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Associated PressClimate Talks Head Toward Compromise Deal By CHARLES J. HANLEY
AP Special Correspondent
BALI, Indonesia (AP) -- The U.S. and Europe headed toward a compromise solution Friday at the U.N. climate conference, breaking a deadlock over how ambitious the goal should be in negotiating future cutbacks in global warming gases, the German environment minister said.
"I think the situation is good ... and we will have success in the end," Sigmar Gabriel told reporters, declining to give details of the talks. "We are sure we are able to reach an agreement." The outcome may help determine how high the planet's temperatures rise for decades to come.
In the final day of the two-week conference, delegates sparred over the wording of a conference final document until 2:30 a.m.. Drafters then retired to craft new formulations in contentious passages - most notably the European Union's suggestion of a goal of emissions reductions from 25 percent to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.
Trying to break the deadlock, Indonesia's Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar - the conference president - later proposed revised language dropping those mid-range numbers, but still reaffirming that emissions should be reduced at least by half by 2050. The U.N. climate chief, Yvo de Boer, told reporters the mid-range 25-to-40 percent was implicit - "an inevitable stop on that road" - in the 50 percent goal for midcentury.
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