Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Youth Embarrassed By US Delegation at Climate Conference
OZNAN, Poland - The U.S. climate delegation's "sidestepping and recalcitrance" in a news conference on the opening morning of the United Nations annual climate conference in Poznan was denounced by the international climate campaign 350.org and a group of young people from the United States who are attending the meetings.
The opening day of the UN's annual climate conference in Poland attracted close to 11,000 people. (Photo courtesy UNFCCC) Lead U.S. negotiator, Ambassador Harlan Watson, representing the outgoing administration of President George W. Bush, dodged reporters' questions about whether or not the United States would commit to emissions targets or funding for developing countries to address global warming.
"It's an embarrassment," said Jamie Henn, 350.org co-founder and a U.S. youth delegate. "With the election of Barack Obama we showed the world we were ready to commit to real action on climate change. All this lame-duck delegation is offering is more of the same."
Henn asked delegates from other countries to ignore the current U.S. delegation and focus on the next administration's commitments.
"Thanks in large part to the work of young people across the United States, President-elect Obama has committed the U.S. to 80 percent cuts in carbon by 2050," Henn said. "That's the type of serious action scientists are saying is necessary to stabilize atmospheric C02 at the safe upper limit of 350 parts per million."
The figure 350 in the organization's name is the safe upper limit of carbon dioxide, CO2, in the atmosphere in parts per million. Led by author Bill McKibben and a staff of young organizers from around the world, 350.org partners with more than 100 organizations to push for a strong international climate treaty that meets the 350 ppm target.
Twenty young people from the United States are attending the Poland climate meetings, representing every region of the country and youth organizations like the Energy Action Coalition and SustainUS.
"As youth representatives of the United States, we're working with other young people from around the world here in Poland," said Jeremy Osborn, a 24 year old from Connecticut. "It's time for our government to do the same. If we can all get along and work together, so can they."
U.S. youth pledged to keep up the pressure after the conference concludes on December 12. "In the next year we are planning everything from a 10,000 person youth climate conference in [Washington] DC this February to an international day of action next October," Henn said. "This is just the beginning."
The two-week meeting, the 14th Conference of the 192 Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, UNFCCC, and the fourth meeting of the 183 Parties to the Kyoto Protocol, is the half-way mark in the negotiations on an ambitious and effective international response to climate change. The deal is to be clinched in Copenhagen at the end of 2009 and will take effect in 2013, the year after the first phase of the Kyoto Protocol expires.
Close to 11,000 participants, including government delegates from 186 Parties to the UNFCCC and representatives from business and industry, environmental organizations and research institutions, are attending the two-week gathering.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, opening the meeting, pointed to the urgent need for progress at Poznan. "Scientists share the view that warming in excess of two degrees Celsius will result in irreversible changes to nearly all ecosystems and the human communities. We shoulder the responsibility to prevent changes that could lastingly disturb the symbiosis between humankind and nature," he said.
Professor Maciej Nowicki, Polish Minister of the Environment and President of the Conference, warned that the planet has reached the limits of its confined system and that a business as usual scenario is not an option.
"Huge droughts and floods, cyclones with increasingly more destructive power, tropical disease pandemics, a dramatic decline of biodiversity all these can cause social or even armed conflicts and migration of populations at an unprecedented scale," he warned.
In Poland, ministers and other delegates will discuss their vision for long-term cooperative action on climate change. In Poznan, ministers will have their first opportunity to discuss a "shared vision for long-term cooperative action."
One of the key questions will be what kind of mechanisms need to be put in place to deliver on finance, technology and capacity building to help developing countries curb emissions, spur green growth and to cope with the inevitable impacts of climate change.
During 2008, Parties submitted proposals and ideas for stronger climate change action. The more than 700 pages of proposals have been distilled into a single document of 82 pages, which governments can now refine further in light of what they want to negotiate in 2009.
"The fact that there is a text on the table offers governments the first real opportunity of moving beyond the phase of exchanging ideas into one where they will be expressing their position on specific proposals," said Luiz Figueiredo Machado, chair of the Ad hoc Working Group on Long-Term Cooperative Action under the Convention. "I am looking forward to see how this text will be fine-tuned in the course of the meeting.
In 2007, Parties agreed to consider a greenhouse gas emission reduction range of minus 25 to minus 40 per cent over 1990 levels, a range which could be confirmed at Poznan.
Addressing the delegates in Poznan, Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the UNFCCC, pointed to the need to achieve progress on issues which are important in the short run - up to the end of 2012 - including adaptation, finance, technology and reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation.
