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saturday 2 july 2005
media advisory
friends of the earth
international
make climate change history
tackling poverty and climate change must
go hand in hand
Edinburgh/ London (UK), July 2, 3005 --
Unless urgent action is taken to combat
climate change at next week's G8 summit, the
consequences for Africa and the world's
poorest nations could be dire, Friends of the
Earth International warned today. The call
comes as people gather for Live 8 and the
Make Poverty History rally in Edinburgh
[1].
The impacts of climate change will be most
severe in developing countries lacking the
resources to respond. Yet climate change is
mainly the result of the use of oil, gas and
coal in rich nations. If the G8 is to
effectively tackle poverty, it must also take
urgent action to combat the threat of climate
change.
Meena Raman, the chair of Friends of the
Earth International, will be speaking at the
Make Poverty History rally in Edinburgh today
(Saturday). She will say:
“Unchecked, climate change will impact most
severely on the world's poorest people.
Africa , with its dependence on rain-fed
agriculture is particularly vulnerable to
drought. Just eight countries - the G8 -
account for 45 per cent of the emissions
causing climate change, yet have only 13% of
the world's people: that's climate
injustice.
"Delivering climate justice is essential to
ending poverty. Climate chaos will make even
meeting the Millennium Development Goals
impossible – never mind exceeding them. That
is why moves to tackle climate change are so
desperately needed at this G8 summit”.
Earlier this month a coalition of aid and
environment groups published a report called
Africa : Up in Smoke? [2] which detailed the
impact that climate change is already having
on Africa and the threat it poses to human
development. The report warned that unless
global warming is tackled future generations
in the world's poorest nations would have to
face the consequences [3].
G8 countries are responsible for 65 per cent
of historical global emissions. These
countries must take action to redress the
balance by making significant cuts in their
current greenhouse gas emissions.
The United States is the world's biggest
polluter (four per cent of the world's
population; a quarter of the world's
greenhouse gas emissions), but the Bush
administration has so far refused to take any
meaningful action to tackle climate change.
Indeed the administration has even cast doubt
that climate change is happening and has
tried to scupper international agreements on
reducing emissions.
Friends of the Earth International vice
chair Tony Juniper, said:
“Ending poverty is a crucial campaign.
Pressure must also be intensified on G8
leaders to take urgent action on climate
change too. Unless the world reduces its
emissions of greenhouse gases the impacts on
the environment and people across the planet
will be severe, with the biggest effects felt
by the poorest countries. Unless the rich
nations of the world wake up to the threat of
climate change, the planet faces a grim
future.”
Friends of the Earth Scotland's Chief
Executive Duncan McLaren, said:
"We hope the G8 visit to Scotland will
result in something meaningful on ending
global poverty and delivering climate
justice. The impacts of climate change will
be most severe in those countries lacking the
resources to respond. Today's rally in
Edinburgh is the start of week of activities
in Scotland that we hope will drive home the
message to the G8 leaders that it is their
moral responsibility to cut emissions and
take the lead in ending poverty."
Friends of the Earth wants to see
commitments from the G8 leaders in the
following areas:
-
Global average temperatures must not be
allowed to rise by more than two degree
centigrade than pre-industrial levels.
-
An agreement by G8 nations for
specific, substantial and timetabled cuts
in their domestic emissions of greenhouse
gases.
-
An agreement that offers innovative and
substantial financing mechanisms to
increase and diversify the energy mix. This
must include more renewable energy and
greater efforts towards energy
efficiency.
-
Urgent assistance is needed for those
developing countries already facing the
devastating effects of climate change.
A Friends of the Earth briefing on G8 and
climate change with found background,
demands, and events is online at
http://www.foei.org/media/2005/0622.html
for more information contact friends
of the earth
:
In Edinburgh
:
Helen Burley, Press Officer, + 44 (0) 7778
069 930 (m)
Lang Banks, Press Officer, + 44 (0)131 554
9977/ + 44 (0) 7813 766759(m)
Meena Raman can be contacted via Helen or
Lang
In London
:
Neil Verlander, Press Officer, + 44 (0)20
7566 1649/ + 44 (0)7712 843 209 (m)
Kath Stipala, Press Officer, + 44 (0)20 7566
1649
notes to the editors
-
Climate change will have a devastating
impact on some of the world's poorest
communities. This is one of the reasons
that Friends of the Earth is a member of
Make Poverty History.
-
www.foe.co.uk/resource/press_releases/africa_pays_price_for_g8_c_28062005.html
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Africa is more exposed to the impacts
of climate change than many other regions
in the world. Its high sensitivity is
exacerbated by other factors such as
widespread poverty, recurrent droughts and
floods, an immediate daily dependence on
rain-fed agriculture, natural resources,
biodiversity and a heavy disease
burden.
The IPCC in its third assessment report
from 2001 describes Africa , the world's
poorest region as "the continent most
vulnerable to the impacts of projected
change because widespread poverty limits
adaptation capabilities" it predicts
"climate change will exacerbate existing
physical ecological/biological, and
soci-economic stresses on the African
coastal zone".
One of the first studies to examine how
climate change might alter the land surface
of Africa , was published on Thursday, by
Oxford University . The report details how
within decades, higher temperatures and
reduced moisture would lead to the Kalahari
dunefields spreading across Botswana,
Angola, Zimbabwe and western Zambia. This
would leave tens or even hundreds of
thousands of people affected by such
changes, the team said. "The Kalahari is a
large area that supports a reasonably big
rural population that lives by farming,"
Professor David Thomas who led the team
explained.
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