Menu Content/Inhalt
Home

Latest Events

No events

Latest Comments

no comments

Syndicate

Peoples' Protocol on Climate Change

Translations of the draft People's Protocol on Climate Change:


Bangladeshi

Dutch

Polish


Description of the Campaign

The People's Protocol on Climate Change is a global campaign that aims to provide venue for grassroots, especially from the South - who are the worst-affected and yet are the least empowered to adapt to climate change - to participate in the process of drawing up a post-2012 climate change framework.


Read more...

Workshop on climate change funding and development assistance
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 26 August 2008
Image
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 26 August 2008 )
 
CSOs Condemn G8’s distorted climate ‘vision’
Written by ava danlog   
Wednesday, 09 July 2008
Hokkaido, Japan- As the 3-day G8 Summit comes to a close today, no real progress is being made on the climate change agenda as the world’s wealthiest nations push for self-serving interests while sidestepping real commitments in significantly curbing their greenhouse gas emissions.

 “Judging from the Summit’s communiqué  on the environment and climate change released yesterday, the G8 countries are not ready to commit to fulfilling their responsibilities in mitigating climate change. While they reconfirm the significance of the IPCC report and recognize the need for a 50% reduction in global emissions by 2050, no definite timeline, plans and actions are being agreed on,” says Maria Theresa Lauron of the Asia Pacific Research Network (APRN), composed of 50 research organizations from 19 countries in the Asia Pacific region.

 Worse, Lauron adds that the Summit has been manipulated by the US, UK, Japan and World Bank in pushing for market-based mechanisms and solutions long criticized by CSOs, academics and even by a number of Southern governments to be unsustainable.

 In particular is the G8’S support for the World Bank’s Climate Investment Funds including the Clean Technology Fund and the Strategic Climate Fund which basically seek to scale up public and private finance to deploy cleaner energy technologies to developing nations, in addition to supporting adaptation.

 Syamsul Ardiansyah of the Institute for National and Democratic Studies in Indonesia, member organization of APRN, questions the irony, “Why will you allow an institution with a horrible record of supporting fuel extraction to manage climate fund?” Ardiansyah, citing figures from EndOilAid.org, adds that WB’s support for fossil fuel extraction has increased 93% in 2006 compared to 2005, its lending for fossil fuels increased at a rate exceeding that of lending for renewable technologies.

 US President George Bush is pushing for clean technology and domestic oil production as solutions to climate change, which critics argue, is a way of justifying his administration’s plan to open up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the Outer Continental Shelf to drilling and oil exploration. The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is a site that is home to a number of protected species.  In addition, the Bush wanted China and India to make the same commitments to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

 Aside from clean technologies, the G8 countries are promoting market mechanisms such as tax incentives, performance-based regulation, emissions-trading and taxes and consumer labeling. Alarming is also the fact that these wealthy nations are aggressively advancing the use of biofuels. Lauron states, “It is ironic that the global food security is one of the issues discussed and yet, even the WB reports that biofuels production has actually forced global food prices to increase by a staggering 75%, in addition to displacing farmers and indigenous peoples from their lands and compromising their health and livelihoods”.

 Lauron acknowledges the importance of technological fixes and funding support as short-term solutions. In the long run, the real solution to the climate crisis is a sustainable economic framework, which is the basic demand of grassroots in the South, as reflected in the People’s Protocol on Climate Change, which is a Southern initiative to bring forth to the climate change negotiating table the concerns and demands of peoples who are worst-affected and yet are the least empowered to adapt to climate change.

 Lauron concludes, “The G8 climate vision is a distorted view of the whole climate change issue. The masquerade is over. The large and numerous protest actions against the G8 summit from all over the world could only mean that the people will not be fooled into all the greenwashing by the G8 nations. People’s movements are now building their strength towards a climate friendly future based on the principles of people’s sovereignty, social justice, respect for the environment and common but differentiated responsibilities”.

 

For more information on the People’s Protocol on Climate Change Campaign, please visit www.peoplesclimateprotocol.aprnet.org

 

Contact: Maria Theresa Lauron at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Telefax: +6324251387

 

 

 

 

 

 
IPs prime victims of climate change
Written by NORDIS   
Tuesday, 24 June 2008

BAGUIO CITY — Indigenous peoples (IPs) zoom in the problem of climate change as

Image
Christian Erni. Photo by Myko Franco Chiong/NORDIS
  one major issue   endangering their very existence.

This was emphasized in the press conference of the recently concluded Asia Workshop for the Promotion of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) here Tuesday. 

 

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 24 June 2008 )
Read more...
 
The 10 Commandments to save the planet
Written by Evo Morales   
Saturday, 03 May 2008

From the speech Evo Morales made at the recent United Nations Permanent Forum of Indigenous Peoples on climate change

Consume only what is necessary, avoid extravagance, waste, luxury and the desire to get rich.

President Evo Morales told the United Nations that in order to save the planet, we must eradicate the capitalist model, and the North must pay its ecological debt.  This was the first of Ten Commandments presented by the leader during the inauguration of the VII Indigenous Forum of the United Nations during a long speech that received high acclaim by those who attended the annual encounter.  

 

Read more...
 

Countdown to People's Assembly

Time now
November 20, 2008, 6:08 am
Count to
December 25, 2008, 12:00 pm
Time left
35 days
5 hours
51 minutes