RADICAL
NEW AGENDA NEEDED TO ACHIEVE CLIMATE JUSTICE
Poznan statement
from the Climate Justice Now! alliance
12 December 2008
Members of Climate
Justice Now! - a worldwide alliance of more than 160 organisations
-- have been in Poznan for the past two weeks closely following developments
in the UN climate negotiations.
This statement is our assessment of the Conference of Parties (COP)
14, and articulates our principles for achieving climate justice.
THE URGENCY OF CLIMATE JUSTICE
We will not be able
to stop climate change if we don't change the neo-liberal and corporate-based
economy which stops us from achieving sustainable societies. Corporate
globalisation must be stopped.
The historical responsibility for the vast majority of greenhouse
gas emissions lies with the industrialised countries of the North.
Even though the primary responsibility of the North to reduce emissions
has been recognised in the Convention, their production and consumption
habits continue to threaten the survival of humanity and biodiversity.
It is imperative that the North urgently shifts to a low carbon economy.
At the same time in order to avoid the damaging carbon intensive model
of industrialisation, the South is entitled to resources and technology
to make this transition.
We believe that any ´shared vision´ on addressing the
climate crisis must start with climate justice and with a radical
re-thinking of the dominant development model.
Indigenous Peoples, peasant communities, fisherfolk, and especially
women in these communities, have been living harmoniously and sustainably
with the Earth for millennia. They are not only the most affected
by climate change, but also its false solutions, such as agrofuels,
mega-dams, genetic modification, tree plantations and carbon offset
schemes. Instead of market led schemes, their sustainable practices
should be seen as offering the real solutions to climate change.
UNFCCC IN CRISIS
Governments and
international institutions have to recognise that the Kyoto mechanisms
have failed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
The principles of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) - common but differentiated responsibilities, inter-generational
equity, and polluter pays -- have been undermined in favour of market
mechanisms. The three main pillars of the Kyoto agreement --the clean
development mechanism, joint implementation and emissions trading
schemes -- have been completely ineffective in reducing emissions,
yet they continue to be at the center of the negotiations.
Kyoto is based on carbon-trading mechanisms which allow Northern countries
to continue business as usual by paying for "clean development"
projects in developing and transition countries. This is a scheme
designed deliberately to allow polluters to avoid reducing emissions
domestically. Clean development mechanism projects, which are supposed
to support "sustainable development", include infrastructure
projects such as big dams and coal-fired power plants, and monoculture
tree plantations. Not only do these projects fail to reduce carbon
emissions, they accelerate the privatisation and corporate take-over
of the natural world, at the expense of local communities and Indigenous
Peoples.
Proposals on the table in Poznan are heading in the same direction.
In the current negotiations, industrialised countries continue to
act on the basis of self-interest, using all their negotiating tactics
to avoid their obligations to reduce carbon emissions, to finance
adaptation and mitigation and transfer technology to the South.
In their pursuit of growth at any cost, many Southern governments
at the talks are trading away the rights of their peoples and resources.
We remind them that a climate agreement is not a trade agreement.
The main protagonists for climate stability - Indigenous Peoples,
women, peasant and family farmers, fisherfolk, forest dependent communities,
youth, and marginalised and affected communities in the global South
and North, are systematically excluded. Despite repeated demands,
Indigenous Peoples are not recognised as an official party to the
negotiations. Neither are women's voices and gender considerations
recognised and included in the process.
At the same time,
private investors are circling the talks like vultures, swooping in
on every opportunity for creating new profits. Business and corporate
lobbyists expanded their influence and monopolized conference space
at Poznan. At least 1500 industry lobbyists were present either as
NGOs or as members of government delegations.
The Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD)
scheme could create the climate regime's largest ever loophole, giving
Northern polluters yet another opportunity to buy their way out of
emissions reductions. With no mention of biodiversity or Indigenous
Peoples' rights, this scheme might give a huge incentive for countries
to sell off their forests, expel Indigenous and peasant communities,
and transform forests into tree plantations under corporate-control.
Plantations are not forests. Privatisation and dispossession through
REDD or any other mechanisms must be stopped.
The World Bank is
attempting to carve a niche in the international climate change regime.
This is unacceptable as the Bank continues to fund polluting industries
and drive deforestation by promoting industrial logging and agrofuels.
The Bank's recently launched Climate Investment Funds goes against
government initiatives at the UN and promotes dirty industries such
as coal, while forcing developing countries into the fundamentally
unequal aid framework of donor and recipient. The World Bank Forest
Carbon Partnership Facility aiming to finance REDD through a forest
carbon mechanism serves the interest of private companies and opens
the path for commodification of forests.
These developments are to be expected. Market ideology has totally
infiltrated the climate talks, and the UNFCCC negotiations are now
like trade fairs hawking investment opportunities.
THE REAL SOLUTIONS
Solutions to the
climate crisis will not come from industrialised countries and big
business. Effective and enduring solutions will come from those who
have protected the environment - Indigenous Peoples, women, peasant
and family farmers, fisherfolk, forest dependent communities, youth
and marginalised and affected communities in the global South and
North. These include:
· Achieving low carbon economies, without resorting to offsetting
and false solutions such as nuclear energy and 'clean coal', while
protecting the rights of those affected by the transition, especially
workers.
· Keeping fossil fuels in the ground.
· Implementing people's food and energy sovereignty.
· Guaranteeing community control of natural resources.
· Re-localisation of production and consumption, prioritising
local markets
· Full recognition of Indigenous Peoples, peasant and local
community rights,
· Democratically controlled clean renewable energy.
· Rights based resource conservation that enforces indigenous
land rights and promotes peoples sovereignty and public ownership
over energy, forests, seeds, land and water
· Ending deforestation and its underlying causes.
· Ending excessive consumption by elites in the North and in
the South.
· Massive investment in public transport
· Ensuring gender justice by recognising existing gender injustices
and involving women in decision making.
· Cancelling illegitimate debts claimed by northern governments
and IFIs. The illegitimacy of these debts is underscored by the much
greater historical, social and ecological debts owed to people of
the South.
We stand at the crossroads. We call for a radical change in direction
to put climate justice and people's rights at the centre of these
negotiations.
In the lead-up to the 2009 COP 15 at Copenhagen and beyond, the Climate
Justice Now! alliance will continue to monitor governments and to
mobilise social forces from the south and the north to achieve climate
justice.
For more information on CJN contact Nicola Bullard at n.bullard@focusweb.org
or Juana Camacho at deuda@censat.org