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The Bali Summit and American Sabotage
The US is trying to sound constructive at the latest climate talks, but its aim is to put the boot in
Alongside the more familiar themes here at the Bali climate talks are some quite new ones. Perhaps the most surprising is the apparent constructive cooperation of the Bush administration. Unlike previous climate negotiations I have attended, at this one the Americans say they want a deal, that they want to talk and that new negotiations should begin under the auspices of the United Nations climate change agreement. What a change! Last time I came to one of these they were even disputing that we had a problem, questioning the science of global warming.
But all is not what is seems, or what the US team would like it to seem. Behind the more conciliatory front the Bush crew are running a systematic wrecking operation, seeking to undermine the prospect for an agreement here.
For example, the US has enraged the developing countries by blocking any financial support for the transfer of environmentally sound technologies from richer countries to poorer ones. They have further provoked developing countries by weakening commitments to help with climate change adaptation. This of course requires money, for example to build sea walls, but here the Bush crowd removed words from the draft agreement that said how the rich countries should be "ensuring sufficient, predictable, additional and sustainable financial resources" for adaptation. They did this on the same day that the UN Development Programme published its annual Human Development Report in which it was estimated that many tens of billions of pounds are needed each year to help poor countries cope with the pollution of the rich. If you want to provoke an angry response, that's the way to do it.
The Americans have also sought to create friction with Europe, for example in seeking to strike out any idea of how much emission cuts are needed by when. They have resisted references to the need for a cut of between 25%-40% from rich countries and have tried to delete any mention of the need for emissions to peak and decline within about a decade. This is clearly a direct contradiction of their own view that any future agreements should be based on the latest science. They have muddied the waters on deforestation as well, deliberately creating confusion and thus the prospect of more misunderstanding and potential friction.
So far the Americans have done quite well, ably assisted by their supine henchmen: Japan and Canada. But the way they have been forced to act this time is quite different from the more public resistance they have demonstrated in previous meetings.
Perhaps the most important factor leading to this more sophisticated strategy is the dramatic shift in public opinion back home. Over the last two years US opinion has moved very far. No longer does the denial of global warming work, neither does the economic scaremongering that Bush and his backers have peddled through junk assessments as to what would be the cost of implementing the cuts mandated under the Kyoto Protocol. The Bush team know that the American people expect them to be positive, and that is why they have a smile on their face while putting the boot into the prospects for agreement.
The US is being cleverer still, however. Last summer President Bush announced just before the G8 Summit in Germany that he planned to start his own new climate change process. It would be about technology rather than targets and would include the big emitters. It was received with derision. I heard President Bush set out the proposal live while sitting in a Sky TV studio, where I gave an instant response as to what it meant. My first reaction was that it was a deliberate attempt to derail the UN and G8 climate change processes. Here in Bali it is clearer than ever that this is exactly what that process was set up to do.
Although it lacks support from just about anyone, the "major emitters initiative" l is being presented here as an alternative to new international laws. It is clear that the Bush team are seeking to hollow out the agreement here and to take the potentially most interesting areas and to hijack them into their non-binding process. High on the list in this respect is the technology transfer discussion. And on this subject the UK needs to be careful that it is not suckered into inadvertently helping the US.
Recently the Bush Administration dispatched people to the UK and Japan to encourage support for a new technology initiative that would be linked to the US-led major emitters process. The idea would be to mobilise some money to assist with technology in developing countries. Of course, if the money goes there and not (as the Americans intend it won't) through the UN process, then the UN track will be empty of resources while the non-binding process finishes up with the cash. Of course global political attention will follow the money and if the resources go to the non-binding process that could help deliver another blow to a long term climate change treaty.
It's quite clever, but it can be stopped.
Hilary Benn, who now leads the UK team at the talks, needs to make sure that he keeps his wits about him and is not fooled into believing that there is any sincerity behind the new and more kindly face of the American team. Margaret Beckett saw them off at the Montreal talks in 2005, diplomatically slapping the US chief negotiator in the chops. She could see that they were vulnerable to public opinion back home and knew that they could not be seen to be the people who brought the house of cards crashing down. It's the same now, only more so. If the Americans are exposed at home, they can be forced to stop blocking.
Under these circumstances, Benn now needs to find a way of helping to expose the US plan. He needs to find some key allies, among them China and Brazil, and to jointly flush out the Bush plot so that the American people can see what is going on. If he did that, he might help save these talks. If he sits on his hands, if he does only the diplomatic thing, then perhaps we will not get what we need from here.
The Americans have a new aim and different tactics, but in the end they are shooting for the same outcome: no meaningful international deal on climate change. I wonder if there will be some governments who will be prepared to challenge them in public. I wonder if Hilary Benn will lead the charge?
