24th session of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change  -  
Issue #6 

EARTH NEGOTIATIONS BULLETIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
PUBLISHED BY THE INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR 
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (IISD) <http://www.iisd.org>

Written and edited by:

Ingrid Barnsley 
Alexis Conrad 
María Gutiérrez 
Miquel Muñoz 

Editor:

Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Director, IISD Reporting Services:

Langston James "Kimo" Goree VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Vol. 12 No. 277
Wednesday, 28 September 2005

Online at http://www.iisd.ca/climate/ipcc24/ 

IPCC-24 HIGHLIGHTS 

TUESDAY, 27 SEPTEMBER 2005

The twenty-fourth session of the IPCC met for a second day on 
Tuesday. In the morning, delegates discussed further work on 
aerosols, election procedures, and emission scenarios. In the 
afternoon, delegates considered emission scenarios, outreach, and 
procedures for admitting observer organizations to the IPCC. The 
Financial Task Team met twice to continue discussions of the IPCC 
programme and budget for 2006-08, as did a contact group on 
election procedures.

NATIONAL GREENHOUSE GAS INVENTORIES PROGRAMME

On the proposal of the NGGIP Task Force to hold a follow-up 
meeting on Emission Estimation of Aerosols Relevant to Climate 
Change (IPCC-XXIV/Doc. 9), WG I Co-Chair Solomon noted concerns, 
including: avoiding overlap with the work of WG I; ensuring that 
the NGGIP works within its mandate and that of the IPCC; and 
insufficient scientific knowledge for developing methodologies on 
aerosols. NEW ZEALAND, with AUSTRIA and HUNGARY, and opposed by 
the RUSSIAN FEDERATION, said the IPCC should defer consideration 
of further work on aerosols until the AR4 is completed. CHINA said 
aerosols should not be included in emission inventories without 
better scientific knowledge. The UK, with ARGENTINA and the US, 
suggested that the IPCC should "have a story" on aerosols, even if 
that story is the postponement of further work until after the AR4. 

NGGIP Task Force Co-Chair Hiraishi said the NGGIP Task Force did 
not intend to include aerosols in the 2006 Guidelines, or to 
prepare a research programme on aerosols, rather, it wished to 
consider how its expertise could assist others with research. He 
noted that, given uncertainties about further work, the NGGIP Task 
Force proposal could be postponed. Delegates agreed to postpone 
consideration of further work until after the AR4 is completed.

ELECTION PROCEDURES

Taking up discussions from Monday, Chair Pachauri introduced 
revised draft rules of procedures for the election of the IPCC 
Bureau and any Task Force Bureau, noting that the text should not 
be seen "ab initio," bearing in mind that the language is 
consistent with other IPCC documents and has gone through 
extensive government scrutiny. On definitions, discussion centered 
on whether Bureau members are countries or persons, with 
SWITZERLAND and the RUSSIAN FEDERATION favoring reference to 
countries, while HUNGARY, CANADA, BELGIUM, the NETHERLANDS and 
SLOVENIA supported reference to persons. AUSTRIA and the US 
suggested attending to this in the rules of procedure rather than 
in the definitions.

SWITZERLAND, with HUNGARY, CANADA, NEW ZEALAND, SPAIN and KENYA, 
and opposed by CHINA, stressed the need for flexibility in 
organizing the IPCC Bureau and opposed reference to Annex C, which 
lists the composition of the IPCC Bureau and Task Force Bureau, in 
the definition of the IPCC Bureau. SWITZERLAND also opposed a 
reference to Annex C in the rules for composition of the Bureaus. 
The RUSSIAN FEDERATION stressed the need for members to have 
government support given the intergovernmental nature of the IPCC. 
The US, with HUNGARY, noted the importance of clearly defining the 
functions of a nominations committee.

