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Mumbai: Australia will ask members of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation forum to formulate an emissions trading
scheme when APEC energy ministers meet this week in Melbourne.
The
meeting, however, will not discuss a formal emission trading
scheme. The deliberations would rather allow for wide
divergence of views among the 21 APEC member countries,
the Australian reported.
The
" talks on energy sustainability and the environment",
would be an important recognition that APEC cannot stand
aside from the growing world concern over climate change.
Australia''s
federal resources minister Ian Macfarlane has made it
clear that a formal emissions trading scheme is not being
discussed or even proposed but that the APEC ministers
will be taking the first steps towards a unified view
of how climate change might be handled.
Ahead
of the formal meeting, a business forum is meeting in
Darwin, Australia, to discuss the question of high energy
prices and climate change.
Executives
such as Russell Caplan from Shell, Charlie Lenegan from
Rio Tinto, Rod Eddington representing JP Morgan, Gerry
Hueston from BP and Denny Mooney from GM-H will lead sessions
in the forum.
APEC
economies will have to invest an estimated $6 trillion
in the energy sector between now and 2030 to meet rapid
growth in demand.
According
to the APEC secretariat, coal will continue to be the
major energy resource contributing to electricity generation,
with its share increasing from 44 per cent in 2002 to
53 per cent in 2030.
US,
Australia and Canada are the main proponents of technology
solutions to climate change problems.
The
business foum is expected to encourage APEC energy ministers
adopt a technology solution rather than opt for cutbacks
in consumption as the underlying platform for an APEC-wide
move on emissions abatement.
The
meeting is would discuss energy security issues, particularly
those relating to rapidly increasing demand for primary
energy from countries such as China, India and South Korea,
Macfarlane said last week.
Australia,
a major supplier of liquefied natural gas to Asian countries,
aims to become the world`s second largest energy supplier
by the end of the next decade.
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