Obama says stronger than McCain on climate change

Seattle (ANTARA News) – U.S. presidential hopeful Barack Obama promised on Friday to start working on an international pact to reduce global warming if he becomes the Democratic nominee, touting his plan to reduce U.S. emissions as stronger than that of Republican front-runner John McCain.

Global warming has become a key issue in the race for the White House, with the top candidates in both political parties seeking to put a cap on greenhouse gases blamed for rising global temperatures.


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Obama, an Illinois senator who is battling New York Senator Hillary Clinton to become their party`s presidential nominee, said he would start developing the U.S. position on a pact to replace the Kyoto Protocol before the general election in November.

“I`ve been in conversations with former Vice President (Al) Gore repeatedly, and his recommendation, which I think is sound, is that you can`t wait until you are sworn into office to get started,” Obama told a news conference in Seattle.

“I think we need to start reaching out to other countries ahead of time, not because I`m presumptuous, but because there`s such a sense of urgency about this.”

Nearly 200 nations, including the United States, agreed at U.N.-led talks in December to launch negotiations on a new pact to fight global warming. But many environmentalists say real progress will only be made once President George W. Bush, who was long a global warming skeptic, leaves office.

Obama said he would not wait until January 2009, when the new president takes office, to get started.

“The moment I secure the nomination, I want to bring together experts in this area to start putting together the U.S. position … what we`re going to be doing internally, what we can agree to with other countries,” he told Reuters.

“I know that my climate change plan is stronger than John McCain`s,” Obama said, citing his intention to make industrial polluters pay for the right to emit greenhouse gases.(*)

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