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Africa wants polluters to pay for climate change

Flood victims in Burkina Faso illustrate the effects of climate change
A world away from the heated negotiations for a critical deal on stopping climate change at the UN summit in Copenhagen, Burkina Faso inhabitants are suffering the direct consequences of global warming. Jacqueline, Noroudine and Guy-Prosper are among the 150,000 made homeless by floods after the heaviest rainfall in decades hit Burkina's capital Ouagadougou last month. On September 1 some 30 centimetres (one foot) of rain fell in the space of 10 hours, the heaviest rainfall in the west African country since 1919.

In central Ouagadougou the flood victims live in a makeshift tent village set up on a sporting pitch in the middle of the capital. At first glance the site, which houses 1,600 people --mostly women and children-- looks like a warzone refugee camp. For these victims of climate change September 1 is a day that remains etched in their minds. "I was very scared, we had never seen that kind of rain. We managed to get some of our stuff out but suddenly the house caved in," student Noroudine Maranga, 25, told AFP. The rain started a little before daybreak. "I was sleeping, they told me it was raining and that it wouldn't stop," 21-year-old student Guy-Prosper Ouedraogo, said. "There was a lot of water in the houses in the lower parts and the people did not know how to swim so we rescued them."

"After we saw that the dam (close to the neighbourhood that was hit) had overflowed. The water was rising and flowing into the houses. We tried to block the entrances with sandbags but the water kept coming. We got out our stuff and the family and then the house fell down," Ouedraogo said. In the crowded working class neighbourhoods of Ouagadougou many of the houses, built straight onto the earth, without foundations, were destroyed by the water. Seydouben Traore managed to save himself after being swept away by the water when he stepped outside his house.

"I climbed in a tree and stayed there the whole day. I saw chickens, cows, bulls and goats swept away by the flood," he said. "I also saw three bodies but I couldn't do anything. It was every man for himself, it was horrible," the 43-year-old musician told AFP. His house was destroyed and he is hoping for help from the authorities to find a new home. "We cannot stay here indefinitely, I want to be far away from the dam. I am afraid that it will happen again. We really believed the sky was falling down on us when it happend."

"We have to rebuild a house but we have no money," Jacqueline Ouangre, 36, said."We are here, we don't know what to do," the unemployed woman told AFP. Just several kilometres from the camp, African policy makers are meeting Sunday to agree on a joint position during the UN climate talks in Copenhagen. The African states have already announced that they would be seeking billions of dollars in compensation payments from industrialized countries. The African continent is the world's poorest and least industrialized. The 800,000 Africans account for only four percent of global greenhouse gas emissions while the central Congo basin is considered one of the worlds 'green lungs' together with the Amazon rain forrest.

by Staff Writers
Ouagadougou (AFP) Oct 11, 2009
Africa will demand billions of dollars in compensation from rich polluting nations at a UN climate summit for the harm caused by global warming on the continent, African officials said Sunday.

With just two months to go before the UN summit in Copenhagen, officials met at a special forum in Burkina Faso's capital Ouagadougou where they underscored the need for compensation for the natural disasters caused by climate change.

"For the first time Africa will have a common position," African Union commission chairman Jean Ping told the seventh World Forum on Sustainable Development.

"We have decided to speak with one voice" and "will demand reparation and damages" at the December summit, Ping said.

Experts say sub-Saharan Africa is one of the regions most affected by global warming.

The World Bank estimates that the developing world will suffer about 80 percent of the damage of climate change despite accounting for only around one third of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

"Policy-makers have to agree to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and adhere to the principle that the polluter pays," Ping said.

In a final declaration, the six African heads of state attending the forum said they supported calls for industrialised nations to cut their carbon emissions by "at least 40 percent" by 2020 compared to 1990 levels.

The declaration also calls for "relaxing the procedures and softening of conditions for African countries to access the resources of the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)."

Under the CDM, rich countries that have ratified Kyoto can gain carbon credits from projects that reduce or avert greenhouse gas emissions in poor countries.

The Ouagadougou forum, which wrapped up Sunday, was attended by the presidents of Benin, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Congo, Mali and Togo.

