On the final day of a crucial negotiating round in Bonn, delegates sought help from the joint chairmen of the UN effort to compile a new, workable draft.
At the meeting's close, diplomats gave the duo, Algeria's Ahmed Djoghlaf and Daniel Reifsnyder of the United States, an official mandate to take on this.
"This document will be ready in October", Djoghlaf told journalists -- in time for the final five days of official negotiations in Bonn to prepare for the much-anticipated November 30-December 11 Paris conference to seal the deal.
"We have only 1,800 minutes (at the next meeting) to agree on the draft package for Paris," said Djoghlaf. "Every minute has value."
The existing blueprint is an 83-page behemoth with contradictory country proposals for dealing with the pressing climate threat.
Diplomats have lamented the "snail's pace" of this week's five-day haggle in Bonn, accusing one another of rehashing well-rehearsed positions and holding up the real work of point-by-point text bartering.
It is time for "direct, inclusive, and interactive negotiations" said Gurdial Singh Nijar, a Malaysian negotiator and spokesman for the Like Minded Developing Nations bloc, which includes China, India, and many African, South American, Middle Eastern and Asian countries.
"The time for talking about concepts and general chit chat is over," he added.
The Paris agreement is meant to slow the march of dangerous global warming by slashing climate-altering greenhouse gas emissions from mankind's unbridled burning of fossil fuels.
Fundamental divisions remain over how to share out carbon-emissions cuts between rich nations, which have polluted for longer, and emerging giants such as China and India powering fast-growing economies and populations.
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