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The UN's working group dedicated to developing and negotiating
a “climate deal” (the United Nations' Framework
Convention on Climate Change or UNFCCC), held a summit
in Copenhagen last December which was meant to set the
framework for the worlds' countries to: a) adapt to the
climate chaos that is already being felt by most of us,
and b) mitigate or lessen greenhouse gas emissions, which
are recognised as one of the main driving forces behind
accelerated climate change.
The UN follows the rule of “one country, one vote” and
also requires reaching decisions by consensus. This means that,
in theory, no group of countries can decide without the agreement
of the rest, which is one of the good values of the UN process,
but also one of its limitations. Although such a process is
fairer than one where rich countries rule, it also leads to
situations like the increasingly confused and tense Copenhagen
talks, with some countries accused of blocking the process,
while weaker countries were bullied and blackmailed by more
powerful ones – and no deal was reached. It is generally
accepted, however, that the UN is the political and diplomatic
space where a world-wide climate deal must be agreed.
The visible result of the summit is the Copenhagen Accord,
a document negotiated at the 11th hour primarily by the US
and so-called BASIC countries (Brazil, South Africa, India
and China). The Accord is not legally binding and no-one is
satisfied with it anyway: some are angered because it does
not lay out targets and tools to allow governments and corpo-rations
to get on with the business of carving up the climate cake
into a profitable exchange commodity; others are disappointed
that neither the negotiations nor the Accord tackle the real
reasons for the interconnected crises we are experiencing (climate
chaos, financial meltdown, environmental degradation, social
injustice, unemployment, global food shortages...). Increasingly,
people feel that the climate talks process serves to perpetuate
a capitalist/neoliberal model which, due to its emphasis on
profit and growth within a finite planet, is in fact reponsible
for the problems we face.

It is quite obvious that there are countries who have benefitted
greatly from the existing economic model and become the “developed
nations” of the global North (called Annex 1 countries
by the UNFCCC), while those who have least benefitted are the “developing
countries” of the global South. Unfortunately, the latter
will be most affected by the direct effects of climate chaos,
and so they hope for a climate deal that will set out realistic
and fair technological and financial systems. They do not want
Northern countries pushing their technologies onto them, but
would rather get help in developing their own appropriate technologies.
Some want to be compensated for their role in looking after
the planet's main carbon sinks, and to be repaid the “ecological
debt” that they feel is owed to them, while others refuse
to limit their emissions since that would mean curbing their
flourishing industrial and economic growth, now that at long
last it is their turn to benefit.
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Of
course, developed nations of the North are themselves
dealing with the effects of the present financial and
employment crisis, and are reluctant to make further
financial commitments for adaptation and mitigation
as they see their investment capacity in their own
countries dwindle.
From the contents of the Accord, it is obvious that developed countries are relying
heavily on offsetting as their main strategy, which means buying the right to
pollute from others who are polluting less (normally in developing countries),
or planting trees to compensate for their emissions. However, many are warning
that offsetting will not serve to reduce emissions but is in fact a dangerous
and ineffective way of dealing with such a major problem that affects us all,
and that it shifts attention from the fundamental task of rapidly phasing out
fossil fuels.
Another concern which has not been addressed by the Accord, but which was very
much discussed in Copenhagen, is the link between agriculture and climate. Recent
calculations indicate that industrial agriculture and its related processes (from
pesticides to transport) actually add up to 50% of the world's emissions – while
it only provides 30% of the food the world consumes. It is hard to imagine for
us in modern Ibiza, but the world's small peasants, fisherfolk, pastoralists
and hunter-gatherers are actually feeding 70% of the world's population. However,
present trends seen in COP15 clearly promote an expansion of the industrial food
chain model, a very real threat to all these small producers.
Out of the confusion and tension of the climate talks, one voice that came out
loud and clear was that of the international civil society, at the People's Summit
called Klimaforum09. A declaration was issued from this parallel summit which
denounced as false the market-based solutions the UN process is debating, and
presented a series of proposals. This, however, received little attention from
the press and was ignored by the
official UNFCCC process.
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What
has become clear out of this whole process, which is still
ongoing, is that the citizens of the world cannot wait for
politicians to solve the climate problem – it is down
to each and every person, each family, each community, to
make appropriate decisions in our everyday lives: choosing
to buy or grow organic food, supporting local producers,
eating less meat, driving less, using more public transport,
creating less waste and recycling the waste we do churn out...
are all ways that we can contribute to meet our own personal “targets” and
be kinder to the environment... and to future generations.
Text: Ana Digón
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In
the next editions of Ibicasa we will be reporting
on
various themes concerning the UN climate negotiations.
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