"The conference needs to deliver on on-going issues, especially issues that are important to developing countries," he said. "And there is huge pressure on available time up to Copenhagen in 2009," he said. "So next to on-going work, the conference also needs to lay a solid foundation for an ambitious climate change deal at Copenhagen."
Alluding to the financial and economic crisis and the opportunities of green and sustainable economic growth, de Boer, who is the UN's top climate change official, called on delegates to "increasingly focus on how the climate change regime could become self-financing and to link climate change policies to economic recovery."

28 Comments so far
Show AllThanks to Presidebt Bush and THE COAL INDUSTRY, visit my web site and see the prosperity in Third World Appalachia ! http://www.wisecountyissues.com
tmullins - great site - horrible pictures that one would never think to see in this "greatest/richest/strongest/etc., country in the world."
I read a little book called "Dust" I believe, several years ago about what happened after we'd killed off all the good bugs and life forms on the planet. Looking at the ruins in Appalachia, and reading about the super bug brought that book back to mind.
Lead U.S. negotiator, Ambassador Harlan Watson, representing the outgoing administration of President George Wanker Bush, dodged reporters' questions about whether or not the United States would commit to emissions targets or funding for developing countries to address global warming. Instead, standing at the speaker's dais with his chest puffed out and his fists on his hips, looking remarkably like Benito Mussolini, he told the international press, "Climate change is a fraud. There is no such thing as climate change or global warming. It is a fantasy conjured up by quibbling faggots and cowards for the expressed purpose of weakening American global hegemony. America is Number One. We will piss where we want, when we want and on whomever it pleases us to piss on." He then turned and briskly walked off the stage to stunned silence.
Watson is a Dubya "company man", but he is also very intelligent and well educated. I just wonder how he sleeps at night.
.He sleeps well no doubt, on 600 count Egyptian cotton with his rather large bankbook tucked under his pillow.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Writing as a former expatriate and as part of the small minority of Americans who has a passport and uses it, I empathize with the young attendees who got to see up close and personal that who gets placed in the White House does matter. It matters in moments like this, when clods like Harlan Wilson represent your country while the rest of the world patronizingly sighs and shakes it's collective heads. January 20, 2009 can not arrive quickly enough!
www.wunderman-comics.com
I'm waiting for January 21, when all the illegal actions Bush committed are gonna be spilled :-)
Since I do not celebrate the holidays or pro football hype, I will look forward to the week between January 14-21 as my holiday and Superbowl celebration rolled into one.
Martin Luther King Jr's birthday, the innauguration of the first African-American president, and (best of all!) the retirement of George W. Bush from the presidency. That all has got to mean more than Christmas, New Years, and even Superbowl Sunday too.
January 21 should be a festive occasion when patriotic Americans of all political persuasions get together to heave a hugh sign of relief and toast the termination of an obscenity that has lasted for 8 loooong years.
Poet
Don't hold your breath
Has any wait ever been longer than the one between this election and January 20th. I sure can't remember one? I've been through many elections, and it always seemed like such a short time before the newly elected president was in the white house. Now when I hear "sixty days to go," "fifty days left," my thought is "WHAT!? Why is it so long this time?"
Depression America had to wait till March 4, 1933 to dump Hoover and for the innauguration of FDR. So chronologically that was longer but I know what you mean.
George W. Bush is like some Jr. high school brat who is to old to spank and too young to beat the living daylights out who is determined to be an asshole (sorry for the vulgar term) to the very last minute of his presidency.
Poet
By all means, call him an A-hole or any other vulgar term you wish. It's your patriotic duty to do so.
matthew loughran
its my patriotic duty to call bush and cheney war criminals, scumbags, and nazis.
thats for starters. hmm what other creative names
Two-bit red neck peckerwood punk. There, not one dirty word. Saving that for January 19 and 20.
The author's excitement and enthusiasm reminds me of the mood after the Democratic party retook Congress in 2006 based on a committment to stop the wars. I sure hope that Barack Obama doesn't disappoint on climate policy the way they did on stopping the wars.
Poet
Look, I realize that George Bush is still a profound embarrassment to the American people! And I know they still have a few weeks before he departs the scene, an event which will make many people around the world happy. I'm one of them. And I know he's cramming his last days with doing bad things for the environment.
But he's not completely bad! I've spent quite some time trying to work out where he will be of great use to the world after he leaves office. Finally I've come up with the answer.
