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UN:
BAN KI-MOON URGES CLIMATE CHANGE BREAKTHROUGH IN BALI AFTER DIRE REPORT
RELEASED: 17/11/2007 (MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network /
- 17 November 2007 - Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon has challenged the world's policymakers to start devising a
comprehensive deal for tackling climate change at next month's summit in Bali,
Indonesia, after a United Nations report released today found that global
warming is unequivocal and could cause irreversible damage to the planet.
Launching
the fourth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC),
which brings together hundreds of scientific experts, Mr. Ban said that slowing
and even reversing the effects of climate change “is the defining challenge of
our age.”
He also
stressed the report makes clear that “concerted and sustained action now can
still avoid some of the most catastrophic scenarios” in the IPCC forecasts.
“We
can transform a necessity into virtue,” he said. “We can pursue new and
improved ways to produce, consume and discard. We can promote environmentally
friendly industries that spur development and job creation even as they reduce
emissions. We can usher in a new era of global partnership, one that helps lift
all boats on the rising tide of climate-friendly development.”
For this
to happen, the Secretary-General said the world's industrialized countries must
form a “grand bargain” with developing nations, which are the most
vulnerable to the impact of climate change.
The
report details how reduced rainfall in much of Africa is likely to aggravate
existing water shortages and slash crop yields, rising sea levels are set to
inundate small island States and melting glaciers could trigger major floods in
South Asia and South America.
More
heat waves and periods of heavy rainfall are deemed very likely to occur,
tropical cyclones are predicted to become more intense and a dramatic decrease
in the polar ice caps is also expected as air and ocean temperatures keep
rising. In the worst case scenario, nearly a third of all of plant and animal
species could be at risk of extinction.
It also
explains that industry, agriculture and infrastructure can become far more
energy-efficient, water can be more effectively conserved and used and countries
can become less dependent on fossil fuels and other non-renewable sources of
energy.
IPCC
Chairman Rajendra Pachauri said governments have “a wide variety of policies
and instruments” available to create incentives to mitigate behaviour –
especially in the area of carbon emissions.
“We
need a new ethic by which every human being realizes the importance of the
challenge we are facing and starts to take action through changes in lifestyle
and attitude.”
The
report, released in Valencia, Spain, is the synthesis of three IPCC reports
issued earlier this year that examined the scientific basis of climate change,
the impact it is having and ways to mitigate and adapt to the phenomenon.
It is
expected to form the basis of discussions in Bali next month when world leaders
gather under the auspices of the UN to try to agree to a successor pact to the
Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions, which is due to expire by 2012.
Mr. Ban
told reporters after today's launch that “the breakthrough needed in Bali is
an agreement to launch for negotiations for a comprehensive climate change deal
that all nations can embrace – developed and developing countries alike.
Scientists have now done their work and I call on political leaders to do theirs
and agree not only to launch these negotiations but also to conclude them by
2009.”
The
report states that “neither adaptation nor mitigation alone can avoid all
climate change impacts. However, they can complement each other and together can
significantly reduce the risks of climate change.”
The
Secretary-General, who is in Valencia at the end of an international trip that
has taken him to both Antarctica and the Amazon rainforest, said he had
witnessed first-hand the perils posed by climate change.
“I can
tell you with assurance that global, sweeping, concerted action is needed now.
There is no time to waste.”
UN
Environment Programme (UNEP) Director Achim Steiner agreed, saying “we now
have the compelling blueprint for action and in many ways the price tag for
failure – from increasing acidification of the oceans to the likely
extinctions of economically important biodiversity.”
Michel
Jarraud, Secretary-General of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO),
called for more detailed and continuing observation of the impact of climate
change to help individuals, businesses and civil society make informed decisions
about how best to adapt to meet their own circumstances.
Labels: United
Nations, U.N.,
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