Tony Juniper is director of Friends of the Earth. He spends his days campaigning for a more sustainable society, both in the UK and worldwide. He is the co-author of the award-winning Parrots: A Guide to the Parrots of the World, published by Yale University Press and Pica Press (1998), and of the widely acclaimed Spix's Macaw: The Race to Save the World's Rarest Bird, published by Fourth Estate (2002).
© 2007 The Guardian



13 Comments so far
Show AllSo much has been done by this present administration and the right-wing fundamentalist christian groups who back them, support them and in the end are now running this country to deny the existence or impotrance of global warming. With the expectation of some fantastical second-coming, coupled with an extreme indifference for life itself, (the variety and intricacies of which, in their eyes are the work of their loving god), fuel their inability to show concern. Especially with the money that is now known to be made by the use of fossil fuel sources. Easily tapped and easily mined with the use of already devised methods allows them in their laziness to use what is left of the Earths dwindling resources and to destroy a global ecosystem that they consider as already to be a thing of the past. Regardless of their childrens futures and regardless of their grandchildrens futures, they can't get beyond it.
If it weren't as is important as it is, then one shouldn't care. However it effects us all, and so we must.
We must all do everything that we can, to be as pro-life as possible and to disallow them from using their monies and their abilities to deny us and our generations, the life on our planet to which we have the unalienable right.
The US of I is like a very spoilt child. The USI has all the toy weapons, all the military bases, appoints itself the chief invader of weak small countries that have wealth making resources, and has historically favorable currency arrangements. While the Bali conference is ostensibly about shared voluntary targets, to be successful, it must have means of bringing nations together to exert strong sanctions against the few that are deliberately trying to trash its world climate saving agenda. Sanctions could include policy of reducing currency reserves of US dollars and government bonds, even more so than current trends. The US has trade connections with every part of the world. A severing of such ties would depress the global economy considerably, and perhaps this would compensate in terms of reducing green house gas production world wide. The Bali meeting must plan for and mitigate against bad effects of non-cooperation coming from nations such as the USI. Does the world really need this millstone of a nation around the worlds neck, as ice melts and the seas rise? The US should state how it is going to bring about a reduced GGP or else. Near real time and motivational sanctions are required to avert and make real the much worse long term consequences. Survival requires sacrifice.
Can we really expect anything esle from a corporate dictatorship?
Capitalism is the ultimate obstacle to continued survival of our civilization and to life as we know it on this planet.
The oligarchs say they want to let the market fix things. The market being merging competition-destroying monopolies, oligopolies and banks whose only legal mandate is to make as much money as possible for their owners and shareholders with no regards for the public other than to keep them working more hours for less pay or they move to stable dictatorships with cheap labor, no unions, no healthcare and no environmental regs. Is this a formula for success or what?
If climate change is real and dangerous and the rest of the world wants to stop it--all they have to do is hit the US in every way they can. Prevent americans from travelling abroad etc.
But they wont do that.
Humans have contempt for Nature, as demonstrated by how it pollutes and tortures other species to death. I really have doubts humans have the ability or leadership to really do something about it.
Yesterday, I said BushCo's climate policy is homicidal. I see no reason to change that assessment.
Fortunately, there are other, powerful organizations outside of the USG that can and are fighting the problem and offering a solution. One of these is achitecture2030, http://www.architecture2030.org/home.html One of the organization's founders has an excellent presentation now being shown and repeated often on UCTV, as shown by this schedule, http://www.uctv.tv/schedule3.asp?keyword=13667 The presentation argues that if we can stop the building of additional coal-fired power plants, we will likely avoid dangerous climate change, http://www.architecture2030.org/current_situation/stop_coal.html This can be done by reducing the enegy used to power buildings, which use over 73% of all coal-produced electricity in the US.
If you get UCTV, or know someone who does, please watch this presentation; it's more than worth the 1 hour. As this article notes, there is a sea-change happening within public opinion regarding climate change here in the US. The presentation is powerful, especially the way the call for action is made at its end. There are also webcast presentations, which I have yet to watch, http://www.architecture2030.org/2010_imperative/webcast.html and http://www.architecture2030.org/news/multimedia.html
There's one way to circumvent the USG on climate change at the local level that can make all the difference: Amending building codes to require high enegy efficiency of all new and retroffit construction, which Santa Barbara just did. We may not be able to kick all the corrupt, venal politicos out of DC, but we can change the conditions on the ground at our own locales that will present the USG with a fait accompli where it can either lead or get out of the way.
