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Page last updated at 09:16 GMT, Monday, 7 September 2009 10:16 UK

Japan vows big climate change cut

Smoke billows from a metals plant in Chongqing, China, in March 2007
Climate change will be the focus of international talks in Copenhagen

Japan's next leader has promised a big cut in greenhouse gas emissions, saying he will aim for a 25% reduction by 2020 compared to 1990 levels.

Democratic Party leader Yukio Hatoyama is due to take over as prime minister on 16 September, after a resounding election victory in August.

His predecessor, Taro Aso, had pledged cuts of only 8%.

Mr Hatoyama said the plan was dependent on other nations agreeing targets at December's climate talks in Copenhagen.

ANALYSIS
Richard Black
Richard Black, BBC environment correspondent

Mr Hatoyama's target puts Japan alongside the EU in pledging substantial greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.

Japan's plan is conditional on achieving a deal at the UN summit in December, so it presents an additional "carrot" to negotiators; the new Japanese leadership has not spelled out what will happen if a deal is not reached.

The ambitious target amounts to an emissions cut of about one-third from current levels in just 11 years, in a country that already uses energy efficiently.

The new government now has some serious thinking to do about how to turn rhetoric into reality.

But Monday's announcement has already sparked resistance from Japanese business groups, and parts of the automotive industry are expected to lobby against the targets.

The BBC's Roland Buerk in Tokyo says Japanese industry believes the country should focus on emerging properly from the recession it has just been through, rather than on emissions.

Analysts say the plan, unveiled at a climate change symposium in Tokyo, is more ambitious than those of many other industrialised nations.

It won praise from the climate change chief of the UN, which is recommending developed countries commit to a 25-40% reduction by 2020.

"With such a target, Japan will take on the leadership role that industrialised countries have agreed to take in climate change abatement," Yvo de Boer, head of the UN Climate Change Secretariat, told the Tokyo forum.

Japan is the world's second-largest economy and fifth-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, which are a major contributor to global warming.

Japan's incoming Prime Minister, Yukio Hatoyama, delivers the opening speech for an environmental forum in Tokyo on 7 September 2009

We think developing countries are also required to make an effort to reduce greenhouse gases
Yukio Hatoyama
Japan's Prime Minister-elect

"As a mid-term goal, we aim at a 25% reduction by 2020 from 1990, based on the levels demanded by science to stop global warming," Mr Hatoyama told the conference.

It is envisaged that the reductions will be achieved by bringing in emissions trading, renovating housing, subsidising solar panels and introducing low-energy technologies in cars.

Without mentioning China or India by name, Mr Hatoyama said: "We think developing countries are also required to make an effort to reduce greenhouse gases, as a global effort is needed on the issue of climate change," reports AFP news agency.

December's UN-backed climate talks in Copenhagen in Denmark will try to work out a deal on reducing emissions to succeed the current Kyoto Protocol, the first phase of which ends in 2012.

Japan has been under pressure to introduce tougher policies on climate change after its emissions rose last year to 16% above the Kyoto target, which it played a leading role in agreeing in 1997.



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FROM OTHER NEWS SITES
Reuters Japan PM-elect backs 25% greenhouse gas cut - 41 mins ago
RTTNews.com Regime change heralds radical change in Japan's environmental policy - 1 hr ago
France24 JAPAN: Next PM plans drastic greenhouse gas cuts - 1 hr ago
TheStar.com.my Japan's PM-elect backs 25% greenhouse gas cut - 1 hr ago
CNBC UPDATE 2-Japan's next PM raises greenhouse gas target to 25% - 3 hrs ago



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