During contact group discussions in the afternoon and evening, 
co-chaired by David Warrilow (UK) and Richard Odingo (Kenya), 
delegates discussed re-election procedures and a rule on cases 
where a member of the IPCC or Task Force Bureau resigns or is 
unable to complete the assigned term of office. Co-Chair Warrilow 
explained that the rule includes a "security check" insofar as the 
new member would have to be elected by the Panel. On terms of 
appointment, FRANCE, with AUSTRIA, proposed that the IPCC Bureau 
nominate a suitable replacement in cases where an IPCC member 
fails to nominate a replacement candidate or is not confirmed by 
the Panel. The US, NEW ZEALAND and CANADA, supported the right of 
an IPCC member to "withdraw support" for a national serving as a 
Bureau member while retaining the right to nominate a replacement 
candidate to that Region. Delegates agreed to extend the time 
allowed for finding a replacement from three to six months. 

On nominations, delegates supported deletion of a reference to a 
candidate's nationality, agreeing that the candidate should be 
regarded as a representative of the nominating country regardless 
of his or her nationality. 

On election procedures, many delegates supported the use of some 
WMO formulations for a nominations committee to facilitate voting 
procedures, and stressed the importance of Regions deciding on 
their candidates. Delegates also agreed on rules about the size 
and composition of the IPCC Bureau, the definition of the IPCC 
Bureau, and other outstanding issues. 

IPCC PROGRAMME AND BUDGET FOR 2006-08

The Financial Task Team (FTT) met in the morning and again in the 
evening after a brief update to plenary on its progress. In the 
morning, the Secretariat provided information on lead author, 
working group, and other meetings that were cancelled, postponed, 
or held back-to-back with other meetings, and the contribution of 
these meetings to the 2004-05 financial carryover. The FTT made 
several adjustments to the forecast budget following requests, and 
the receipt of updated information, from the TSU, the TGICA and 
the NGGIP Task Force, and in light of decisions taken at IPCC-24.

In the evening FTT meeting, the Secretariat distributed a revised 
IPCC Programme and Budget for 2006-08, which included the addition 
of a two-year position for an information officer to assist in the 
development and implementation of a communications strategy for 
the AR4. Delegates approved a draft decision on the budget for 
discussion in plenary on Wednesday and agreed that if additional 
funding for outreach were to be included in the budget, the 
request would need to come from the Panel.

FURTHER WORK OF THE IPCC ON EMISSION SCENARIOS

Chair Pachauri introduced this issue, noting the outcomes of the 
Laxemburg workshop, in particular that the IPCC should play a 
facilitating and coordinating role in the development of new 
emission scenarios. He introduced a proposal to establish a Task 
Group (IPCC-XXIV/Doc. 11), which, with regard to new emission 
scenarios, would define, inter alia: the coordination role to be 
provided by the IPCC; deliverables of the emission scenarios 
development process; the process and timeline for development of 
new scenarios; and the organizational arrangements of the IPCC's 
activities on coordinating, assessing and using scenarios. Under 
the proposal, the Task Group would present its report to IPCC-25. 

HUNGARY underlined the importance of emission scenarios beyond 
their use by the IPCC, and stressed that the IPCC's responsibility 
cannot be reduced to facilitation of the scenario development 
process. The RUSSIAN FEDERATION underscored the extent to which 
the IPCC's work depends upon scenarios. AUSTRIA, NEW ZEALAND and 
many others highlighted the need for new emission scenarios prior 
to AR5, while CHINA said new scenarios should only be considered 
after the AR4 is completed. Many delegates asked for flexibility 
in the composition of the Task Group proposed by Chair Pachauri. 
GERMANY and others expressed a preference for the IPCC to 
undertake emission scenario development, but a willingness to 
compromise on the IPCC's "coordinating and facilitating" emission 
scenario development. Supported by many, the US proposed explicit 
reference to the Laxemburg workshop in the Task Group mandate. 
BELGIUM, GREENPEACE and others emphasized the need for coherent 
assumptions and storylines, comparable scenarios, and a wide range 
of scenarios including economic, demographic and other social 
factors. AUSTRALIA cautioned against Task Group micromanagement by 
the Plenary. The UK underscored continuity with past emission 
scenarios, in order not to undermine the work upon which the AR4 
is based. EGYPT and others noted the need to involve developing 
countries. CHILE proposed that the IPCC develop methodology 
guidelines for the development of national emission scenarios, 
which would help developing countries. DENMARK stressed geo-
referencing of scenarios. SPAIN emphasized the need for temporal 
and spatial disaggregation of scenarios, and CHILE emphasized the 
relevance of regional scenarios for decision makers. KENYA 
expressed worries about the ownership of scenarios developed by 
other institutions, and associated budgetary implications. 
MOROCCO, noting the risk of scenario proliferation, proposed a 
work group to clarify a procedure for preparing scenarios that 
would serve to differentiate between IPCC and non-IPCC scenarios. 
Chair Pachauri proposed to include comments from the plenary in 
the IPCC-24 report. Delegates approved this Task Force proposal.

