Add Comment on:
With Copenhagen Summit Approaching, Leading Polluters U.S. and China Undercut Hopes of Substantial Pollution Cuts
Wednesday, September 23, 2009 :World leaders gathered at the United Nations on Tuesday for a one-day global summit on climate change. But with little on specifics and emerging signs the world's biggest polluters will try to determine their own emissions reductions, poorer nations most threatened by global warming are warning they're being left behind. We speak with award-winning New York Times reporter Andy Revkin, environmental activist Ted Glick, and Anna Pinto, an indigenous rights activist from India who's traveled to Pittsburgh to call on G20 leaders to tackle global warming.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009 :World leaders gathered at the United Nations on Tuesday for a one-day global summit on climate change. But with little on specifics and emerging signs the world's biggest polluters will try to determine their own emissions reductions, poorer nations most threatened by global warming are warning they're being left behind. We speak with award-winning New York Times reporter Andy Revkin, environmental activist Ted Glick, and Anna Pinto, an indigenous rights activist from India who's traveled to Pittsburgh to call on G20 leaders to tackle global warming.
×
Previews not available for media files.
Short description of the image used by screen readers.
Guidelines for commenting on news articles:
Thanks for contributing to Indybay's open publishing newswire. You may use any format for your response, from traditional academic discourse to subjective personal account. Please, keep it on topic and concise. Read our editorial policy, privacy, and legal statements before continuing. Or go back to the article.