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Eco-warriors seek to crank up heat on climate talks

Action against disasters needed at climate summit: UN
Geneva (AFP) Dec 3, 2009 - A senior UN official said Thursday the Copenhagen climate summit next week needed to take action against growing weather-related disasters linked to climate change. "The disasters are there, there are more of them, more people are being affected, it's costing more money, it's having a longer term effects on poverty... so that's the immediate issue," Margareta Wahlstroem, UN assistant secretary-general for disaster risk reduction said. Wahlstroem said the UN summit on climate change in Danish capital should pledge at least 100 billion dollars (66 billion euros) a year to start to help the most vulnerable nations adapt to disaster risks. Finance for adaptation is a core issue for Copenhagen, to help poorer nations, such as low lying islands, coastal regions or those afflicted by water shortages, adapt to their changing environment with floods, storms or other weather shifts.

"What we now really want is... a commitment to financing which in the next few years will give the confidence to those who need financing," Wahlstroem explained. "It's not there yet, but what they talk about for example is a fund of 100 billion (dollars) a year, that would take care of a lot of the needs to reduce risk in that framework," she added. The president of the Maldives said Thursday that he would use the Copenhagen summit to appeal for immediate cash, to fend off the rising sea levels that threaten his atoll nation. A row has erupted in recent weeks between climate scientists and sceptics about research on the causes and extent of global warming. Recent opinion polls, in the United States and Britain, have highlighted public doubts about whether climate change is man-made or the result of a natural variation. "Whether the causes are extreme weather events or extreme climate, in that perspective it's probably less significant," she added after being asked about recent shifts in public opinion over climate change.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Dec 3, 2009
Thousands of activists are set to converge on Copenhagen for the December 7-18 world climate conference, using digital technology, people pressure and the Little Mermaid to make their opinions heard.

The Internet and mobile phone are being harnessed as the key organisational tools for rallying opinion ahead of the most critical environmental meeting since the UN's Kyoto Protocol was forged in 1997.

Protests are being variously staged by environmentalists, aid groups and hard-left radicals.

They fear the Copenhagen showdown will fail to stave off the peril of climate change, haul billions out of poverty or curb the excesses of capitalism.

"What kind of society do we want? Do we want to share resources or throw up walls to protect ourselves? This is what is spurring the mobilisation," said Anne Bringault of the French branch of Friends of the Earth.

The Danish capital is bracing for around 30,000 delegates and other visitors during the course of the conference.

They include heads of state and government -- 98 so far, according to Danish sources -- who will arrive on the penultimate day with the declared aim of sealing a deal.

Lobbying starts this Saturday with a "flash mob" -- flash mobilisation -- in major cities, in which participants are alerted by mobile phone about the time and place to assemble.

The time will be 12:18 pm, referring to December 18, the conference's close.

In London, demonstrators will hold a carnival-style procession to the Houses of Parliament.

A militant group called Camp for Climate Action says it will also camp out. Participants will advised of the location by SMS text messages at the last minute in the hope of thwarting police, its site says.

At the conference's halfway point, on December 12 and 13, a special train will arrive in Copenhagen, laden with demonstrators who will form a "blue tide, like drops of water."

Religious communities will sound church bells and pound a drum 350 times, urging political leaders to reduce carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere to a safe 350 parts per million.

A campaign called tcktcktck.org will hold a candlelit rally, while WWF will stage another "Earth Hour", in which cities around the world will be enjoined to switch off unneeded public lighting for an hour to save carbon emissions.

Copenhagen's Little Mermaid, the harbour-side statue inspired by the figure in Hans Christian Andersen's tale, is set to play an unwitting role in protests with one green group planning to bestow an "Angry Mermaid Award" on the most nefarous corporate lobbyist undermining the climate talks (http://www.angrymermaid.org/).

Peaceful and colourful demos of this kind, many of them shaped with an eye for the 5,000 journalists expected in Copenhagen, are traditional fare at the annual meetings of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

But there is also a risk of confrontation, with reports that hard-edged anarchists from Germany, the "Black Blocks", who staged violent protests at the NATO summit in Strasbourg and Kehl this year, will take part.

In addition, the German branch of Climate Justice Action says it has mustered 1,500 militants who will stage an act of "civil disobedience" on December 16.

They intend to "push" their way into the Bella Centre, a conference venue that has been declared UN territory for the duration of the talks, and disrupt proceedings, it said in an emailed press release.

"The outcome of the UN summit will bring neither justice nor effective protection against climate change," the group's Ines Koburger predicted.

"(...) Since the first world climate conference in 1992, CO2 emissions have shot up around the world rather than fallen."

Bringault and other mainstream groups hope that any talk of clashes will not overshadow concerns about climate change felt by many millions of people.

"Let's not whip up fears about violence," she said. "Society is already over-focussed on security."

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Australian Greens Vote Down Carbon Emission Trading Laws
Gerroa, Australia (SPX) Dec 2, 2009
In a sociopathic act of defiance the Australian Greens have walked away from Australia's first round of carbon economy reform. Via a critical procedural vote in the Australian Senate, a raft of law bills were set aside from a third and final reading. The development sets an ominous sign for the upcoming Copenhagen Climate Summit. The Global Greens Alliance is prepared to walk away from anything less that what they dictate is required today. ... read more







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