-8 is to send out strong political signals, not to sign deals. So Japan’s taxpayers will have to wait for Copenhagen to see whether the $560 million their government stumped up to stage the summit was well spent.

“An expression of strong political will from 16 leaders this will surely be a strong force to push UN negotiations forward,” Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda said.

True, the G-8’s commitment to work towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 50 per cent by 2050 fell short of what green activists wanted. But they were never going to be satisfied.

True, G-8 leaders did not set numerical interim goals that would convince voters they might be serious about meeting targets decades hence when they will be out of office and in the grave.

And true, eight other big polluters invited to the last day of the talks adding up to the 16 to which Fukuda referred did not sign up for the aspirational 2050 goal.

But politics is the art of the possible, and analysts said getting US President George W. Bush to back the mid-century target marked a tangible success for the summit host.

“You can say it’s a problem, a challenge or a reality of the international political landscape that we have that these talks have to sometimes work on the lowest common denominator. And the lowest common denominator in the G-8 is the United States,” said Marthinus van Schalkwyk, South Africa’s environment minister.

TIME FOR A BIGGER G-8?: With Washington having budged and with the G-8 agreeing that they need to set ambitious mid-term goals for emission cuts, the outline of a deal in Copenhagen is taking shape.

Rich countries would shoulder most of the burden of cutting carbon pollution, while developing countries would make less ambitious commitments and would get a lot of financial and technological aid from the West to help them meet their goals.

Sketching the contours of a Copenhagen consensus is not to minimise the political obstacles that will have to be overcome.

Even in one-party states, leaders are loathe to make promises that might imperil growth.

“China’s central task now is to develop the economy and make life better for the people,” said President Hu Jintao of China, which relies on coal for more than 70 per cent of its energy.

Poorer countries have genuine concerns that they will take longer to escape poverty if they are forced to curb pollution.

“The imperative for our accelerated growth is even more urgent when we consider the disproportionate impact of climate change on us as a developing country,” said Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who joined Hu at Wednesday’s talks.

Trading off growth today for uncertain benefits tomorrow is hard enough for any one country. When more than 100 nations are involved, the task is next to impossible: witness the seven long years of haggling in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) to try to agree a new round of tariff cuts and market-opening measures.

Hence the attractiveness of a reasonably representative spearhead group to do the main horse-trading: 35 or so trade ministers will meet in Geneva on July 21 to seek a breakthrough in the WTO talks, while Wednesday’s “Major Economies Meeting” brought together countries that account for 80 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The G-8 is not about to wither away. Japan, for one, without a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, treasures the prestige of being at the top table.

“We don’t see any need to expand the G-8 membership,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Kazuo Kodama said. “We believe that the current size and format are meaningful enough to discuss all these issues.”

The US also restated its opposition to revamping the G-8 as did Chancellor Angela Merkel.

“I can’t say whether in two, five or 15 years we’ll be together in a bigger group,” she said.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, a former French finance minister who now heads the International Monetary Fund, said an overhaul of a group that first met in 1975 was only a question of time.

“I have no doubt that, I don’t know when but in the near future, G-8 will be extended,” he said.

—Reuters

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