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10/10/10: 7,000 Events Planned in 188 Countries
The international grassroots climate campaign 350.org invited civil society across the planet to register events on its web site for "A Day to Celebrate Climate Solutions".
Last year, over 5,200 actions were organized in 181 countries, on Oct. 24.
"We're getting to work -- what about you?" is this year's message to the political leaders who will meet Nov. 29 to Dec. 10 at the 16th Conference of the Parties (COP16) under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Cancun, Mexico.
"We want to mobilize people and empower local actions by each community to show the governments that society wants change, and we chose an easily remembered date: 10/10/10," Kelly Blynn, 350.org Latin America coordinator, told IPS from Mexico.
Hundreds of events are planned for Latin America, ranging from tree-planting, the installation of solar panels and bike rides, to "cloud harvesting," a climate change adaptation technique also known as "fog catching," for obtaining water in dry zones.
In Buenos Aires, people have been invited to gather at the obelisk, one of the city's best-known landmarks, in the center of the capital, wearing green t-shirts. A protest is also being organized against plans for a coal-fired power plant in southern Argentina.
In Brazil there will also be bike rides, walks, tree-planting and street-cleaning activities, as well as concerts, parachute jumps, and a broad range of other activities in cities around the country.
The campaign 350.org is named for the 350 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that scientists regard as the maximum safe concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere compatible with life on the planet.
Until about 200 years ago, the atmosphere contained 275 ppm of carbon dioxide, scientists report. But with the development of industry and the growth of cities, transportation and intensive agriculture, emissions have climbed to 387 ppm today.
Global warming is causing accelerated melting of glaciers, higher sea levels, and more frequent and more intense extreme weather events like hurricanes, torrential rains and prolonged droughts.
In Venezuela, Latin America's biggest producer of oil and natural gas -- the burning of which is the main cause of climate change -- both the authorities and society at large are becoming increasingly aware of the problem, as a result of recent impacts.
The severe drought that affected the country in late 2009 and early 2010 forced the government to implement water and electricity rationing measures. But after August, unusually heavy rains caused landslides.
"In the Venezuelan government, there is awareness of the need to fight climate change, but the fact that this is a country that depends on the production of hydrocarbons weighs heavily," Yazenia Frontado, with the Venezuelan environmental organization Vitalis, told IPS.
Vitalis is coordinating the 350.org campaign actions scheduled for Sunday in Venezuela, where "understanding of the effects of climate change on everyone's lives has grown in the public sector, and in society," the activist said.
In Mexico, the region's other huge oil producer, more than 170 events are registered for the "Day to Celebrate Climate Solutions", including a gathering in the Chapultepec forest, the "green lung" of the western part of the capital.
The leftwing government of Mexico City will join the campaign with the official announcement that day of the goal to reduce the capital's CO2 emissions 10 percent next year, through different measures.
"The important thing is to plan tangible commitments," Marcelo Quintanilla, director of 350.org in Mexico, told IPS. "We need commitments that can be assumed not only by governments but also by business, town halls, and citizens."
Recent floods in the northeastern state of Nuevo León and the southeastern states of Tabasco and Veracruz highlighted Mexico's vulnerability to the impacts of climate change.
"The situation is serious, and we have to take on a greater leadership role," said Quintanilla, whose country will host COP16.
Blynn commented that since the last climate change conference, which was held in December in Copenhagen and failed to reach any meaningful agreement, "The environmental movement has lost faith in political change."
Nevertheless, she said it was necessary to show that change is possible and that civil society and some governments are willing and prepared to take action, even if it is merely symbolic.
To illustrate, she cited two examples: The president of the Maldives, Mohamed Nasheed, helped install solar panels this week on the roof of the presidential residence in the capital of his country, which is one of the small island nations whose very existence is threatened by rising sea levels.
And U.S. President Barack Obama announced that he would line the roof of the White House with photo voltaic cells and install a solar-powered water heater, to provide clean energy for the government of his country, which along with China is the biggest emitter of greenhouse gases.
With reporting by Emilio Godoy in Mexico City and Humberto Márquez in Caracas.

