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On the move: Species face race against climate change

Danish court rejects climate protestors' freedom bid
Copenhagen (AFP) Dec 23, 2009 - A Danish appeals court Wednesday dismissed a request to free four Greenpeace activists who gatecrashed a royal gala dinner for heads of state at the UN climate summit. A judge said the matter was too serious to allow the suspects to be let on of jail and such a move could damage a police investigation which was under way, according to a judicial official. A lower court last week ordered the suspects to remain in custody until January 7. Two of the suspects -- Spaniard Juan Lopez de Uralde, 46, and Norwegian Nora Christiasen, 34 -- fooled security staff at the Danish parliament in Copenhagen by drawing up to the December 17 gala dinner in a limousine and wearing evening attire. Another Greenpeace protester, a 37-year-old Swiss national, posed as their bodyguard and was also arrested. The fourth suspect is a Dutch Greenpeace activist, 30-year-old Joris Thijssen, arrested the day after the incident. Police charged the activists with illegally entering state property and using false police number plates. In a letter sent from Greenpeace to the police which was read at Wednesday's hearing, the non-governmental organisation said the gatecrashers had used three limousines in which the Greenpeace logo was placed visibly on the windscreen as well as a sign reading "Planetary Emergency -- Greenpeace Authorized." It was the second time in less than a week that Greenpeace had pulled off such a stunt. On December 11, protestors surprised arriving VIPs as they jumped out of vehicles in a "Greenpeace motorcade" before an EU meeting in Brussels.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Dec 23, 2009
Land ecosystems will have to move hundreds of metres each year in order to cope with global warming, according to a letter published on Thursday in Nature, the British-based science journal.

On average, ecosystems will need to shift 420 metres (about a quarter of a mile) per year to cooler areas this century if the species that inhabit them are to keep within their comfort zones, scientists in the US believe.

Flat ecosystems such as mangroves, wetlands and deserts face the biggest challenge, for they will have to move the farthest in order to survive.

Mountainous habitats are a bit luckier, as just a small shift in altitude provides some cooling.

The figures are based on the "A1B" scenario for likely carbon emissions this century, as forecast by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It is considered an intermediate level of warming.

Climate change would impact slowest in tropical and subtropical coniferous forests, temperate coniferous forests, so-called montane grasslands and shrublands, say the scientists.

Deserts, mangroves, grasslands and savannas would be hit fastest.

The paper suggests a ruthless Darwinian struggle will be unleashed.

Some rugged species may be able to adapt to warmer temperatures and modification of their home. Others that can migrate elsewhere in time will also survive.

But those species that cannot adapt -- or which move only slowly, such as plants -- will have nowhere to go and could face extinction.

"Expressed as velocities, climate-change projections connect directly to survival prospects for plants and animals. These are the conditions that will set the stage, whether species move or cope in place," said co-author Chris Field, director of the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology.

The study says that protected areas such as nature reserves are generally too small to cope with the expected habitat shifts.

Less than 10 percent of protected areas globally will maintain current climate conditions within their boundaries a century from now, it warns.

Under the A1B scenario, the best estimate of a UN's Nobel-winning panel of climate scientists foresees a temperature rise this century of 2.8 degrees Celsius (5.04 degrees Fahrenheit), in a range of 1.7-4.4 C (3.06-7.2 F).

A group of world leaders, at the Copenhagen climate summit last Friday, set the goal of limiting warming to 2 C (3.6 F), but did not explicitly say whether the benchmark was since industrial times or over the course of this century.

There has already been around 0.7 C (1.26 F) of warming since the start of the Industrial Revolution of the mid-18th century, when the burning of coal, oil and gas began the greenhouse-gas phenomenon.

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EU lashes out as climate discord deepens
Brussels (AFP) Dec 23, 2009
Europe accused the United States and China of torpedoing the Copenhagen climate summit and vowed not to back down in its push for a tough, binding accord to avert the potential disaster of global warming. Post-summit recriminations deepened even among the select nations, including the United States, China, India and Brazil, that convened behind closed doors to stitch together a widely panned ... read more







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