Story Published: Nov 29, 2010
Nearly 200 world governments will meet Nov. 29 –
Dec. 10 at the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change conference
in Cancun, Mexico to discuss future commitments under the
Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement linked to the UNFCCC.
The Protocol sets binding targets for 37 industrialized countries
and the European community for reducing greenhouse gas emissions to
an average of five percent against 1990 levels over the five-year
period 2008 and 2012.
Although some world leaders have declared that no meaningful
agreement will be produced, a senior U.N. official said the talks
can produce significant progress on forest protection, aid for
developing nations and technology sharing. U.N. Assistant
Secretary-General Robert Orr told reporters that enough issues are
close to resolution, “that an important outcome could be achieved.”
“Increasingly, people are not holding high expectations for an
international treaty to come out of the climate summit at Cancun,”
said Robert Gruenig, senior policy analyst for the
National Tribal
Environmental Council. “Instead, they’re looking to Johannesburg
next year.”
Gruenig and Native
American Rights Fund Staff Attorney Kim Gottschalk will
represent tribal interests in Cancun. “Our main thing is to get more
tribal leaders on the U.S. Delegation,” Gruenig said. The Obama
administration approved former Shoshone-Bannock Tribal Chairman
James Steele’s attendance at last year’s talks in Copenhagen, though
without funding.
Last year’s summit produced the Copenhagen Accord, an agreement
drawn up by the U.S., China, India, Brazil and South Africa that
yielded few commitments to keep global greenhouse gasses from
rising. The action by the five nations angered some of the countries
that were excluded from the process, especially poorer nations
experiencing the earliest and worst impacts of climatic changes yet
who have contributed the least to its cause.
The Accord did provide for $100 billion a year by 2020 to fund
climate efforts in developing countries. While leaders at Copenhagen
vowed to stop global temperatures from rising above two degrees
Celsius, many of the scientists in attendance claimed that the world
is now on a path of increasing temperatures to 3.5 degrees Celsius
by 2100.
Steele said the message from Copenhagen was clear. “The U.S. must
lead the world by enacting a strong, science-based cap on greenhouse
gas pollution. Failure is no longer an option. The cost of inaction
is too high, for our people as well as our wildlife and natural
resources.”
Four alternative climate summits will take place alongside the
official proceedings; a summit of non-governmental organizations,
one run by the Mexican government,
Klima Forum,
first held in Copenhagen in 2009, and
La Via
Campesina (the International Peasants’ Movement), an
organization of over 148 organizations that advocate
family-farm-based sustainable agriculture.
Via Campesina will accommodate thousands of people affected by
environmental destruction – farmers, landless, indigenous peoples
and activists from all sectors during the summit, to propose
solutions to confront climate change.
Via Campesina will bring 4,000 Mexicans – indigenous peoples,
farmers and their allies to Cancun, and a few hundred from the
Global South. The Bolivian government is flying in 90 people, and
Venezuela is flying in a similar number.
Caravans are en route to Cancun from the U.S. and Canada, and more
people are coming in from Europe. The U.S.-based
Indigenous
Environmental Network is bringing in 23 people.
IEN, La Campesina and worldwide social movements want to show world
leaders their opposition to what they are calling “false solutions
to climate chaos discussed by the UNFCCC, such as market-based
proposals on carbon trading and REDD, agrofuels and
geo-engineering.”
La Campesina has issued a call out to social movements,
organizations and people around the world to organize thousands of
protests and actions during the summit to “reject false solutions
and to support a people’s agenda for climate justice.” They’ve
declared Dec. 7 an
International Day of Action, calling for “Thousand of Cancuns”
around the world, with a massive march and protest planned in
Cancun.
NTEC and NARF also focus on indigenous rights. “We’re working to
ensure indigenous peoples are not left out of the process,” Gruenig
said. “As of now they are asked to give an opening and closing
statement. That is not sufficient by any means, as a lot changes as
the negotiations proceed. Indigenous people need to have direct
participation and be allowed to speak on the floor.”
To affect that work Gruenig and Gottschalk will participate at the
daily Indigenous Caucus, held concurrently with the talks.
In a recent development, the U.N. approved a
draft resolution Nov. 16 that if finalized will organize a
“World Conference on Indigenous Peoples.” In so doing the U.N.
stated concerns about the “extreme social and economic disadvantages
that indigenous peoples have faced,” and referenced the first
World People’s Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother
Earth held in Cochabamba last April.
The high-level plenary meeting would take place at the end of the
Second International Decade of the World’s Indigenous People in
2014, and would share perspectives and best practices for the
fulfillment of the objectives of the
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The resolution calls on member states and the international
community to find solutions to problems faced by indigenous peoples
in areas that include culture, education, health, human rights, the
environment and socio-economic development. It would expand the
U.N. Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Populations to include
facilitating the participation of representatives of indigenous
organizations in sessions of the
U.N. Human Rights Council.
Indian Country Today is grateful to the
Earth
Journalism Network for its U.S. 2010 Climate Media Fellowship
that is sending environmental reporter Terri Hansen to Cancun,
Mexico Nov. 29 – Dec. 10 to cover the U.N. Framework Convention on
Climate Change.
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