December 11, 2010 View all news Cancún, Mexico / Brussels, Belgium, December 11 - UN climate negotiations have ended after two weeks of negotiations in Cancún, Mexico with a weak adopted package that leaves the world further away from a just and strong agreement on tackling dangerous climate change. It's a package that has prevented collapse but has failed on the most important essential part- the substance.Friends of the Earth Europe criticises the role of industrialised rich nations, including Europe Union. The European Union didn't fulfil their promise of playing a progressive role by hiding behind inaction from other countries and using the climate negotiations to push for the expansion of carbon markets.Susann Scherbarth, climate justice campaigner for Friends of the Earth Europe said: "Justice was not done in Copenhagen - and neither was it done here in Cancún. It is a shame that we are again left with another weak agreement that could lead to catastrophe. There is a long and challenging way to go to achieve a strong and fair agreement we need. "The adopted package could put the planet on track to catastrophic temperature increases of up to 5°C. Even setting up a Green Climate Fund and recognition that current emission targets are not enough and have to be scaled up, real substance to prevent catastrophic climate change is missing. Key provisions are still in doubt - the future legal framework is unclear, deep emission cuts for rich industrialised countries are missing, it brings in the pledge and review system from Copenhagen, the World Bank has a role in managing climate finance and the push for markets and for carbon trading is not acceptable. Pushing for the expansion of carbon markets doesn't change the climate crisis. The European Union Emission Trading System (EU-ETS) is failing to deliver emission cuts and is blocking other more effective policy measures. The European Union must acknowledge its historical responsibility for causing the climate crisis and commit to binding emission reductions under the Kyoto Protocol of at least 40% by 2020, without relying on carbon offsetting. In the absence of an agreement that prevents dangerous climate change, Friends of the Earth Europe continues to demand binding national climate legislation, which would commit countries to making annual cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.Susann Scherbarth, climate justice campaigner for Friends of the Earth Europe added: "There is one promising and motivating outcome here in Cancun. Movements for climate justice, especially from developing countries, are louder than ever. Friends of the Earth will continue to build a diverse global civil society movement to achieve climate justice, and to push for action in Europe which is now more urgent than ever." Categorised in: Climate Change