Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
- A Culture That Condones The Killing Of Children And Teaches Children To Kill
- Slaughter in Connecticut: 20 Children, 6 Adults Dead in Kindergarten Massacre
- How the Mighty (Mississippi) Has Fallen: Historic Drought Plagues US
- 'I'd Rather Fight Like Hell': Naomi Klein's Fierce New Resolve to Fight for Climate Justice
- Study: World's Mighty Giants Dying off at Alarming Rate
- A Culture That Condones The Killing Of Children And Teaches Children To Kill
- 'I'd Rather Fight Like Hell': Naomi Klein's Fierce New Resolve to Fight for Climate Justice
- Remember All the Children, Mr. President
- Save the Children: Tears and Tragedy in Connecticut
- Wealthiest Kissed, Weakest Kicked: Obama's Ugly 'New Deal' Offers to Cut Social Security
Popular content
Today's Top News
Voices from the Frontline of Global Warming
An IoS special report on the people most affected by climate change
CONFLICT
Rainfall has become less predictable in Marsabit, northern Kenya in the past 10 years. (Independent) Satim Kahle, 46
Marsabit, northern Kenya
"It has been a great stress for us this period - a depressing time. Working all day on the wells that have no water, we're running out of patience. Before, we had predictable seasons: we knew the dry spells, but we also knew that rain would come. Now, over the past 10 years, the rains can't be trusted. Nowadays, you just have to wait and hope. I used to have 500 animals... now I have 100 goats. But even those are weak again because it is so dry; if it doesn't rain for another month, I can't say if they have a future. If it doesn't rain, we're completely doomed. We don't know what to do. I have four children. If it weren't for the drought, I would have sent more to school. Those that go to school can get jobs and not have to come back to this herding life."
Obbo Jateni, 80
Ethiopia
"Previously, conflict was mainly about the raiding of cattle. Now the conflict between neighbouring rural clans is about securing pasture and water, and also for territorial integrity and power. The main problem we face is that rainfall in the past five years has not been enough and has resulted in consecutive years of poor harvests. The lack of rain has also impacted on the availability of pasture and water for animals."
STORMS
Lorenzo Pavon Carballo, 65
El Pochote, Masaya, Nicaragua
"In the past, the climate used to be much fresher, with more dependable rain. We hardly used to need fertiliser to produce good crops. Now everything has changed. This year we lost our first harvest because there was too much rain, and then the second either failed completely or produced only small quantities because there wasn't enough. A lot of this is due to deforestation. You see trucks loaded with trees coming out of the mountains."
Pham Thi Tuyen, 30
Coastal commune Da Loc, Vietnam
"When the typhoon came, we were instructed to move to a safer place. I already lost one son in another typhoon. He was 10, but couldn't swim and he died in the flood. My newborn child was just one month old at that time [typhoon Damrey in 2005] - so when we got this warning we immediately moved to my uncle's house in Yen Dong village, some kilometres inland from the coast. When I came back, my house was completely destroyed and only the pig shed walls were still standing."
DROUGHT
Oliveria Aguilar Perez, 53
Tepexi, Mexico
"Before, the rainy season was May to October but now we are lucky to get two months when it rains. It's also a lot hotter now. Twenty years ago, it was intensely hot throughout March and April, but now it's that hot all year - even when it rains. Climate change has affected us a lot because it has brought with it dryness. There used to be more vegetation because in this region we used to grow avocados and dragon fruit, but now they don't grow anymore. We are seeing increasing extensions of dry areas with no plants or trees. In most of them, all you can find are cacti, because they can stand droughts."
Seidou Samba Guindo, 67
Chief of Anakila village, northern Mali
"We have seen big changes in the past ten years - less rain but when it comes it's heavier. We remember the days when farms flourished and all was beautiful. God help us from having to move our families. The dunes are eating our land; we will never grow a good harvest. We need help - emergency help. My message [to Cancun] is that there have been many meetings, but no agreement. As the dune is consuming our village, they must find a solution."
FLOODS
Rahima Mai, 45
South Punjab, Pakistan
"This year we had very heavy rains. Waters started to rise and soon it reached the edge of our village. We knew it was going to be a big flood, but no one had guessed it would destroy our homes and take away our livestock. When I first looked at my destroyed home, I started to scream and cry. I sat on the ground, asking, 'Why did it have to happen to us poor people?' Now we are back, but everything is ruined. I have even sold my goats as I need money to buy food. My son goes to the city every day looking for work, but returns empty-handed. I fear for his safety. Flood waters took away all I had. I am too tired to start over."
