COP16 — Hope for the holidays
Something truly magical is happening in Cancun. Patricia Espinosa got a standing ovation when she returned after giving people a couple of hours to peruse the text. Read more »
Something truly magical is happening in Cancun. Patricia Espinosa got a standing ovation when she returned after giving people a couple of hours to peruse the text. Read more »
COP 16 President Patricia Espinosa just received a prolonged standing ovation simply for announcing 10 hours late that negotiations were still ongoing and a deal was still possible. I am in tears.
The youth action outside this building was forcibly stopped.
The best analysis I’ve seen of the new text is offered by BBC. It is better than nothing.
A ceremony announcing the Colossal Fossil was widely expected to award Canada for the fourth year in a row, given the large number of fossils accumulated during this year’s negotiations. But in the confusion outside, the announcement has been put off. I’m proud of the young Canadians for their courage, and disgusted by our leaders for their lack of it.
[Adriana is blogging from the UN climate change negotiations in Cancun, in an attempt to keep the Canadian delegation honest.]
Patricia is going to get the President’s new text, just available hot off the press in the Azteca building here at the Moon Palace in Cancun.
Outside, some 50 young people are counting in unison. Some are crying. They are counting the dead. 21,000 annual deaths from climate change now, a number destined to climb right along with the temperatures. We desperately, desperately need some good news.
[Adriana is blogging from the UN climate change negotiations in Cancun, in an attempt to keep the Canadian delegation honest.]
The open meetings have all been delayed as last-minute negotiations continue behind closed doors. I’m sitting in the Cancunmesse area where displays are being taken down and people are tense and bored. For anyone following in Canada, now would be a good time to call the Prime Minister’s Office and tell him you want Canada to show some leadership in breaking the logjam by going along with the majority of countries and supporting a second Kyoto period, and urging Japan and Russia to do the same.
[Adriana is blogging from the UN climate change negotiations in Cancun, in an attempt to keep the Canadian delegation honest.]
At this morning’s meeting with Canada’s chief negotiator, the first question of the day was taken by a representative of Canada’s youth delegation. He delivered a strongly worded rebuke to Canada for failing to show any leadership, for insisting on weak targets and extensive loopholes, for failing to work constructively with countries that took the problem seriously, and for failing to recognize and address the terrible pain they were imposing on succeeding generations who would never benefit from the advantages that Canadian government choices made today. They demanded that Canada stop kowtowing to the oil industry and take a stand for Canadians and the world. And then they walked out, all 15 or so of them. Read more »