Climate Change

 

Climate Change Convention:
Sinks that stink

Selection of articles published in the WRM's Bulletin on the issue of climate change.

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About this book                             

This book includes a selection of articles --organized chronologically under several headings-- published in the World Rainforest Movement's (WRM) Bulletin on the issue of climate change. It focuses on how the problem is being dealt with by the international community --particularly at the level of the Convention on Climate Change-- as well as on the impacts that both the problem and the envisaged solutions have or may have on local communities and on the future of our Planet.

The level of detail and analysis greatly varies from article to article due to the bulletin's character, which aims at being a useful tool both to people and organizations working at the local level and to those who work at the international level. In spite of that, we decided not to omit any article, in the belief that all of them can help to raise awareness on an issue such as this, of vital importance for the survival of humanity as a whole.

The authorship of the book is shared by Ricardo Carrere and Alvaro González (from WRM's International Secretariat) and by the numerous people and organizations which either sent us articles or relevant information to produce them, a list of whom is included separately. We wish to particularly thank Larry Lohmann for his very useful comments and suggestions which greatly improved many of the Bulletin's editorial and analytical articles. The WRM assumes responsibility over the mistakes that might have been made.

Sources              

Individuals: Adam Burling; Andrew C. Revkin; E. Melloni & A. Galvao; Federico Parapar; Fred Pearce; Harald Eraker; Javier Baltodano; Jaya Ramachandran; Jorn Stave; Larry Lohmann; Mario Rautner; Miguel Rentería; Nelson Francisco; Nihon Keizai; Shahid Naeem, Lindsey J. Thompson, Sharon P. Lawler, John H. Lawton & Richard M. Woodfin; Steve Bernow, Sivan Kartha, Michael Lazarus, and Tom Page; Tadashi Ogura; Tim Keating; Yuri Onodera. Organizations: Australian Broadcasting Company; CIMI; CLAES; Coecoceiba, Friends of the Earth - Costa Rica; Foro del Buen Ayre; Friends of the Earth Japan; Greenpeace International; Greenpeace New Zealand; IIASA; IPS; Japan Tropical Forest Action Network (JATAN); Native Forests Network, Tasmania; NorWatch; Rainforest Relief; Red por una América Latina Libre de Transgénicos; Republic of Uganda, Forest Department; Tellus Institute and Stockholm Environment Institute-Boston Center; Woods Hole Research Center. Publications: Christian Science Monitor; Ecología y Negocios; Estado de Sao Paulo; FAO Forestry paper No. 124) January 1999; IPS; http://users.ox.ac.uk/~dops0022/conference/forest_biotech99_home.html; http://www.worldbank.org/pics/pid/ar6040.txt; Information Bulletin for the Buenos Aires Conference; Inside China Daily; Jornal da Tarde; Nature; New Scientist magazine; New York Times; Resenha Ambiental Ecopress; Sydney Morning Herald.

 

Presentation                                                    

The sixth Conference of the Parties of the Convention on Climate Change will take place in November in The Hague, The Netherlands. The public at large, increasingly concerned over the present and future effects of climate change, may well expect as a matter of course that their governments will have the good sense to take constructive action to solve the problem. Among those of us who have been participating in this international process, however, expectations are somewhat different.

The fact is that this Convention appears to be going in the wrong direction and many of those participating seem to be quite happy about that. It has in fact become a negotiation more concerned with how much money each country thinks it might save or grab in the short term that about finding true solutions to a real problem.

To cut or not to cut emissions? Amazingly enough, that does not seem to be the question. For all it seems quite clear that cutting emissions is a need. However, most of the major emitters and oil-producing countries are trying to find ways to avoid doing what they know needs to be done, telling themselves that this will somehow save them money.

The promise of short-term money is also increasingly a factor for many Southern delegations. Three years ago, prior to the Kyoto climate meeting in 1997, one African climate-change negotiator angrily told a Northern-country representative that "our countries are not toilets for your emissions!" Yet today, many Southern countries are going out of their way actually to offer themselves as such "toilets" in order to gain a few dollars, renting or selling their countries' lands and forests to act as supposed carbon sinks for the emissions that Northern countries will continue sending to the atmosphere. The fact that this particular sewage system won't work, and that the resulting climate change is having increasingly serious effects on their people, ecosystems and economies, is seldom mentioned.

The upshot is that the current round of climate negotiations are focused on carbon sinks and not on carbon emissions reductions, equal rights to the atmosphere, and the adoption of clean, renewable and low-impact energy -- which is what they should be about.

Government delegates bewitched by false economics, not surprisingly, are backed by many businesses. The Climate Convention has the peculiarity of having a number of active participants lobbying under the name "Business NGOs". Believe it or not, the room they occupy even bears that name. Among others, the nuclear "business community" is active in the talks, trying to sell its "clean" energy to save the planet. More unexpectedly, even some environmental NGOs appear to be playing the carbon sinks game and are willing to receive carbon money for forest conservation and rehabilitation.

On the positive side, there is a large representation of NGOs and indigenous peoples organizations trying to make governments change course in The Hague. This could well come to pass if people in all countries of the world were to put sufficient pressure on their governments and on the conference delegates. That means making people aware of what's happening, organizing pressure on governments and bringing that pressure to bear at The Hague. Without that pressure, it is all too clear what the outcome in November will be.

Within such context, we hope that this book may be a positive contribution for changing course in the upcoming negotiations and that these will finally create the necessary conditions to avoid the environmental and social catastrophe to which otherwise humanity would be condemned to. 

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