I love the UNFCCC's decision to "rethink" the list of haves and have-nots for a post-2012 agreement, such that Russia is preemptively given the nod that it need not fear about pressure to stay in the game. Bulgaria, which was recently bribed in (a la Russia) on the promise of selling 60 MMT to Europe — Heaven knows, they'll need them — has no business being among the "haves" and we thank them for playing, here's a lovely parting gift. Romania, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland certainly no longer need apply, either, but make way for Bermuda, the Channel Islands, San Marino…who knows, maybe the Savoy will seize the moment to make a comeback (don't forget Qatar, UAE, Kuwait and Singapore, all of whom are far richer than many of the Kyoto Parties). EU-member and Kyoto free-rider Cyprus is as wealthy as South Korea; surely we should expect them to pony up now?
Obviously this isn't a coherent argument to reshuffle the lineup. What changed? Nothing, except Russia made clear what others have known and predicted for years: they had no intention of being in the agreement should it require them to do anything other than receive wealth transfers. What a lovely, face-saving way to preemptively deal with that: naturally, being among the 155 recipient nations is precisely where they belong. But consider the thinking behind this step-down by the UNFCCC. Apparently the agreement, whose original aim was to slowly include all countries (or certainly most) is really just for a rotating bunch of about 34.
That'll teach you to grow.