Brazil Rejects Bush Climate Proposal US plan not a viable alternative to Kyoto accord, says Lula By Ben Worthen Posted Jun 4, 2007 6:19 AM CDT Copied Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, left, watches as President Bush talks with reporters during a joint news conference at Camp David, Md., Saturday, March 31, 2007. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) (Associated Press) Brazil's president bluntly dismissed the climate-change plan offered by George Bush last week as "voluntarism" in a situation where "multinationalism" is needed. Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, whose fast-developing country is critical to any international deal on emissions cuts, said the proposal for a new international framework was a ruse to sidestep the UN, Lula joins a long list of world leaders who have rejected the Bush proposal. "I cannot accept the idea that we have to build another group to discuss the same issues that were discussed in Kyoto and not fulfilled," Lula said. In the wind-up to the G8 summit in Germany this week, only Tony Blair has hailed the Bush plan. Read These Next Six federal prosecutors quit in Minnesota. Dilbert creator Scott Adams has died. GoFundMe for ICE agent in Minneapolis shooting gets a big donor. Actor accused of child sex abuse has turned himself in. Report an error