Norway Wants U.S.
Politicians to See Warming Arctic
December 28, 2006 — By Alister Doyle, Reuters
OSLO — Norway will invite U.S.
politicians to visit a group of fast-thawing Arctic islands in 2007,
hoping to win converts for tougher action against global warming, its
foreign minister says.
"Climate change may be one of the most serious threats mankind has ever
faced," Jonas Gahr Stoere told Reuters in a end-year interview. "The
Arctic is a clarion call, perhaps more than anywhere else, that things are
changing."
Stoere said the Svalbard archipelago, 1,000 km (620 miles) from the North
Pole, where melting glaciers and thawing sea ice is disrupting the lives
of people and animals such as polar bears, could be a showcase in 2007 for
the effects of warming.
"One ambition we have...is to extend strategic invitations" for visits to
Svalbard, Stoere said about Norway's plans for International Polar Year in
2007, when many countries are planning to step up scientific research.
"In particular we are working towards the United States, we are thinking
in terms of key advisers, key political decision-makers," he said.
He said he had no names yet on his list.
"People change from seeing," he said. Norway also chairs the eight-nation
Arctic Council in 2006-08.
A 2004 report by 250 scientists said the Arctic region was warming twice
as fast as the global average and blamed a build-up of greenhouse gases,
mainly from burning fossil fuels.
Stoere noted that U.S. Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona and
Democratic Senator Hillary Clinton of New York, both seen as possible
candidates for the White House in 2008, visited the islands in 2004.
British opposition Conservative leader David Cameron was among visitors in
2006. Reached by scheduled flights from Norway, the town of Longyearbyen
on Svalbard is farther north than Alaska and has everything from hotels to
supermarkets.
In 2001, President George W. Bush pulled the United States out of the
Kyoto Protocol, the U.N. plan binding 35 industrial nations to curb
emissions of greenhouse gases, mainly from burning fossil fuels in
factories, power plants and vehicles.
Bush argued that Kyoto would cost U.S. jobs and wrongly excluded
developing nations.
Stoere said he believed the arguments for tougher action to slow warming
were getting across to more people. "I feel that talking about this is
being listened to -- in Oslo, Brussels, Washington and New Delhi," he
said.
Source: Reuters