Bet you can't think what it is! Street cleaner? No. Ambassador for Peace? No. See:
www.dangerouscreation.com
Don't get your hopes up, zmann, enough of Bush's actions have already been spilled and continue to be spilled.
What part of Nancy Pelosi's November 2006 proclamation that "impeachment is off the table" don't you understand ?
You can do something right now. Join your local bus/transit riders' union or transport advocacy group. Build the movement for free public transit. There are groups starting up all over the world. The group from Sweden is at Poznan now.
http://freepublictransit.org
.I sure wish I could look forward to a massive shift in policy regarding global warming and emission control, oh yeah I surely do, you betcha. Then I get rational and understand that every industry asked to curtail emissions will beg off threatening layoffs, plant closures, offshoring, higher prices etc..
Forgive me for my skepticism but I keep hearing President-Elect Obama speaking about "clean coal", and see him rushing off to DC in the midst of his campaign to lobby for the welfare money for Wall Street greed mongers and see little change coming....Maybe I'm wrong.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Its called "Leadership". Obama will have to disappoint some of his coal and corn based gasohol backers if he really wants to get the job done. Don't be surprised if he shows some pro-nuclear inclination. He can't please everyone, but he has a job to do.
We are delivered from Dubya and the neocons. Change enough to start!
.I have this land to sell you, at low tide.
Lets see, whom to disappoint? The corporate folks who paid through the nose to buy allegiance or the electorate who give little to finance the campaign compared to the big money guys, hmmm. How about the future. When ones days as an elected official are over it might be really nice to have a six figure lobbying job awaiting one.....
I would suggest that it is you who will be surprised at what follows, not I.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Jamie sounds madder 'n a wet Henn!
· Yr Obd't Servant
It doesn't seem as if anyone is actually commenting on the article itself, the fact that at a public forum, a bunch of twenty-somethings with a legitimate place at the table publicly expressed their embarrassment for the actions of the US government, and also took a lot of responsibility for the election of Obama.
All of the cynical remarks being made about the possibility of addressing climate change ("good luck!" etc.) refuse to see what is at least evidence of generational change. I teach students this age, and I am amazed and inspired by their incredibly sensitivity to environmental issues and their frustration with an older generation that still considers such actions as dishing out 25 billion to a moribund auto industry (duh! Sure, that's the way capitalism is supposed to work...if a company refuses to change to be competitive, let's just write them a check to keep them afloat. I'm no fan of capitalism, but if we are going to adapt it as a global system, why don't we at least respect its fundamental tenet--competition--and not be hypocrites about it).
Anyway, knee-jerk cynicism depresses me. Change happens only over time, in tiny increments. Sure people like Jim Hansen say we don't have that time on global warming, but I see the election of Obama and the ousting of Bush, and the generational change described here, as evidence of progress.
"Professor Maciej Nowicki, Polish Minister of the Environment and President of the Conference, warned that the planet has reached the limits of its confined system and that a business as usual scenario is not an option"
The Polish Minister of the Environment is a scientist who is able to use the concept of a confined system correctly and understand the implications. Who, I pray, who will be appointed as our environmental secretary, interior secretary or head of the EPA? I cannot hope for a scientist, but at least someone who believes that science has more validity than spin does, will seek good information, listen and TELL THE TRUTH.
The appointment a general associated with Chevron to the cabinet is not a good sign. I Obama is planning to use his insider information to limit the role of oil companies in the projects for the environment and clean energy. (Sigh, Lucy just moved the football).
The twenty somethings have their work cut out for them.
Joe
They sure do have their work cut out for them--at least they are trying. I guess older generations have a more selfish view..."what the hell, I'll be dead by the time the really bad stuff happens."
.Lest we forget there are those who have been working their entire lives for positive change. Many now in their sixties have been activists since the sixties. One should never condemn an entire group regardless.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Well I probably we will be dead by time the environmental abuse fully manifests itself in daily problems that seriously affect the industrialized world. The poorer people are already suffering a lot.
But we have kids, grandkids or care about those who will be around. It bothers me that I will probably be dead and unable to help those tender ones I love when the trouble cuts loose. I so wish I could die knowing that people were succeeding in taking care of the one earth we have.
I agree with ardee. You do not know us well enough to characterize us as selfish. It shows a mean and spiteful streak. Why attack people who care and work for change?
Joe
"...Change happens only over time, in tiny increments."
Who says ? This is the comforting lie we tell ourselves, it abdicates responsibility and power to someone other than ourselves. We really don't have to pander to those whose interests compromise our own, but we do it because we've bought the bull, horns and all.