Update on Thursday’s Demonstrations

-by Michael

The Youth of the World attending this year’s COP12 can rest assured that their right to demonstrate peacefully and reasonably will not be impeded upon. Meetings with the appropriate authorities confirmed that actions taken by security to 1. End the demonstration through confiscation of signs and dispersal of those present, and, 2. Delete photos taken by a Youth photographer of security’s illegal actions, were both unneccessary and illegal. Unfortuneately, those photos are irretrievable. However, Youth still retain their gusto for taking further actions as the COP moves forward(or stagnates). What these actions will concentrate on will be decided by the particular impediments to progress that shall later present themselves in the later stages of the COP.

Will the UNFCCC take action on climate changing deforestation?

This is an incomplete post salvaged from the internet archive.

-by Alex

During the weeks leading up to the Nairobi Climate negotiations the World Bank (WB) released a new report, At Loggerheads?Agricultural Expansion, Poverty Reduction, and Envirionment in the Tropical Forests, demonstrating that the global value of Carbon storage in existing forests is greater than the economic value of converting them to other uses such as livestock pasture or timber. Katherine Sierra, vice president of sustainable development at the World Bank, stated that “now is the time to reduce pressures on tropical forests through a comprehensive framework that integrates sustainable forest management into the global strategy for mitigating climate change and preserving biodiversity.”

As if it wasn’t enough that deforestation threatens 800,000 people who live in or around vulnerable forests or woodlands, endangers the majority of the worlds remaining terrestrial biodiversity, and degrades and destroys the valuable ecosystems that provide a myriad of essential environmental services, deforestation is a major source of anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases contributing to our changing climate.

Today tropical deforestation accounts for approximately 20% of total global emissions of carbon dioxide (3.8 B tons per year), almost twice as much as does global road transportation. Since the 1950’s, 5% of tropical forests have been lost per decade. In just the past five years, over 50 million hectares of tropical forest (about the size of France) have been lost.

CDM, CCS, and EB, oh my

This is an incomplete post salvaged from the internet archive.

-by Sarah

This morning’s COP (still in progress as I write) began with an agenda item on the CDM (Clean Development Mechanism). Listening to the statements, I was taken back to Global Environmental Politics class- only this negotiation consists of hundreds of people, and I was given new insight into why the process is so slow.

One of the major issues of CDM is the inclusion of CCS (Carbon Capture and Storage) as a feasible project under CDM. While perusing a hard copy of the IPCC Special Report on CCS that I picked up yesterday, it seems there are, indeed, ways to capture carbon and use it in other endeavors rather than emit it into the atmosphere. However, according to the report, plants which capture carbon using the existing technology actually consume much more energy than they otherwise would. Not only does carbon capture inherently fail to address our reliance on fossil fuels (rather, it seems to be merely a band-aid so that we can continue with existing energy use rather than invest in new technology), but it actually increases our reliance on it because of the amount of energy consumed. There are also major issues with the potential for leakage and so forth- a problem we see with oil pipelines as well, unsurprisingly.

The ocean as a part unseperate

This is an incomplete post salvaged from the internet archive.

-by Sarah

A side event entitled Climate Impacts on the Ocean this afternoon focused on a report by the WBGU (German Advisory Council on Global Change) on the impacts of climate change on oceans (and, subsequently, on humans and the earth as a whole). The report is divided into five parts: Sea levels, Circulation, Acidification, CCS, and Methane Hydrates.

After taking Don’s climate science class, this was not to be missed.