Buenos Aires, Argentina - In a press conference today, human rights and
environmental organizations participating in the 10th Conference of the
Parties for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
condemned the rapidly emerging market in carbon as a failed experiment in
solving the climate change crisis.
"Powerful interests have hijacked the climate debate, and are forcing a
corporate, free market approach to the earth's peril," said Tom Goldtooth,
director of Indigenous Environmental Network.
In previous climate negotiations, developing countries attempted to create
a global fund that would assist them in transitioning to more sustainable
energy paths. Instead, the Northern governments forged the new Clean
Development Mechanism, which even Kyoto Protocol supporters concede has
failed to forge new pathways of development. The CDM allows Northern
countries to evade limits on their carbon emissions already committed, by
setting up projects in Southern countries, including "cheap" carbon"sinks" such as large-scale tree plantations.
"Monoculture tree plantations are devastating for local communities and
for the environment," said Rachel Nunez of the World Rainforest Movement. "If the Kyoto Protocol allows large plantations of genetically modified
trees to count as clean development projects, the results will be
catastrophic," she added.
Current carbon trading schemes involve governments, export credit
agencies, corporations and international financial institutions-all of
whom continue to invest in and support fossil fuel exploitation and
use-but not the people whose land, air and water, and lives and most
directly affected.
At today's press conference, the Institute for Policy Studies released an
expose of the biggest carbon trading proponent, the World Bank. Wrong
Turn From Rio: The World Bank's Road to Climate Catastrophe demonstrates
how the World Bank has systematically transformed Kyoto tools including
carbon trading schemes into mechanisms for institutional profit and
maintaining the status quo.
"The World Bank has done more than any other institution to entrench the
global fossil fuel industry," said Nadia Martinez of the Institute for
Policy Studies. "It must be removed from any scheme that purports to
solve the climate crisis."
Daily updates on the Climate Justice blogs:
http://climatejusticeblogspot.com (English) and
http://justiciaclimatica.blogspot.com (Spanish).
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