Global Warming and CO2 Emissions Blog

Friday, October 20, 2006

INTERVIEW - Refugees, Disease Big Risk from Global Warming - UN

BEIJING - The world is not doing enough to combat global warming which, left unchecked, could trigger a mass movement of people and have serious consequences for security, the United Nation's environment chief said on Thursday.

"For those of us who look at the science and look at the indicators, it's not enough yet, but it is more than we would have hoped for maybe a few years ago," Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme, said.

In an interview with Reuters, he raised the possibility of climate refugees and the huge disruption this could cause.

Experts have said that millions of people in densely populated, low-lying, developing countries such as Bangladesh and parts of China, Indonesia and Vietnam might be forced to move by rising sea levels.

In the South Pacific, this has already begun to occur in some low-lying islands.

"If global warming trends continue at the moment, and the models suggest that they are and maybe doing so more rapidly, they will have significant impact on where people can live, grow food and whether people will have to leave," he added.

"We will have disease spreading and it will have implications in terms of global trade, perhaps," Steiner said in an interview on the sidelines of a maritime protection forum in Beijing.

"Nations that don't play their part in terms of a climate regime -- how do they work with nations who are investing in setting their CO2 emissions?" he added, referring to carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas released by burning fossil fuels in transport and smoke-stack industries.

"The potential for conflict arising from the consequences of global warming are major trends that we now see," said the diplomat, who took up his current position in June.


REEFS A PERFECT EXAMPLE

One area particularly threatened by climate change and rising temperatures is the world's coral reefs, an important fishing and tourism resource that the United Nations estimates has an annual economic value of US$30 billion.

Since the late 1990s, when unusually high water temperatures killed off up to 90 percent of reefs in some parts of the world, there have been signs of recovery, according to a new UN report released on Thursday.

But reef recovery after so-called bleaching episodes depends on clean water, and in Asia and East Africa up to 90 percent of sewage is discharged directly into rivers and the sea, the report said.

"If you ever wanted a sign that something happening up in the atmosphere can have a fundamental impact even on an ecosystem we know relatively little about, you have it with coral reefs," said the Oxford-educated Steiner, former head of the World Conservation Union.

World environment ministers meet next month in the Kenyan capital Nairobi for talks on climate change to search for ways to map out longer-term cuts in greenhouse gases once the first phase of the Kyoto climate change pact runs out in 2012.

Last year's Kyoto meeting in the Canadian city Montreal set no deadlines for negotiations but some want a clearer timetable on the next phase of cuts.

"I think industrialised nations and developing nations are coming close to the point where they recognise that the time has really run out in looking for impasses," he said.

"Nairobi is going to be a litmus test on whether governments are seriously addressing this challenge," added Steiner.

"The notion of a contested phenomenon is really no longer there. It is universally acknowledged that climate change is occuring, that global warming is occuring and that we must act," said the Brazil-born German national.

"We can only act as an international community."

Story by Ben Blanchard
Reprinted from http://www.planetark.org/avantgo/dailynewsstory.cfm?newsid=38588

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Letter from Steve Cochran of the Environmental Defense Action Fund

Dear Friend,

On the record

We've put 607 candidates on the record!

Amazing! Truly Amazing!

Thanks to the extraordinary help of our Action Network, we've put 607 Congressional candidates on the record on global warming, including at least one candidate in 225 of the 435 House races and 31 of the 33 Senate races.

But that still leaves scores of opportunities to get even more candidates on the record.

You can help us promote this campaign. Ask your candidates where they stand.

So far, 51% of the candidates support a national cap on global warming pollution compared with less than 16% of the candidates who still doubt the science.

That means 84% of the candidates are either with us already or open to solutions on global warming. This makes our job very clear – get all the persuadable candidates to vote with us next year.

The extraordinary results of this campaign prove two powerful truths:

  • First, as we already knew, the Environmental Defense Action Network is a force to be reckoned with in our efforts to pass a national cap on global warming pollution!

  • Second, there is clear and growing momentum among national leaders to finally take meaningful action to fight global warming.

But even with momentum on our side, we must keep up the pressure. There's still time to make sure every Congressional candidate hears from us on global warming.

Here are two steps you can take right now:

  1. Put your candidate on the record - It's not too late to get your Congressional candidates on the record. Every candidate we get on the record now is someone we can strategically reach out to when the new Congress is sworn in next year.
  2. Take our survey - We'd like to get you on the record, too. Where does global warming rank as an electoral issue for you?

These are critical times for the future of our planet. No matter the results of the election in a few weeks, we have our work cut out to pass a meaningful bill with a mandatory national cap on global warming pollution.

One thing's for sure, with you and the rest of our online Action Network in our corner, we've got a powerful grassroots team ready to keep the pressure on. With your help, I have no doubt that we'll win this fight.

Thank you for everything you do,

Steve Cochran
Director, Global Warming Campaign

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