A New Zealand proposal for how to navigate a new international agreement on climate change has won support from a leading US official.
The proposal, submitted to the UN in March, makes suggestions for handling negotiations ahead of the 2014 UN Climate Change Conference in Lima and 2015 UN Climate Change Conference in Paris.
Speaking at Yale University on Tuesday, US State Department Special Envoy for Climate Change Todd Stern praised New Zealand's proposal.
"We think the most interesting proposal on the table is New Zealand's," he said.
"There would be a legally binding obligation to submit a 'schedule' for reducing emissions, plus various legally binding provisions for accounting, reporting, review, periodic updating of the schedules, etc. But the content of the schedule itself would not be legally binding at an international level."