Abbas Ali, 11
Lower Assam, India
"I go into the water to collect fish, even during the floods. My mother told me the floods used to bring many interesting fish from the upper parts of Assam. Now, the floods make the waters dark and muddy, and the fish are hard to find. I swim to the shallow places and wait silently for the fish to come. You have to be careful during the floods. The waters are too angry and they can pull you down. I like to go with other fisher boys to the slow waters."
RISING SEA LEVELS
Khalis Shareef, 34
Maldives, Indian Ocean
"Erosion is our biggest problem. Ten houses are going to be gone in the next three years because of beach erosion. No one can do anything about it, apart from big governments. Also, it is hotter now than ever before, and that causes coral damage, leaving fish with nowhere to live, so they go and live in areas where people throw garbage into the ocean, and then that affects our fishermen. Our island is 7.5km long, and there is erosion taking place along 6km of it. In 10 years it will have affected so many houses and people will not be able to live there."
Claire Anterea, 32
Kiribati, Pacific Ocean
"Living in Kiribati, we understand the impacts of climate change as we already experience them - increased coastal erosion with many houses having had to relocate inland. Many sea walls have been built by people themselves, and by the government in public places. How long will these sea walls last? No one knows. I was in North Tarawa, where the main source of fresh water - well water - is becoming contaminated with salt water. They now import from neighbouring villages, but they can't afford to do this for very long."
FAMINE
Batisse Dassa, 33
Shebedino, Ethiopia
"The main problem for us is lack of arable land. My husband has several brothers, so he only inherited a small area. We produce very little food. There is now less precipitation during the rainy season, and when the rain does come, it is sporadic - sometimes crops die halfway through their growth period. Many of the poorest in the area have cut down the trees above our home. If we receive rains after long dry periods, the soil may be washed out."
Chelimo Pokoti, 9
Tangulbei, northern Kenya
"For two years, there has been no rain and the only plants that grow are poisonous loma berries. The first step is to take off the outer shells and dry them for four hours. After that, we take off the next layer. Then we boil them for 12 hours. Next, we wash off the poisonous water. The last step is to take off one more layer. Making a meal is hard work."
... and a dozen reasons to be cheerful
The bad news is that there is no sign of a UN deal to unite the world against climate change any time soon. The good news is that governments, businesses and people around the world are taking matters into their own hands.
Here is a reminder of reasons to be cheerful, even in the absence of an international legally binding agreement on reducing carbon emissions.
China The largest single investor in green energy in the G20 group. It will invest $1trn in green technology from 2010-2013. More than 1.6 million LED lights are being used in 21 cities in a pilot scheme that will save 164kWh in electricity a year; an eco-city is being built in Tianjin; and renewable energy projects, such as solar power, right, are in place.
The anaconda A 200m rubber tube capable of producing one megawatt of power from wave power. A cluster of 50 coastal anacondas could generate enough power for 50,000 homes. Professor Rod Rainey, who devised the tube, and his colleagues are looking for investors to back commercial production.
Rice Millions will escape hunger and poverty within 25 years by developing new varieties of "climate-ready" rice able to survive in the face of climate change. The new research programme, by the Global Rice Science Partnership (Grisp), aims to lift 150 million people out of poverty by 2035 and prevent the emission of greenhouse gases by an amount equivalent to more than a billion tons of carbon dioxide.
Sea tubes Two environmental scientists, James Lovelock and Chris Rapley, have a plan to dot oceans with hundreds of millions of 200m tubes which would bring nutrients from the deep up to the surface, encouraging algae to bloom. This would suck carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and lock it away.
Giant mirrors in space Scientists at the Royal Society have proposed artificially altering the climate by using a series of giant mirrors or a constellation of trillions of space craft as a sunshade to reflect solar energy. A 2009 study said the idea was "technically possible".
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger recently fought off attempts by climate sceptics and lobby groups to derail new state legislation to curb carbon emissions and promote clean energy. A defiant Schwarzenegger said: "The environment is not for sale."
Mirrors in the desert At a cost of £20bn over 10 years, scientists suggest laying vast sheets of reflective material over 1.2 million square miles of the Sahara desert. This would counter the fact that only 30 per cent of sunlight is reflected back into the sky naturally.
Investors The world's largest global investors are calling for national and international policies that will spur private investment into low-carbon technologies. Allianz and HSBC are among the largest-ever group of investors to call for government action. Global clean-energy investments are expected to top $200bn this year, but must rise to $500bn a year by 2020 to restrict warming to below 2C.
