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201208Dec22:58

UN Cli­mate nego­ti­a­tions fail again, says WWF

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 08 Decem­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 08 Decem­ber 2012
Archived
Peo­ple are ready for action on cli­mate; “world lead­ers” are not.
Doha protestIn a year in which the impacts of cli­mate change pounded peo­ple in rich and poor coun­tries alike, nego­tia­tors in Doha have failed to deliver even the min­i­mum expec­ta­tions for the UN cli­mate nego­ti­a­tions.

But a broad spec­trum of civil soci­ety organ­i­sa­tions have vowed to con­tinue the fight for a global cli­mate agree­ment in 2015, start­ing with nego­ti­a­tions next year in Poland.

“Some devel­oped coun­tries have made a mock­ery of the nego­ti­a­tions by back­ing away from their past com­mit­ments and refus­ing to take on new ones. And to make mat­ters worse, it was only a hand­ful of coun­tries — such as Poland, Rus­sia, Canada, the US and Japan — who held the nego­ti­a­tions to ran­som,” says Saman­tha Smith, leader of WWF’s Global Cli­mate and Energy Ini­tia­tive.

“What sci­ence tells us and what mil­lions of peo­ple expe­ri­enced this year is that fight­ing cli­mate change is now extremely urgent. Every year counts, and every year gov­ern­ments do not act increases the risk to us all.

The acid test for these nego­ti­a­tions was real emis­sions cuts; real and con­crete finan­cial com­mit­ments for cli­mate change; and the basis for a new global deal by 2015 that is both ambi­tious and equi­table. But instead we got a shame­fully weak deal, one that is so far away from the sci­ence that it should raise eth­i­cal issues for those responsible.
(Saman­tha Smith, leader of WWF’s Global Cli­mate and Energy Ini­tia­tive)

”But hope is far from gone. The move­ment gets stronger and more pas­sion­ate every­day. Com­mu­ni­ties and peo­ple are stand­ing up for clean energy, con­fronting dirty projects all over the world, such as coal, and demand­ing that changes be made. Here in Doha, for the first time in his­tory, peo­ple marched to demand real lead­er­ship to tackle cli­mate change,” says Tas­neem Essop, head of the WWF del­e­ga­tion to COP 18.

“The most sig­nif­i­cant devel­op­ment in Doha was what hap­pened out­side the ple­nary rooms, says Essop, “Social move­ments and civil soci­ety joined hands to take a stand against the lack of ambi­tion and urgency in the cli­mate nego­ti­a­tions. We will con­tinue to work to ensure that gov­ern­ments are going to meet the 2015 dead­line for a fair, ambi­tious and bind­ing agree­ment.”



(Source: WWF Global — news release, 08.12.2012)
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