I get the impression that Bush would rather make for his cronies (who will one way or another give him some percentage of profits through a kickback) a trillion and one dollars with a 90 percent chance of climate catastrophe, than make for his cronies only a trillion dollars with a 10 percent chance of climate catastrophe. And I am sure Bush is proud of himself for being such a "smart biznisman," who would trade away an 80 percent probability of catastrophe to make his friends a buck and himself a nickel.
It's really not appropriate for others to compromise with the US on climate change. The US position has no ethical, logical, or practical basis.
Climate change and all of the other non-economic issues are in fact the society's real ends, while economics are the means. You don't compromise the ends to perpetuate the means - that's insane.
Americans have been brainwashed to believe that economics are the ends, but they are not. Economics are the MEANS, while a healthy biosphere, healthy people, with healthy minds, bodies and souls ARE THE REAL ENDS.
Stop compromising with the US and instead shift all of your exchange/association away from it. Do your business only wiht those who care about people and planet.
Nothing surprises me anymore when reading about the US admin...
...except for the fact that they are still using 'diplomacy' to pretent to not be doing what they are actually doing.
I am waiting for the moment when they just tell its people and the rest of the world to F*&K off and die...
Comming soon to a country near you.
The US wants a "free ride". Let everyone else cut back. It will backfire as usual. Assuming civilization survives the next 50 years, the rest of the world will be operating on essentially free electricity from new generation nuclear power plants. The US will be dirt poor if its still shopping for oil with the point of a gun.
China is suddenly a little more active. They have climatologists, too, and they realize the glaciers that feed the rivers that supply water for 1 billion people are going away. They may decide to stop playing "after you" with the US and join the more progressive (on climate change) governments.
I don't know how someone with the education of Harlan Watson could bring himself to present the US position. Its more than just a job for a hired gun. As long as the neocons can find guys like him, we aren't going anywhere.
Civilization is going to be in chaos in 50 years due to mass migration alone. Greenland experts say we now only have decades or maybe only single years until flooding starts wiping out coastal cities. New Orleans was nothing. How about the human cost of having one of those every time a storm comes ashore in New York or San Francisco? Or tidal surge in dozens of coastal cities around the world?
Neocons need to rethink what this will do to their precious global economy which accelerated this problem to crisis in the first place.
Religion is a practice of faith. It has no place in government. The two should never mix. Unless we desire world-wide holy war which seems to be the shrub admin game plan.
And a president that says he hears god talking to him needs to be taken out of the white house in a straightjacket.
AL GORE'S COMMENTS CONCERNING BALI:
Al Gore will surely now be branded as unpatriotic for his comments concerning the U S opposition to climate change mitigation measures, by the same administration that had branded Senator Max Cleland (a triple amputee Vietnam Vet) as unpatriotic for sponsoring an investigation into the causes of 9/11 which Bush also opposed.
Until Americans take back our country from this misguided administration, and its controlling interests--and put out nation back on track--our world standing will continue its decline while degrading to out planet progresses.
Given the gravity of this issue, Mr Gore's comments were not only appropriate but were overdue.
GLOBAL WARMING ARROGANCE
The US rejections of Kyoto, and now the Bali Conference, underscore the dangerous control that special interests exercise over this administration's policies. Their distortions of scientific data typifies their unconscionable war on science. Evidence linking carbon pollution to warming has long been as close to certain as science can be. Its causes, consequences, and mitigation requirements have been documented by many dedicated environmental organizations including The Union of Concerned Scientists.
Special interests argue that the current warming trends follow historic warming cycles, and hence reflect natural weather patterns--but they omit obvious differences: The earlier warming trends developed at slower rates which permitted the ecosystems to adapt. Morever they resulted from temporary natural events, which allowed transitions back to normal temperature patterns--by contrast, the current warming patterns result from artificial causes that will only intensify unless mitigated.
By all indicators, global warming will self perpetuate as the melting ice sheets absorb rather than reflect heat, as the melting permafrost releases more CO2 & methane, and the list goes on. Inundation of low lying areas, spread of tropical diseases to temperate latitudes, sea life destruction from changing ocean chemistry, & currents, are only some potential consequences.
Often overlooked is the fact that, the same measures needed to mitigate global warming would be necessary even if it were no issue. Conservation, alternative energy development, anti- pollution refinements, etc are essential for other vital environmental reforms such as air and water quality, reductions in toxic waste generation, land preservation, etc.
Contrary to right wing assertions, measures to reduce greenhouse gases could only improve our economy by lessening our trade deficits, and improving our security by reducing our dependance on foreign oil. We could also regain some of our lost world respect that has resulted from our rejection of Kyoto while arrogantly contributing disproportionally to carbon pollution. With our participation in international efforts, China & India could no longer use our non-compliance as an excuse for their non-participation.
The environmental and social damage from our indifference to carbon pollution can only worsen if we allow this administration, guided special interests, to continue their war against our planet