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APEC outlines action on climate

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  • Tentative agreement on need "to slow, stop, reverse" climate change reached
  • Thousands protest outside town hall against Iraq war and global warming
  • South Korea's Roh presses Bush to be "clearer" on Korean War stance
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SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- Pacific Rim nations reached tentative agreement on the need "to slow, stop and then reverse" climate change, setting nonbinding goals to improve energy use, according to a draft statement Saturday.

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Bush addresses the audience on Friday as Australian Prime Minister John Howard looks on.

Details of the draft emerged as President Bush and other leaders gathered at the Sydney Opera House for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit: the 21-member group must deal with the declaration before Bush departs later in the day.

The draft being considered struck a compromise between rich and developing nations. It set a target to reduce energy intensity 25 percent by 2030 -- a demand by Australia, backed by the United States.

It also affirmed that climate change negotiations should take place under U.N. auspices, a demand of China and other developing nations.

"The world needs to slow, stop and then reverse the growth of global greenhouse gas emissions," said the draft, which was obtained by The Associated Press.

A dozen blocks away -- on the other side of a 10-foot metal fence fortified by concrete barriers -- thousands protested outside Sydney's Town Hall against issues from the Iraq war to poverty and global warming. Police said two officers were injured three people were arrested, but did not provide details of the circumstances.

If Bush, Chinese President Hu Jintao and the 19 other leaders accepted the draft statement, it would mark a victory for Australia and the U.S., which have sought to persuade China and other developing nations to commit to firmer goals for combatting global warming.

"Everybody cannot get everything, but everybody did not lose too much," said Salman Al-Farisi, an Indonesian official involved in the talks that drafted the agreement.

APEC includes four of the largest emitters of greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming -- the U.S., China, Russia and Japan -- so an agreement could potentially affect the wider international debate on addressing climate change.

The draft statement included two goals that Australia wanted APEC to agree on. It called for the reduction of "energy intensity" -- the amount of energy needed to produce economic growth -- and increasing forest cover in the region by at least 50 million acres by 2020. Forests help absorb the greenhouse gases that cause global warming.

Both goals are nonbinding in keeping with APEC's voluntary, consensus-based approach.

"We support a flexible arrangement that recognizes diverse approaches," the draft said.

In a concession to developing countries, the statement recognizes "common but differentiated responsibilities" in combating climate change. The phrase means richer nations will have to bear more of the financial costs and other burdens in cutting carbon emissions.

The draft calls for laying the groundwork for a new climate change agreement to replace the U.N.-backed Kyoto Protocol when it expires in 2012. A series of meetings on a Kyoto successor will take place in coming months, including U.N. meeting in Bali in December.

Bush and Australian Prime Minister John Howard hoped an APEC agreement would bring a new international consensus on global warming. The U.S. and Australia refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol in part because it exempted developing nations from stringent emissions targets imposed on industrialized countries.

Aside from climate change, the APEC leaders were expected to issue a statement urging a renewed push in stalled global trade talks.

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On the sidelines of the summit, Bush debated Russian President Vladimir Putin on missile defense and held a testy exchange with South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun on forging a peace treaty to formally end the Korean War.

Bush, Howard and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe held a three-way meeting Saturday on security issues. China had criticized the meeting, fearing encirclement. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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