Technology brings together a 3, 5, and 0 worlds apart: Sydney, London, and Copenhagen350.org via Flickr Creative Commons
Kicking off with thousands gathering on the steps of Sydney’s iconic Opera House, global warming protests took place around the world Saturday to mark 50 days before the U.N. climate summit.
From Asia to Europe via the Middle East, activists staged lively events addressing world leaders and to mobilize public opinion around climate issues.
Many waved placards bearing the logo 350, referring to 350 parts per million (ppm) of CO2 in the atmosphere which scientists say must not be exceeded to avoid runaway global warming.
France’s politicians received a “wake up” call from several hundred Parisians who chose clocks as their symbol.
Protesters who met in a central square had set their alarm clocks and mobile phones to ring at 12:18 p.m. in reference to the closing date of the summit, which lasts from Dec. 7-18.
The summit is considered crucial as world leaders will try to thrash out a new treaty to curb greenhouse gas emissions in place of the Kyoto Protocol which will expire in 2012.
However, Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen said Saturday that preliminary discussions are not moving fast enough for an international decision to be concluded in Copenhagen.
“It is time to give full speed to the negotiations,” Rasmussen said, adding that he wanted a legally binding international agreement to be in place by January.
There is growing concern that a treaty deal in Copenhagen could be hampered by issues including U.S. domestic politics and the problems of securing agreement between developed and developing countries.
Rasmussen underlined that progress had been made on climate issues but that these “key political questions” still had to be resolved ahead of the December meeting.
In Berlin, some 350 protesters wearing masks with the face of German Chancellor Angela Merkel came together in front of the Brandenburg Gate in the city center.
In London, more than 600 people gathered beneath the London Eye Ferris wheel by the River Thames to arrange themselves into the shape of the number five, according to organizers Campaign against Climate Change.
An aerial photograph of the event was added to pictures of a giant “three” and “zero” from around the world (photo at top).
“Hundreds of thousands of people are taking part (globally) and for us that’s so important, to have people out on the streets,” campaign activist Abi Edgar told AFP. “We want serious action on climate change and we want it now.”
Across the Thames, some 100 musicians playing trumpets, trombones, saxophones and clarinets gathered outside parliament to play the same note—an F, made by the frequency of 350 Hz—for 350 seconds, organizers said.
In the Lebanese capital Beirut hundreds of activists, many wearing snorkels, held demonstrations in key archaeological sites.
They gathered around the Roman ruins in central Beirut, in the ancient eastern city of Baalbek and along the coast, carrying placards bearing the logo 350.
“It’s not the first time Beirut will have gone under water,” Wael Hmaidan of the IndyACT group organizing Beirut’s protests said to AFP, explaining the goggle-wearing, “but this time it’s going down because of climate change, and not earthquakes.”
In Jakarta, around 100 students from the London School of Public Relations also gathered to form the symbolic number 350, coordinator Candy Tolosa said on Detik.com news website Saturday.
In central Madrid, the Spanish capital, members of the Platform Against Climate Change, grouping social organisations, ecologists and unions, acted out parodies of the “catastrophic consequences of climate change on the planet,” the Platform’s press release said.
Environmental activists in the Turkish metropolis of Istanbul staged their protest in a boat, unfurling a banner reading “Sun, wind, right now!” under the main bridge linking Asia and Europe over the Bosphorus Strait, Anatolia news agency reported.
They then sailed to the ancient Maiden’s Tower, which sits on a tiny islet in the Bosphorus, and unfurled another banner reading “Jobs, climate, justice,” the report said.
Here’s a full slideshow of the worldwide events:
Comments
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sindark Posted 7:06 pm
24 Oct 2009
Video: http://www.sindark.com/2009/10/24/fill-the-hill-2009-video/
Photos: http://www.sindark.com/2009/10/24/fill-the-hill-2009-photos/
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randino Posted 10:02 am
26 Oct 2009
Randy Cunningham
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guade00 Posted 3:55 pm
26 Oct 2009
I like the sentiment--clearly we have a serious problem facing civilization due to anthropogenic global warming. But I am not feeling the global sense of urgency beyond environmental activist circles accreting around this, the newest environmental slogan (or "meme" as Bill McKibben puts it). I hazard to guess that there were more people watching the USC vs. Oregon St. game than were participating in this event. The point, I suppose, is that we don't have time to wait the 20 years or so this slogan will take to really catch on (think Earth Day).
We've debated climate change policy since 1992 while emissions (and denial) continue to increase. The time for wholesale migration to renewables was 30 years ago. The time for carbon trading was 20 years ago. The time for a carbon tax was 10 years ago. The time for a bleak realization of the future is now.
Urge your local & national leaders to start planning for a warmer future, where water is scarce, food is harder to grow, disease is spreading, forest ecosystems are collapsing, and mass populations are on the move to more hospitable latitudes.
Oh, and have a nice day!
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swimgr11 Posted 9:50 pm
26 Oct 2009
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