OUTREACH

IPCC Secretary Christ presented a progress report on outreach 
activities and a consultancy report entitled Framework 
Communications Strategy for Release and Dissemination of the IPCC 
Fourth Assessment Report. She noted the new IPCC web site could be 
online before the close of IPCC-24. 

Many delegates highlighted the importance of disseminating IPCC 
information to the broadest possible audience. The NETHERLANDS, 
with support from many others, cited the need to engage developing 
countries. UGANDA and NIGERIA added that non-electronic forms of 
communication should also be used when distributing documents to 
many developing countries. In response to comments by SWEDEN and 
FINLAND on their translation of IPCC documents into their own 
languages, IPCC Secretary Christ urged countries to share such 
translations with the IPCC Secretariat.

CANADA, with ARGENTINA, FRANCE and others, stressed the need for 
the IPCC to use international events to disseminate information, 
and for individual governments to disseminate information 
nationally. The US, with SWITZERLAND and ARGENTINA, cautioned that 
outreach activities must not become marketing mechanisms, as that 
would extend beyond the IPCC's role. FRANCE, BELGIUM, and Chair 
Pachauri spoke against the release of any products prior to IPCC 
approval.

Delegates agreed that the Outreach Task Group would begin meeting 
again. Chair Pachauri asked John Stone and Lucka Kajfez-Bogataj 
(Slovenia) to co-chair the Task Group, and invited Austria, South 
Africa, New Zealand, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Chile, Costa Rica, 
Belgium, and any other interested parties to participate. The 
first meeting of the Task Group is scheduled for Wednesday morning.

PROCEDURAL MATTERS

IPCC Secretary Christ introduced a proposal for a Policy and 
Process for Admitting Observer Organizations to the IPCC 
(IPCC-XXIV/Doc.10). The NETHERLANDS suggested including several 
additional conditions for admitting organizations. CHINA said the 
policy must be consistent with the principles of the IPCC, and 
proposed establishing a work group on the issue. HUNGARY, the US, 
AUSTRIA and SWITZERLAND emphasized the role of observer 
organizations in facilitating transparency and confidence in 
organizations. Deliberations will continue in plenary on 
Wednesday.

IN THE CORRIDORS

Several delegates noted that disagreements regarding election 
procedures seemed to reflect diverging views of the IPCC's dual 
roles as a scientific and an intergovernmental body. One observer, 
noting the polarized positions on election procedures, expressed 
pessimism about whether the issue would be resolved at IPCC-24. 
>From the reported success of an evening contact group on the 
issue, he could prove to be wrong.

ENB SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS: The Earth Negotiations Bulletin Summary 
and Analysis of WGIII-8 and IPCC-24 will be available on Friday, 
30 September 2005 on line: http://www.iisd.ca/climate/ipcc24




This issue of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin © <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is 
written and edited by Ingrid Barnsley, Alexis Conrad, María 
Gutiérrez, and Miquel Muñoz. The Digital Editor is Francis Dejon. 
The Editor is Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and the 
Director of IISD Reporting Services is Langston James "Kimo" Goree 
VI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. The Sustaining Donors of the Bulletin are the 
Government of the United States of America (through the Department 
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