Police and workers battle in South Korea

South Korean workers approach a police line.
Seoul, South Korea, Nov. 12— Some 100 people were injured
Sunday when thousands of angry South Korean union activists
battled riot police in the most violent labor protest this year.
The riot erupted when thousands of police using shields formed
human barricades across a major street in central Seoul to stop
a march by 20,000 workers chanting “No layoffs!”
The workers used trucks, rocks, steel pipes and fireworks in
attempts to break through a police blockade. Police wearing
black helmets and bullet-proof vests fought back with truncheons.
The fight was led by about 2,000 activists wearing red mufflers
and white helmets. Some 20 cars were destroyed during a close
battle along a sprawling downtown shopping district.
Three protesters carrying a one-meter-high gas can rushed towards
a police blockade, threatening to burst it, as dozens of fellow
workers were severely beaten by riot police.
Police said 50 officers were injured, while unions claimed
the same number of injuries.
The
protesters chanted “Down with (President) Kim Dae-Jung,” blasting
his reform crusade to “bolster” South Korea’s “industrial competitiveness”
through the closure of debt-stricken banks and firms.
Last month, Daewoo Motor Co., the country’s second largest
carmaker plagued by snowballing debts, was declared bankrupt,
forcing the company to file for receivership.
Daweoo Motor’s bankruptcy and the closure of other non-viable
firms sparked a wave of labor protests, with unions claiming
200,000 people could be thrown out of work on top of 800,000
already laid off in the past two years.
Sunday’s battle lasted for several hours. After night fell,
the protesters occupied a key intersection by pushing away police.
“Fight back,” shouted union leaders through loudspeakers as
protesters in back rows chanted slogans to the tune of traditional
gongs and drums.
At an earlier rally, union leader Dan Byong-Ho challenged the
president to stop his reform crusade or face “an all-out anti-government
struggle.”
“We oppose the government’s unilateral restructuring drive,
which forces just workers to make sacrifices,” Dan said in a
speech.
Workers waved placards and flags in a demonstration of approval
when the head of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU)
suggested a nationwide strike in early December.
The protesters called for the nationalization of Daewoo Motor,
which suffered a 879 million dollar loss in the first half of
this year alone despite an injection of money from creditors
since August 1999.
The bankruptcy forced a suspension of work at Daewoo Motor’s
main production lines west of Seoul.
The KCTU also threw its support behind workers at 11 construction
firms, which have been ordered to close, although the government
delayed action against Hyundai Engineering and Construction
Co., the country’s largest civil engineering firm.
Hyundai Engineering, a flagship of the giant Hyundai Group,
is under pressure to present a drastic reform package or face
bankrupcty. The construction company, which employs about 100,000
people through staff and sub-contractors, is fighting about
five billion dollars of debt due by the end of the year.
Construction industry unions have warned of an indefinite
strike starting November 29.
Source: Agence France Presse
US may derail climate change negotiations
An anti-nuclear protester at the
sixth session of the UN
framework Convention on Climate Change Nov. 13
By Cat Lazaroff
The Hague, The Netherlands, Nov. 14 (ENS)— The United
States has taken a tough stance regarding the compromises it
is willing to make in this week’s international climate change
negotiations in the Netherlands. The US position threatens to
alienate the support of some environmental groups, which could
be crucial to the successful implementation of the agreement.
Environmental officials from about 160 governments are represented
at the sixth session of the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which opened Monday at The Hague.
The negotiators are working out last minute details regarding
how the convention, also known as the Kyoto Protocol, will be
implemented and enforced.
A major sticking point will be the differences in opinion
between the United States (US) and European Union (EU) on which
mechanisms should be used to reduce emissions of global warming
gases such as carbon dioxide.
At least 15 EU countries pledged last week to present a united
front in support of strong, enforceable rules for compliance
with the emissions reductions goals set by the convention. Specifically,
these countries want participating nations to agree to real,
verifiable cuts in actual greenhouse gas emissions from factories,
utilities, vehicles and other sources.
The US, along with Canada, Australia, Japan and Norway, is
pushing for a variety of controversial methods that US negotiators
claim could prove just as useful in reducing the impact of greenhouse
gases on the environment.
But some scientists and many environmentalists say the mechanisms
supported by the US - the largest single national source of
greenhouse gases on the planet - would not reduce greenhouse
gas emissions, and could, in some cases, even make the problem
of global warming worse.
Last week, a coalition of four national and international environmental
groups released a report, “Legacy of Loopholes,” that is strongly
critical of the US position.
The report warns that US supported mechanisms, such as emissions
trading, carbon sinks and the so-called Clean Development Mechanism,
could hamper efforts to combat global warming and to garner
international support for the final climate change treaty.
“People around the world want their leader in The Hague to
bring home real reductions in carbon pollution - not paper cuts
with paper tons,” said Jennifer Morgan, director of the World
Wildlife Fund’s climate change campaign. The World Wildlife
Fund, one of the authors of the report, is urging US President
Bill Clinton to “bring home a treaty that cuts global warming
pollution in the US”
The report analyzes three “loopholes”:
The Kyoto Protocol contains a provision for international trading
of tons of greenhouse gases to reduce the costs of reducing
global warming pollution. Under this mechanism, nations that
meet their emissions goals earlier than required under the treaty
could sell “credits” to nations that are having trouble meeting
their deadlines.
US Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs Frank Loy, who
heads the US delegation at the climate talks, testified before
the US Senate earlier this year that one of the Clinton administration’s
main goals is to make sure that the final agreement is cost
effective.