20 Comments so far
Show AllHere is how you can get involved:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSTLDel-G9k
People who are concerned about climate change mostly worry about their own selves and their children. They want to save the planet for their progeny.
How about the 40,000 who died last night from hunger and lack of water? How about the young girls selling their bodies for food TO-DAY? How about the girls being sold so their families can eat TO-DAY? I'll worry about climate change and the future AFTER we've addressed the present.
RE: How about the 40,000 who died last night from hunger and lack of water?
I agree.
An earlier post of mine that addresses this same issue:
McKibben has been granted his high visibility (and "influence") within the liberal environmental movement because what he is proposing will never be achieved. He represents a "progressive" vanguard voice of the "carbon fundamentalists"; that the global issue of climate change is simply a technical one: we just need to get down to 350 ppm and then everything will be golden. The problem is that global warming is not a technical problem; it is a systemic problem. The capitalist economic system requires continuous growth of markets and profits, which means continuous growth of resource extraction and worker exploitation - all accelerated by various forms of coercion and, not least, by war. The quest for ever-greater profits means externalizing costs: to the environment via pollution and environmental degradation; to ever-greater downward pressure on working people's standard of living and health. Global climate disruption is caused by the innate exigencies of capital accumulation. McKibben de-links global warming from global capitalism, and therefore de-links concern for the environment from social and economic justice. Environmental justice must be seen as part and parcel of economic justice, but that's too radical for McKibben. We must challenge the narrative of the "technical fix" with a sustained critique of the capitalist system itself.
Our real problem is not global warming. Climate change is a symptom - like poverty, preventable disease, pollution, lack of jobs, health care, war, etc. The mother of our problems is capitalism. That's where our focus should be.
thanks. right. but do you not find it freaky that so few people ever mention this even though everyone knows it? Capitalism, by its own admission is dedicated to killing the planet- ever growing gdp means always chewing up more earth and we know the earth is finite.
No, I don't find it strange. Most people are compromised by their ties to the system. It's the old saintly mafia wife that prays for her husband while she lives in a fine house with excellent food, clothing and furniture. IF you corner her, she'll say, "So what do you want me to do, kill my husband?".
Of course most people are a pack of cowards. That's part of humanity. Sure, many rationalize their impotence in the face of the Juggernaut of our corporatocracy. But in the end they are all just surviving in an unresponsive system. No CEO or powerful person is commenting here or listening to us except maybe to put us on a shit list. We are talking to other powerless individuals seething at our daily humiliation and horrendous acts commited by our government in our name. The non government under world of mafia numbers rackets, prostitution, snuff films, protection rackets, etc. is still out there but we would go stark raving mad if we thought about that stuff continuously.
We can't take it all on. The best way to proceed is to stop cooperating with the murderers that run our government by deligitimizing the status quo. No need to raise a fist. Just do the best you can to ignore them without going to prison. Without legitimacy, our government will fall. When it gets really bad, ignoring them may guarantee prison. We'll see.
Good post
I'm sure the small handful of people you and your family has saved TODAY is grateful for your help.
But they, and you, and everyone else is screwed if THIS happens:
http://www.energybulletin.net/node/3647
Exactly how bad would THAT be ?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsx2vdn7gpY
Coolhead,working on a problem doesn't mean we work on it to the exclusion of all else. It's not an either or situation, it's an AND situation.
So, how about you and me work on all the issues at the same time
You work on one, I'll work on another, our brothers and sisters can work on other problems.
That way we can change the whole world. :D
comment deleted
I signed up to host an event tomorrow.
I looked at 350.org and the first thing I saw was a group of natives standing around in the Maldeses ( which are scheduled to be swamped with water) and these people are in a photo and they are saying that they feel encouraged that others too are with them and that they do not feel so alone.
Check out www.350.org and participate in an event near you and increase your knowledge of the problem.
I checked out a huge coffee table size book with the title "Plundering Appalachia" about mountaintop removal published 2009 and 470 mountaintops had been blown up and that was last year and now it is 500. The book had great research and comments from courageous and inspiring people in it.
I plan to share to tomorrow if anybody comes to my party.
Take care and think positively how we can all help and do not be critical of McKibben or any other individual-- this calls for many voices.
