LONDON - The front-line of industrial nations fighting climate change needs shaking up to reflect that outsiders such as South Korea are now richer than insiders like Russia, the U.N. climate chief said on Monday.
"It would make sense to me to revisit the current list," Yvo de Boer, the head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, told a Reuters Environment Summit.
The U.N.'s Kyoto Protocol obliges 36 industrialised countries, including Russia, the European Union, Canada and Japan, to cut their overall emissions of greenhouse gases to 5 percent below 1990 levels by 2008-12.
Other countries, ranging from relatively rich South Korea to the poorest of African states, have no emissions caps as part of policies meant to avert more heatwaves, droughts, floods and rising seas.
De Boer said he was encouraged by meetings in the United States last week that he said had shown broad global support for a new pact to fight climate change beyond 2012. "I'm much more heartened than I was a week ago," he said.
But he said the Protocol, signed in 1997 but only implemented in 2005, needed an overhaul.
"The per capita GDP (national income) of Korea is much higher than that of Russia," he said.
"I can understand that they (Russia) feel some discomfort in thinking about the Kyoto approach," he said. Russian officials had told de Boer that they were worried that any new caps under a new treaty from 2013 would cramp Russia's economic growth.
Alternatives for Russia could be less stringent targets for greater efficiency in using energy or targets for reducing the amount of carbon dioxide emitted per unit of GDP.

















