While many are
celebrating the Kyoto Protocol’s entering into force this
week, others are finding cause for grave concern.
A coalition of NGOs, social
and environmental activists, communities,
scientists and economists from around the world concerned about the climate
crisis, the Durban Group, charged that the 1997 climate treaty not only
fails to cut greenhouse gas emissions enough to avert climate catastrophe,
but also steals from the poor to give to the rich.
The Kyoto Protocol
says that industrialized country signatories must reduce their emissions
5.2% below 1990 levels by 2008-2012. However, the group noted, the scientific
community has called for global reductions of over 60% below 1990 levels.
What’s more,
the carbon trading promoted by the Protocol hands Northern governments
and corporations lucrative tradable rights to use the earth’s natural
carbon-cycling capacity, effectively stealing a public good away from
most of the planet’s inhabitants.
Just last month, Danish
power utility Energi E2 sold hundreds of thousands of dollars of the rights
it had been granted free by its government to Shell after mild temperatures
kept the utility's carbon emissions below expected levels. No such free
rights have been granted to ordinary citizens.
The Kyoto Protocol’s
attempt to create “carbon dioxide-saving” projects in
poorer countries is meanwhile stirring protests from Brazil to South
Africa. Such projects – which include industrial tree plantations
and
schemes to burn off landfill gas – are designed to license big emitters
in
the rich North to go on using fossil fuels. But they usurp land or water
ordinary people need for other purposes.
“We’re creating
a sort of ‘climate apartheid,’ wherein the poorest and
darkest-skinned pay the highest price—with their health, their land,
and,
in some cases, with their lives—for continued carbon profligacy
by the
rich,” said Soumitra Ghosh of the National Forum of Forest Peoples
and
Forest Workers in India.
Worse, such carbon
projects don’t work. “Even in purely economic terms, a market
in credits from ‘carbon-saving’ projects will fail,”
said Jutta Kill
of Sinkswatch, a British-based watchdog organization. “You simply
can’t
verify whether a power plant’s emissions can be ‘compensated
for’ by a tree plantation or other project. Ultimately investors
are bound to lose
confidence in the credits they buy from such projects.”
Kill noted that almost all
of the methods proposed so far for proving how
much carbon is saved by Kyoto’s “carbon-saving” projects
have been rejected by the UN itself. “People are beginning to realize
that this is ENRON accounting,” she said.
Ricardo Carrere of the World
Rainforest Movement added that “so-called
carbon sink plantations will result in the further spread of monoculture
tree plantations, which are already having enormous impacts on people
and the environment”. The Kyoto Protocol also allows genetically
engineered trees to be used in carbon-absorbing plantations. “This
will open up a Pandora’s box of impacts we can’t even guess
at,” said Anne Petermann of Global Justice Ecology Project in the
US.
One of the biggest promoters
of the carbon market, including
“carbon-saving” projects in poor nations, is the World Bank,
ironically
also a major financier of fossil fuel developments.
“It’s ridiculous
that the Bank, which has a mission of entrenching the
fossil fuel industry, is now advertising itself as solving the climate
crisis,” said Nadia Martinez of the Sustainable Energy and Environment
Network in Washington.
“If we are to avert a
climate crisis, drastic reductions in fossil fuel
investment and use are inescapable, as is the protection of remaining
native forests,” confirmed Heidi Bachram of Carbon Trade Watch.
“We’re
joining many other movements of Northern and Southern peoples to take
the climate back into our hands. ”
Members of the Durban Group
are today sending an open letter to UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan excoriating the UN’s failure to take
constructive action and giving notice of their intention to build
independent alliances to “press governments to limit fossil fuel
extraction and use while supporting grassroots alliances struggling against
fossil fuel exploration, extraction and use and against unjust ‘climate
mitigation’ projects.”
For further information/interviews:
Heidi Bachram (UK) +1 631 477 8653, heidi@carbontradewatch.org,
www.carbontradewatch.org
and www.carbontradewatch.org/durban.
Ricardo Carrere (Uruguay) +598 2 4100985 or 4132989, rcarrere@wrm.org.uy,
www.wrm.org.uy.
Soumitra Ghosh (India) +91 353 2661915, nespon@sancharnet.in,
Sajida Khan (South Africa) +27 31 208 9223, rafiquee@telkomsa.net.
Jutta Kill (Germany/UK) +1 250 799 5888, jutta@fern.org, www.sinkswatch.org.
Larry Lohmann (UK) +44 (0)1258 473795 or 821218; larrylohmann@gn.apc.org,
www.thecornerhouse.org.uk.
Nadia Martinez (US) +1 202 234 9382, x208, nmartinez@seen.org.
Winnie Overbeek (Brazil) +55 27 33226330 or 32237436
winnie.fase@terra.com.br.
Anne Petermann (US) +1 802 482 2689,
globalecology@gmavt.net.
NOTES FOR EDITORS
1. Carbon Market Daily, 7 Feburary 2005, www.pointcarbon.com.
2. For interviews: Winnie Overbeek, Sajida Khan, Soumitra Ghosh (above).
3. SEEN, Wrong Turn from Rio, www.seen.org.
View the letter sent by the Durban Group to
Kofi Annan
For
press comment in other countries see country contacts
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