Earth sunglasses In 2007, Dr Roger Angel secured Nasa funding for a pilot project, for a £244trn project involving using a huge cannon with a barrel 0.6 miles across to fire trillions of mirrors a million miles above the Earth. These would reduce the sun's rays hitting the Earth by about 2 per cent.
Cars HSBC bank predicts 8.65 million electric vehicles and 9.23 million plug-in and hybrid electric vehicles will be sold globally in 2020, up from 5,000 and 657,000 respectively last year.
Solar power in the desert In 2006 German scientists Dr Gerhard Knies and Dr Franz Trieb calculated that covering 0.5 per cent of the world's deserts with concentrated solar power technology could provide the world with all its electricity needs.
Carbon capture At a cement plant in Texas, construction is under way on a $115m Capitol-SkyMine project billed as the world's first for-profit carbon capture plant, which converts CO2 into baking soda. The plant, due to be finished in 2012, is expected to capture 75,000 tons of CO2 and mineralise the CO2 emissions as baking soda.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

13 Comments so far
Show AllI am glad that some people are doing something. Reguardless of wether it is our fault or not the Earth's tempeture is changing and we must deal with it. If we have another little ice age like they had in the 13th century thru the 17th century ,I wonder how we will fair ?
Few know of Carbon Farming, but it is a much safer, much easier, much cheaper alternative to geoengineering, and brings with it a multitude of benefits for preserving biodiversity, reducing poverty and fighting hunger. Check out this article:
Microfinancing a Carbon Farming Solution: http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-micro-financing-carbon-farming-solution
Another reason to be cheerful:
Condoms. The Pope just legalized contraception.
This was rather astounding news. How strange that it took so long. How odd the way it eventually came out. How mystifying that what this person says affects millions.
I read from Heiffer International that goats and cattle are dying in parts of Africa. Heiffer has been substituting cattle with camels, that are better adapted to the new climate.
The milk is more rich from the camels and the villagers are able to sell some too. The camels are also very useful in carrying water and wood back to the villages. It's not just womens' work anymore
if anyone has enough money for a few camels, that would certainly help. Go to Heiffer International and see what they need; even bees and rabbits and trees can help. If you can't afford an item by yourself, then groups can help raise funds too.
We're to consider these various examples of geoengineering lunacy to be "good" news?
Please, before you buy into this dangerous, domination-model, corporate profit-driven magical bullshit, check this link:
http://www.etcgroup.org/en/node/5217
and download the report "Geopiracy: The Case Against Geoengineering."
Lunacy? The cannon which will fire trillions of mirrors a million miles above the earth? The moon is about 240,000 miles from the earth. So these mirrors would be about four times the distance from earth that the moon is. Might be a good way to recycle aluminum cans.
You are spot on.
As serious as these are, they are only the canaries. Tony
It's time to investigate, prosecute and imprison the propagators of disinformation against climate science.
Several investigations into the widespread, systematic denial of global warming by Exxon, Koch Industries (oil billionaire David Koch), Shell, and other organizations:
http://www.ucsusa.org/publications/catalyst/exxon-exposed.html --
http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/campaigns/global-warming-and-energy/polluterwatch/koch-industries --
http://www.shellguilty.com/press-release-shell-climate-crimes-exposed-in-new-report/ --
http://www.examiner.com/x-31532-Modesto-Political-Issues-Examiner~y2010m1d25-Tea-Party-movement-influenced-by-corporate-oil-and-Mormon-ideology --
The first year my water toy came out (www.aquaglider.us), it was by an Australian company, and due to the drought, they closed all the pools in that country. No sales were the result, and thus no receipts to show the companies here (many consider it to be one of the few educational pool toys on the market).
Take note, geo-engineering is being taken far to fucking causally here.
This is a very dangerous attitude being floated, selling us on no real sacrifice for glutinous eco-system annihilating consumer capitalist model we currently live. It's probable side effects could be devastating. With so many methods, each comes with a potential risk factor that is not even addressed in this article. Cooling the earth even just a little could backfire catastrophically if you happen to have a major volcanic eruption during the same period similar to a Mt. Pinatubo.
This needs to be thought out very carefully and not thrown around like some miracle techno solution, that involves us not even having to power down, and reduce our consumption and population. Any 'solution' that suggest that.....isn't a solution at all, but simple green washing, eco destructive consumer culture bullshit.
We should really care our environment. We should avoid doing things that can affect our ozone layer and even though we aren't doing it, we will educate those people whose still practicing on it.
Thanks,
Tony aka Pest Control