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UN Plans 'Shock Therapy' for World Leaders on Environment
Pared-down summit will force heads of rich states to listen to those of third world in hope of kickstarting radical action
The United Nations is planning a form of diplomatic shock therapy for world leaders this week in the hope of injecting badly needed urgency into negotiations for a climate change treaty that, it is now widely acknowledged, are dangerously adrift.
Residents walk down a road that leads to the county's power plant in Zhangjiakou, China, June 2005. Photograph: STR/AFP/Getty Images UN chief Ban Ki-Moon and negotiators say that unless they can convert world leaders into committed advocates of radical action, it will be very hard to reach a credible and enforceable agreement to avoid the most devastating consequences of climate change.
As the digital counter ticking off the hours to the Copenhagen summit - which had been supposed to seal the deal on climate change - hit 77 days today, progress at the UN summit in New York is seen as vital. Nearly 100 heads of state and government are to attend the summit, for which a pared-down format has been devised.
"We need these leaders to go outside their usual comfort zones," said one diplomat. "Our sense is that leaders have got a little too cosy and comfortable. They really have to hear from countries that are vulnerable and suffering."
Rajendra Pachauri, head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which won the Nobel peace prize with Al Gore, agreed. Commenting on the leaders attending the G20 summit in Pittsburgh next week, he said: "We need to remind these people about impacts of climate change - the fact that they are inequitable and fall very heavily on some of the poorest people in the world. We are likely to see a large number of failed states if we don't act in time."
The heads of state attending the UN summit are to be stripped of their entourages. Each will be allowed just one aide, generally their country's environment minister, in the sessions.
Instead of set-piece speeches, leaders will be paired off to chair discussion groups. Britain will be with Guyana, Tuvalu with the Netherlands, and Mongolia with the European commission.
The leaders will also lunch with environmental activists and chief executives of corporations who have been pressing their governments for action. At dinner, the leaders of the biggest polluting countries will dine with the leaders of Bangladesh, Kiribati and Costa Rica - which are among the primary victims of climate change.
By the end of the day, the rationale goes, the leaders will be imbued with a new sense of purpose. Leaders of rich countries will have been galvanised to take on the big emissions cuts - 25-40% over the next decade, 80% by 2050 - needed to keep temperatures from rising more than two degrees above pre-industrial levels, the temperature set by science to avoid the most calamitous effects of climate change.
The leaders will also, it is hoped, have some understanding of the threat to poorer countries. And, at the very least, they will have more of a common purpose in tackling the problem. "We need to gather together. We don't want to blame or point fingers at each other," said Yaqoub al-Sanada, counsellor at the Kuwaiti mission to the UN. Kuwait - one of the biggest producers of oil - will co-chair a discussion session with Finland.
The UN is hoping for help from Barack Obama. The US president will speak at the session, and there is anticipation he will deliver a strong signal that America is committed to action. There is growing anxiety for those kinds of reassurances, especially as opposition to Obama's green agenda grows in Congress. "The first question I get any time I meet with anybody is, 'Where's the legislation? How's it going?'," Todd Stern, the State Department's climate change envoy, said. There are also reports that China's president, Hu Jintao, in his first appearance at the UN, will announce new commitments to curb pollution - the kind of signal that will be crucial to boost negotiations in the days leading up to Copenhagen.
"We can get a successful outcome from Copenhagen. It is achievable, but at the moment it's in the balance," said John Ashton, Britain's climate change envoy. "We need to close the gaps."
Those gaps grew over the summer. There is what Ashton called the "ambition gap" - the failure of leaders of the big polluting countries to sign on to the deep emissions cuts needed. Then there is the "finance gap" - the failure of industrialised states to come up with a package on how to compensate poor countries that will suffer the most devastating consequences.
Britain came forward last June with an estimate of £61bn a year by 2020. Negotiators are frustrated that major industrialised states have not set clear figures on how much they are willing to commit, or how they will provide the funding.
Some climate change experts and negotiators have already begun planning a fallback position should the December Copenhagen summit fail to produce a strong enough agreement.
In Washington, Obama administration officials now talk openly about negotiating beyond Copenhagen. "Let's not make that one particular time the be-all and end-all, and say that if it doesn't happen we are doomed," Steven Chu, the energy secretary, told reporters.
Thinktanks are already starting to work on what is being called "Plan B" - scenarios for how the world could come up with an action plan before it is too late. But some are not holding their breath.
"It seems to me that Copenhagen is not the end of this," said Tim Wirth, the president of the UN Foundation, and the man who, in the 1980s, helped to write the first cap-and-trade plan for acid rain. He added: "We are going to have Copenhagens for the rest of our lives."

17 Comments so far
Show AllHas capitalism made the world stupid?
Short answer: Yes!
Long answer: It has made people short-sighted, greedy, opportunistic, willing to trade freedom for material wealth, and promotes hyper-individualism at the the expense of the wider community.
Walk in peace.
From when mankind started walking on the face of this Earth, s/he has had to utilize the resources that nature provides to sustain himself. Humans have used their ingenuity, by the way of tool making, to fashion nature's resources to its needs. Through this long period of time, the tools have become more sophisticated and nature's resources have been increasingly fashioned and used to sustain human life.
As mankind evolved, so has his social structures, ie. his society. Through these thousands of years, mankind using his labour-power and tools, individuals either owned the tools individually or shared them collectively and in so doing, owned the results of their labour.
It wasn't until society evolved to the stage of capitalist society that the following has taken place in the structure of society:
1. The producers, the workers who used tools, no longer owned those tools. All they owned was their ability to sell their labour-power to the capitalist class who now owned the means of production.
