Australia: Climate Change to Hot for Bush and Howard
The ice sculptures (watch video)were made for Make Poverty History – a coalition of more than 60 aid agencies, community groups and religious organisations – to highlight its report on 'APEC: An End to Extreme Poverty – An Alternative APEC Agenda.' (PDF 1.1MB)
Make Poverty History co-chair, Andrew Hewett, said climate change is not simply an environmental or economic challenge. “It is a moral challenge, because those least responsible for causing the problem – the poorest people in the poorest countries of the world – will overwhelmingly pay the highest price as climate change begins to bite,” he said. “If Australia is serious about being a global leader as chair of APEC, we must do three things. First, join the rest of the international community in ratifying the Kyoto Protocol. Second, commit to deep cuts in greenhouse pollution. And third support the efforts of our neighbours and developing country partners in APEC to adapt to climate change and reduce poverty in an environmentally sustainable way.”
“It is clear that climate change is affecting the lives of the poorest people in our world. The monsoon season in our region and in South Asia has become shorter and more intense over the last decade, and so we can expect to see more people displaced by the kind of flooding we see right now in India, Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. Crops are failing in the face of increasing temperatures and changing rainfall patterns. Millions of the poorest people in sub-Saharan Africa face water shortages. And sea level rise could potentially displace millions of people from small island nations in the Pacific, and low-lying coastal countries, over the next few decades.” “If we don’t get serious about tackling climate change, we won’t be talking about making poverty history, we’ll be making it permanent,” said Mr Hewett.
Australia and the US are the only two APEC countries that have not ratified the Kyoto Protocol. On a per capita basis, these countries are the largest APEC emitters of the greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide. Each year, Australians emit 18.8 tonnes of CO2 and Americans emit 20 tonnes per person. Developing country members of APEC have a much smaller climate impact. China’s per capita emissions of CO2 is 3.19 tonnes per year, while Vietnam’s is only 0.93 tonnes.
“Climate change is expected to substantially reduce freshwater availability in much of Asia, leading to widespread malnutrition and adversely affecting more than a billion people by the 2050s. In other places, more frequent flooding will lead to a large increase in deaths from diarrhoea and cholera,” warned Make Poverty History Co-Chair, Tim Costello.
“With projections that higher sea levels, floods and droughts could displace tens of millions of people, there is a risk of exacerbating tensions between different communities, precipitating territorial disputes and generating new waves of refugees. Put simply, if APEC takes its role to promote regional prosperity seriously, it must take swift, unified action to substantially reduce emissions and avert the worst effects of climate change.” Said Costello
Make Poverty History’s report further calls on APEC to adopt a poverty-reduction focus to its discussions of trade, human security and climate change.
Sources:
- Make Poverty History Media Release 6 Sep 2007 - Bush and Howard melting under climate change
- Make Poverty History Media Release 3 Sep 2007 - Risk of conflict, natural disasters and disease if APEC fails to act on climate change
- Youtube video by GreenpeaceAustralia, 6 Sep 2007 - Ice Sculptures
In order to be an intelligent reader you must have a basic knowledge. Please do your own homework, a starting point http://www.InteliOrg.com/
We've teamed up with Australian allies GetUp to create spectacles in Sydney, the climate-endangered Great Barrier Reef and around the world—heading off an "Axis of Global Warming" through a media firestorm, and sending our petition to key leaders. Can you help us break the half-million barrier this weekend? You've already signed the petition, but you can help by forwarding this email to five more friends to ask them to add their voices:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/apec_petition/i.php
Over 400,000 people have already signed, and on Friday we're launching a massive 144-square metre floating canvas "target" at Sydney's iconic Bondi Beach where it will be taken out to sea by surfers. Next stop, Saturday, swimmers will float this banner over the Great Barrier Reef -- which current predictions suggest will be killed off by climate change before 2030. Thousands of people from every continent have joined in by uploading climate target pictures of their own.
George Bush of the US and Australia's John Howard are seeking to derail our efforts for a new global climate deal, and to convert the waverers. But both are lagging behind their publics, with elections expected soon. We need to reinforce the efforts of leaders like New Zealand's Prime Minister Helen Clark, whose chief of staff has confirmed to Avaaz she will be working for binding targets at APEC. Let's win over the undecided countries, and add hundreds of thousands more voices round the world: only binding targets can prevent a climate disaster.
http://www.avaaz.org/en/apec_petition/i.php
The APEC summit isn't just a talk-shop. It's the kick-off to a string of top-level meetings in the coming months, all leading up to a landmark conference in Bali, Indonesia which will begin to write the next Kyoto Protocol. What happens in Australia could set the direction, for good or bad. But thanks to the worldwide movement that has been growing all year--from the G8 to Live Earth--we now have a real chance to shape the outcome.
Scientists agree, now is humanity's window of opportunity to stop a climate catastrophe. The world can't afford to miss this chance -- so please, spread the word today.
With hope,
Ben, Ricken, Iain, Graziela, Galit, Paul, and the Avaaz team
PS: Here are some links for more information on the issue of climate change at APEC, as well as the Summit's implications for the rest of the world:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/09/03/africa/apec.php
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6976617.stm
http://www.avaaz.org/blog/en/
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