On Friday Burkina Faso's Environment Minister Salifou Sawadogo said the continent needed 65 billion dollars (44 billion euros) to deal with the effects of climate change.

Ping said African policy-makers hope industrialised countries will pledge "new international funds to support poor countries."

He gave the example of the US state of Texas which "with 30 million inhabitants creates as much greenhouse gases as the billion Africans taken together".

Africa is also hoping to become a player on the carbon emissions market which allows polluting countries to offset their emissions with green projects such as re-forestation and conservation in other countries.

Ping said there was a lot of potential for Africa there as currently of the 1,600 such offset projects around the world only 30 are based in Africa, with 15 in South Africa, the continent's economic powerhouse.

Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore stressed that Africa had many hurdles to overcome "linked to the absence of efficient mechanisms for financing and transfer" and called for special Africa-wide financial talks from 2010 onwards on the subject.

earlier related report
Climate talks ending with rich-poor rift wide open
Two weeks of crucial UN climate talks were due to conclude Friday after exposing huge rifts between rich and poor nations, just weeks ahead of the deadline for sealing a planet-saving global deal.

Only five negotiating days remain, in November, before 192 nations converge for a critical December showdown in Copenhagen, where they have pledged to conclude a treaty to tackle global warming.

Without rapid action, scientists say, the world faces catastrophe in the form of drought, flooding, famine and forced migration.

"My feeling is that the ball, immediately, is in the developed country court to make it clearer what they are looking for," said Malta's Michael Cutajar, co-chair of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) talks.

A few minutes later at a separate press conference, US negotiator Jonathan Pershing countered, "I think the ball is in the court of all countries".

He highlighted a key demand from rich countries that emerging giants such as China, India and Brazil commit to binding actions on climate.

"We are at a critical stage with major issues unresolved," said Martin Khor, executive director of the South Centre, a Geneva-based think-tank aligned with developing world positions.

"If there is no improvement in the divisions, the prospects are certainly not bright for an outcome in Copenhagen that is ambitious environmentally, and equitable from a social point of view," he said.

The key stumbling blocks are how to share out the job of slashing the heat-trapping greenhouse gases, and how much money wealthy nations will cough up to help developing ones fight climate change and cope with its impacts.

"At the end of the day, if you don't have ambitious (emissions) targets from rich nations, and if you don't have significant finance on the table, the whole thing falls apart," said Yvo de Boer, the UN's top climate official.

But even as Bangkok inched from procedure to substance, negotiators on both sides of the issues agreed the expert-level dialogue will remain blocked without strong input from world leaders between now and December.

"This is not the only game in town," said de Boer, referring to the UNFCCC, of which he is Executive Secretary.

Expectations are high for a second world leaders' summit on climate before Copenhagen, following a September gathering at the UN in New York, but no dates have been announced.

The looming question of how the United States will fit into any new agreement has dominated the Bangkok meeting, with Pershing making clear that Washington will never join the Kyoto Protocol.

Kyoto legally binds 37 industrialised countries to cut greenhouse gas output by a total of more than five percent before 2012 compared to 1990 levels.

This forces the issue of whether to scrap Kyoto and fold some of its provisions into a new accord, or to expand its provisions for another five or seven years while cutting a separate deal for the US.

"A single instrument is more coherent, and for that reason is preferable," said Elliot Diringer, Vice President of the Washington-based Pew Center on Global Climate Change.

But developing nations -- especially India and China -- expressed deep alarm in Bangkok at what they saw as a shift away from Kyoto toward a US proposal for a "bottom-up" approach, in which countries submit national plans to outside verification.

"The European Union, which was the most loyal to the Protocol up to now -- seems to be wavering. If they jump ship, Kyoto will be an empty shell," said Khor.

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Climate negotiators look to world leaders for boost
Bangkok (AFP) Oct 8, 2009
UN climate negotiations are making real progress, but will fail to lay the foundation for a global treaty without a major push from world leaders, the UN climate chief said Thursday. "There is a general sense that this process needs the backing of political leaders at the highest level in order to get to a result," said Yvo de Boer, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on ... read more







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