2. The production of human necessities became commodities to be sold and purchased within a capitalist marketplace.
3. Labour-power itself became a commodity within the capitalist economic system.
This separation of the worker from his tools and the turning of his labour into a commodity brought about what Marx called "the alienation of labour". Workers ceased labouring for themselves and their families but rather laboured for the enrichment of the capitalist class to produce commodities that the capitalist class could then sell back to the workers. This whole shift in how society was structured compared to previous times, turned producers into consumers. Workers could no longer measure their own "success" within the system other than based on how much of the commodities out there that they could afford to consume. That has become the yardstick - "how much stuff can I get my hands on and hence measure my worth?".
As long as people are only consumers within a society and no longer individual human beings the following results:
1. People become "greedy" and "opportunistic" because the economic system itself is based on these attributes and "success" within the system calls for it.
2. People are willing to trade "freedom" for "material wealth" because the latter is required for their subsistence and the former is defined within the very restrictive constraints of the capitalist system. Workers under capitalism are what Marx called "free labour". They are free to enter into a commodity exchange with the capitalist to sell their labour-power to the capitalist or not to do so. The system offers the "freedom" for the capitalist to exploit the labour of the worker in order to make profits for the former. The capitalist political system offers "freedom" to choose everything BUT the doing away with the capitalist system itself.
3. The system "promotes hyper-individualism" because it helps to prevent the individual worker from recognizing he belongs to a class and has a collective interest that is not the interests of the capitalist class. Ie, it keeps the working class divided.
Getting too long, so will end it here. But I agree with all that you said and just wanted to expand on it.
"UN Plans 'Shock Therapy' for World Leaders on Environment"
The real 'Shock Therapy" is going to be what nature has in store for us!
can't argue with that nc tom...............
This one little paragraph says it all:
We need these leaders to go outside their usual comfort zones," said one diplomat. "Our sense is that leaders have got a little too cosy and comfortable. They really have to hear from countries that are vulnerable and suffering."
The cosy comfort zone of the industrialized, commodified 'first' world monoculture is insanely unsustainable. And that of its 'leaders' vastly moreso. Leaders worthy of the name would SEEK to hear from the vulnerable and suffering in THEIR OWN countries (ex: the indigenous, the homeless, the disabled vets, the small farmers, the wage-slaves, the millions of un- or underemployed aching to pour their talents and passions into jobs that are not part of the problem, but are part of its solution--- to live within our ecological means, respecting human rights and dignity) such as right here in the USA--these summits need to encourage and stop stifling or trivializing the voices of the multitude of casualties of military/industrial excess and 'corporate persons' need to -for once in their non-human 'lives' - develop the capacity for human common sense and conscience.
Powerful writing! Thank you.
Wouldn't it be nice to have one or two "leaders worthy of the name" in this world at the abyss! As long as we have rule "by" the corporations, "for" the corporations, the humans become just a factor to be taken into consideration by institutions. The suffering and death will be defined in dry perfunctory statistical terms. Even this report and the comments by UN personel see disaster in terms of "failed states" not humans suffering. What these representative leaders are protecting will be their power and the status-quo that keep them there. Climate change and other man made ecological and economic disasters may in fact be helping them maintain their hold on that power for now.
Personally I feel that as the real disasters unfold these people, or rather these place holders who consider themselves world leaders, will become ever more irrelevant and insignificant, as government and authority will become more and more ignored, and arms, wealth and corporate power become less the means by which societies run.
The UN is irrelevant, like it or not. Without power it means nothing.
It depends what you call power. How about the power to inform with authority, as in the report on Gaza war crimes. No that is not irrelevant.
The free market will solve the problem by killing us all.
Jeevee
How about promoting Dr.Albert Schweitzer's, "Reverence for Life": reverence for all sentient beings (not just humans}.
The Indigenous Peoples from around the woirld have been contributing to the real 'green revolution', increasingly documented throughout the world. Stewarding forests and open lands for centuries, contributing (when not prevented by special interests)to development of public policy and developing academic programs over the past decade. Voices and proposals that need to be heard.
http://www.tebtebba.org/
Please understand the powerful impact of living the New Economy of greater sustainability. The slow growth, slow economy based upon greater community and greater sustainability can weaken both corporations and governments leaving them less able to project bad policy upon us. Living the new economy is an important element among other elements designed to transform our Nation from the bottom up. Target the worst of the worst politicians and corporations for opposition, defeat, and loss of influence. A minority of people living sustainably can have a large symbolic and direct impact by eliminating the worst. Do it now for an immediate and continuing positive impact. Spend your dollars sustainably and not otherwise.
UN Plans 'Shock Therapy' for World Leaders on Environment
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I hear that KBR has an exclusive contract to build shower facilities for the participants.
· Yr Obd't Servant
i think the surprising leadership that the Secretary General is showing is worthy of support.
It needs to be supported by POPULAR ACTION in the countries that are being called to task.
October 24 is an international day of climate action (http://www.350.org/invitation). Get involved and make it so in your community.
November 30 is another day of action in the United States (http://www.actforclimatejustice.org/).
Please please PLEASE get involved with people in your community to carry out actions for climate justice on these days leading up to the Copenhagen conference in early December. Please!
Wouldn't it be nice to have real leaders, humanists with a conscience, representing us at Copenhagen?
Instead we have sociopaths who rose to the top by raising tons of money kissing corporate sphincter whose only real talent is writing clever campaign commercials ripping their competitor to shreds with more ferocity than a pack of starving hyenas.
This is who we're supposed to trust to save the world as the midnight hour approaches?