POZNAN, Poland, Dec 1, 2008 (AFP) -- Green groups upped the pressure at U.N.
climate talks in Poland on Monday with wacky stunts aimed at prodding
delegates from around the world to get moving on a new deal to tackle global
warming.
The World Wildlife Fund, or WWF, welcomed the almost 11,000 participants at
the 12-day talks in Poznan by handing out walnuts and urging them to "crack
the climate nut" and overcome negotiation deadlock.
Greenpeace meanwhile unveiled a three-metre (10-foot) high sculpture
depicting the Earth on the brink of destruction from a "tidal wave" of carbon
dioxide made of wood and coal.
"So far there is still an utter lack of any kind of visionary leadership in
these talks. There are still governments that repeatedly fail to grasp the
urgency of the crisis," Greenpeace said.
"That's why we need to make ourselves heard, because the impacts of climate change are racing ahead of the scientific projections."
It also launched a video running through 20 years of speeches and "broken
promises" on climate change from the likes of former German chancellor Helmut Kohl, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italian premier Silvio Berlosconi.
The forum in Poland of the 192-member U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) comes halfway in a two-year process, launched in Bali, Indonesia, that aims at crafting a new pact in Copenhagen in December 2009.
Delegates in Poland are tasked with whittling down an 82-page document
containing a vast range of proposals for action into a workable blueprint for
negotiations culminating in a deal in the Danish capital.
Aid agency Oxfam said that climate change would "increase global poverty
and halt -- eventually reverse -- human development if governments fail to
take major steps."
Copyright 2008 -- Agence France-Presse
Sometimes You Feel Like a Nut
Greens go nuts at U.N. climate talks 1
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RisingTideNA Posted 8:05 am
01 Dec 2008
photos at: http://www.risingtidenorthamerica.org
As the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change opened today in Poznan, Poland, grassroots climate activists took over the Washington DC office of Environmental Defense. The activists stated that they had targeted ED, one of the largest environmental organizations in the world, because of the organization's key role in promoting the discredited approach of carbon trading as a solution to climate change.
Dr. Rachel Smolker of Global Justice Ecology Project and Global Forest Coalition read a statement, which said in part, "My father was one of the founders of this organization, which sadly I am now ashamed of. The Kyoto Protocol, the European Emissions Trading Scheme and virtually every other initiative for reducing emissions have adopted their market approaches. So far they have utterly failed, serving only to provide huge profits to the world's most polluting industries. Instead of protecting the environment, ED now seems primarily concerned with protecting corporate bottom lines. I can hear my father rolling over in his grave."
The activists rearranged furniture in the office, illustrating how marketing carbon is "like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic." Others held signs reading "Keep the cap, ditch the trade" and "Carbon trading is an environmental offense."
Leo Cerda, an indigenous activist with Rising Tide Ecuador said, "ED wants to turn the atmosphere and forests into private property, and then give it away to the most polluting industries in the form of pollution allowances that can be bought and sold. Not only is this an ineffective way to control emissions, it is also a disaster for the poor and indigenous peoples who are not party to these markets and are most impacted by climate change."
ED has been key in establishing the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, a business consortium advocating for a cap and trade system with extremely weak emissions reductions. US CAP allows polluters like Duke Energy, Shell, BP, DuPont, and Dow Chemical to claim they are green while continuing with business as usual. In recognition, activists awarded ED the "Corporate Greenwash Award," a three foot tall green paintbrush. "We think this award is appropriate since Environmental Defense spends more time painting polluters green than actually defending the environment," said Matt Wallace of Rising Tide North America.
Opposition to carbon trading is growing as it becomes apparent that market based schemes do little to fight climate change while helping corporations rake in profits. Earlier this year, over 50 groups came together in the US to denounce carbon trading in a Declaration Against the Use of Carbon Trading Schemes to Address Climate Change. Globally, hundreds of environmental, social justice, and indigenous groups have come together to oppose such market based initiatives as inherently unsustainable and ineffective in creating a just transition away from fossil fuels.
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