I have zero faith that the human race can prevent its own suicide. Good thing I am older and expect to be long dead by 10/10/30. The rest of you enjoy your climate apocalypse.
While mass events such as 10.10.10 are great for pulling the public's attention to these important issues, sometimes it is easy to forget about the people and organizations that are inspiring change everyday -- sometimes in the most unlikely of places. I was really surprised to learn about the communities in Sierra Gorda Mexico, for example. The sheer enormity of the environmental operations there is astonishing. I'm not exaggerating when I say the operations are massive. They have an entire "campus" set up as offices, as the Grupo Ecologico Sierra Gorda now serves as an umbrella for dozens of organizations working in the area.
Unfortunately, when people hear about environmental initiatives in Mexico though, they usually think only of the coastal regions, closer to the tourist's familiar path. Yet, Sierra Gorda, truly in the heart of Mexico, just hours from Mexico City, is a world away from the tourist coast. I've rarely encountered so many environmentally conscious people all in one place, while also being spread over such a wide area -- literally hundreds of tiny communities across acres and acres of gorgeous, lush, protected landscapes. I tried my best to capture the magic of the place in this short segment while also giving voice to this precious place, but try as I might, the area is so richly diverse it's impossible completely capture it on camera.
It's a great story and in the spirit of 10/10/10, I encourage you to watch this short CNN iReport!
http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-500575
Percy von Lipinski
www.percysnewworld.com
http://ireport.cnn.com/people/seeitnow
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtrT5oG_IVc
What a bunch of horsecrap. I'm with George Carlin. We can't even stop dropping bombs all over the planet and putting bullets in other people bodies and you clown are talking about saving the world? Give me a break.
Since Capitalists are firmly in control of the World’s political system and have most of the money and power, it will take a catastrophe of major significance to bring about any meaningful socialistic change. Meanwhile, we must just keep trying to chip away at the problem and never give-up. Even in Latin America where Socialism has the best chance of gaining a foothold, it will likely be a hybrid of socialism and capitalism.
'Even in Latin America where Socialism has the best chance of gaining a foothold'
It is one of the most intriguing developments in the entire world at moment _ certainly much worth watching
At the moment it shows the usual signs of failure. Socialism has failed in every instance, every time, for very ordinary reasons. People are just people.
Make everyday 10/10/10 !!!! Make everyday Earth Day! Make everyday count! Live simply and get active, and I do not mean more 'clicktivism'.This here computing machine is a blessing and a curse when it comes to activism. CD is a blessing!The lack of boots on the ground at protests and direct actions is a curse, directly related to the sedentary lifestyle this 'new world' of networking has created. I sincerely hope that computer addiction is a fad! I am in a 12 step program right now....1st step: sign off and go for a walk.....
I should have thanked Tom Larsen for his insightful comments and Percy ireporter for those comments which give us a glimmer of hope.
The reason we are so pessimistic
in America, is that big oil, etc are doing their best to cripple every effort the rest of us work so hard to impliment. Europe is making greater strides that we and is much more socialistically minded than we. They have a very firm foundation for converting transportation to all electric and a commitment as well.
China, the world's largest polluter, where capitalism just started, has a bigger problem than capitalism -- population. They fully understand the problem and are making fair strides, it is just the magnitude of the problem is overwhelming.
Here's the way our fine chrony capitalist egomaniac CEOs deal with activists.
From the web site of the Corporate Crime Reporter:
public relations spy firm Mongoven, Biscoe and Duchin (MBD)
MBD works to divide and conquer activist movements, MBD believes that activists fall into four distinct categories: radicals, opportunists, idealists, and realists. MBD outlines a three-step strategy: isolate the radicals, cultivate the idealists and educate them into becoming realists, then co-opt the realists into agreeing with industry.
- end of snippet -
The money grubbing monsters NEVER address the issues. They always respond with a PR effort. Our corporate government is the same. Remember Rahm Emanuel saying the Democrats had a 'MESSAGE' problem? Remember Rumsfield jacking up the PR pentagon budget in perception management in order to improve the populace's support for the war after the Abu Ghraib disclosures? There are psyop people right here practicing this heinous modus operandi. The betrayal of humanity by people with a Hobbesian mindset continues.
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