That is why US negotiators have insisted on inclusion of market
based mechanisms such as emissions trading, Loy said.
Loy said that a well designed emissions trading system will
“cut the cost of reducing greenhouse gases by allowing the marketplace
to identify the most cost effective reductions, thereby making
efficient use of limited global resources.”
The US and some other nations support so called “hot air trading,”
which would allow Russia and other former Soviet states to sell
emissions credits that they have accumulated because their economic
collapse has drastically reduced their fossil fuel use. The
US could therefore delay its own emissions cuts by buying credits
from a country that has not taken any concrete steps to make
long term reductions in pollution.
The US hopes to achieve about 34 percent of its required emissions
reductions through emissions trading.
Forests and other ecosystems are reservoirs, or sinks, for
carbon dioxide (CO2), which they absorb as they grow. The US
hopes to meet as much as 36 percent of its emissions cuts through
reforestation projects at home and overseas.
Last week, environmental groups released two reports indicating
that carbon sinks could, in some cases, even increase the amount
of CO2 in the atmosphere. Mature, old growth forests - which
absorb less CO2 than growing vegetation - could be threatened
by the drive to plant fast growing, plantation style trees to
mop up CO2.
But many scientists now say these carbon sinks do not remove
enough carbon from the atmosphere to compensate for actual US
emissions. In addition, forests will release their stored carbon
if they are damaged by fires, drought, insect infestation or
other natural problems.
A US State Department report submitted to the United Nations
calculates that about 300 million metric tons of carbon dioxide
is absorbed annually in US forests and in soil used for crops
and livestock grazing. US negotiators say this carbon sink accounts
for almost half of the annual carbon emissions reductions the
nation would be expected to make beginning in 2008 under the
treaty.
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) allows industrialized
countries to meet some of their emissions targets by investing
in emissions reduction projects in developing countries. The
US advocates rules that could promote environmentally unsound
technologies, such as large scale hydroelectric and nuclear
power.
The US, which hopes to meet about 14 percent of emissions reductions
through the CDM, seeks credit for its support of many projects
that are already planned or underway - projects that the developing
countries would undertake despite the US need for credits.
With such rules, critics say the CDM would fail to promote
distributed renewable energy, energy efficiency and reductions
in pollution from burning coal and other fossil fuels.
These three loopholes could account for as much as 84 percent
of the total 500 to 600 million metric tons of carbon that the
US needs to reduce to meet its treaty target of a seven percent
reduction of its 1990 emissions levels.
US could slip extra emissions through loopholes
If the US gets its way, environmental groups charge that greenhouse
gas emissions in the US could increase by 18 percent from 1990
levels - while still technically meeting its reduction targets.
“Accounting gimmicks may fool bureaucrats, but they will not
fool Mother Nature,” said Alden Meyer, director of government
relations for the Union of Concerned Scientists. “The climate
treaty must make real cuts of real pollution or the severe storms
and other impacts that we are already starting to see will only
get worse.”
In an address broadcast over the Internet on Saturday, President
Clinton called for a comprehensive new clean air strategy to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions from US power plants. The President
also announced the completion of the first comprehensive assessment
of the potential impacts of climate change across the US, (available
online at: http://www.gcrio.org/NationalAssessment).
Clinton called for national emissions standards for four pollutants,
including carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and
mercury. Electricity generation is the largest source of air
pollution in the US, releasing more than two thirds of the nation’s
sulfur dioxide, and about one third of carbon dioxide, nitrogen
oxides and mercury emissions.
These standards would be met in part by emissions trading among
US utilities, the president said.
Clinton also reiterated his opposition to any restrictions
on international emissions trading under the Kyoto Protocol,
and his support for carbon sinks and the Clean Development Mechanism.
Regardless of the final form that the Kyoto Protocol takes,
the US Senate may still oppose ratification of the treaty. Although
the US has signed the treaty, it cannot take effect until it
is ratified by a majority of the countries responsible for most
of the world’s greenhouse gas pollution - including the US.
Senator Chuck Hagel, a Nebraska Republican, said the newly
divided Senate, which the recent elections left split between
Democrats and Republicans, will not “even come close” to ratifying
the accord.
In an interview with James Glassman released Monday on Tech
Central Station, Senator Hagel said there is no way that the
treaty will be approved by the required two-thirds majority
of the Senate.
“I don’t see how ... the United States Senate, even in its
closely divided form, even come(s) close to ratifying this treaty,”
said Hagel, who will be attending the meetings in The Hague
in his capacity as chair of the Senate Climate Change Observer
Group. “Under no conditions do I see this Kyoto Protocol - and
I think [Vice President Al] Gore would agree with this - even
come close to getting 67 votes in the United States Senate.
I mean, that is not even debatable.”
Without Senate ratification, the Kyoto Protocol would be essentially
unenforceable in the US - particularly if its final form contains
so many loopholes that the treaty loses the support of the environmental
groups that have been the agreement’s strongest proponents.
“The US is the world’s biggest global warming polluter and
is shirking our responsibility to cut our pollution,” said Daniel
Becker, director of the Sierra Club’s Global Warming and Energy
Program.
“The US should not be allowed to pollute more because our forests
absorb some of the carbon pollution we emit.” “The US must act
now to cut our auto and power plant emissions to become the
world’s leader in cutting our global warming pollution,” Becker
concluded, “instead of the world leader in creative accounting
and passing the buck.”
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