เรียน เพื่อนคนรักษ์สิ่งแวดล้อม ทุกท่าน – ประชุม – ภาวะโลกร้อน

เรียน เพื่อนคนรักษ์สิ่งแวดล้อมทุกท่าน

ประเทศโบลิเวียประกาศเป็นเจ้าภาพการประชุม  World Peoples’ Conference on Climate Change and Mother Earth Rights  ในเดือน เมษายน ได้รับการตอบรับที่จะสนับสนุนในนานาประเทศ จะ มีรัฐบาล 192 ประเทศมาประชุม ร่วมแสดงความคิดเห็น และถกเถียงกันร่วมกับประชาสังคม ร่วมกับสำนักงานเกี่ยวกับภาวะโลกร้อน ขณะเดียวกัน ก็เปิดโอกาสให้ประชาคมได้มีส่วนร่วมแสดงความคิดเห็น และนำเสนอข้อเสนอแนะ เกี่ยวกับเรื่องนี้ โดย

ขั้นที่1  ท่านต้องลงทะเบียนเข้าร่วมการประชุม ที่ http://pwccc.wordpress.com/

ขั้นที่ 2   ด้วยเลฃที่ลงทะเบียน ท่านจะได้รับทางอีเมลล์ ท่านสามารถสมัครเป็นสมาชิกของ 16 คณะทำงานได้

ขั้นที่ 3  ท่านจะได้รับ

ความเห็นและข้อเสนอแนะ  ทาง อีเมลล์ จากคนที่สมัครเป็นสมาชิกของกลุ่มคณะทำงาน ขณะเดียวกัน ท่านสามารถ เสนอข้อเสนอแนะ และแสดงความคิดเห็น ของท่านต่อกลุ่ม

ซึ่งจะมี คณะทำงาน 16 ชุดด้วยกัน เพื่อทำงานใน16 หัวข้อ ตาม รายการข้างล่างนี้

งานหลักของการประชุม จะได้จัดทำชึ้นใน 16 กลุ่มหลัก  แต่ละกลุ่มจะเริ่มทำงาน ทาง อิเลคโทรนิคเมล์ม และเสาะหา ความเห็นชอบเป็นเอกฉันท์  และจัดทำข้อเสนอแนะ ที่จะถูกนำไปพิจารณา และขยายการถกเถียงในที่ประชุม ที่จะเกิดชึ้นในการประชุมที่จะเกิดขึ้น ที่โคชาแบมบา แนวความคิด ที่จะให้ โคชาแบมบา เป็นที่รวม  และมีส่วนร่วมของคนส่วนใหญ่ ในการที่จะรักษาสิทธิของสิ่งมีชีวิต และอนุรักษ์แผ่นดินแม่

ท่านสามารถเข้าร่วม ได้ถึง 5 กลุ่ม  โดยไม่ต้องไปแสดงตนในที่ประชุมที่ประเทศโบลิเวีย

01GTcausas@cmpcc.org
02GTarmonia@cmpcc.org
03GTderechosMT@cmpcc.org
04GTreferendum@cmpcc.org
05GTtribunal@cmpcc.org
06GTmigrantes@cmpcc.org
07GTindigenas@cmpcc.org
08GTdeuda@cmpcc.org
09GTvision@cmpcc.org
10GTprotocoloK@cmpcc.org
11GTadaptacion@cmpcc.org
12GTfinanciamiento@cmpcc.org
13GTtecnologia@cmpcc.org
14GTbosques@cmpcc.org
15GTmercados@cmpcc.org
16GTestrategias@cmpcc.org

กลุ่มคณะทำงานท่ามกลาง การทำงานก่อนการประชุม ต้องเริ่มสร้าง เอกสารที่ต้องการนำเสนอภายในเดือน เมษายน มีขนาด 2-3 หน้า เพื่อใช้เป็นเอกสารที่จะนำมาเสวนากันในการประชุม

หากท่านที่สนใจ อยากใคร่นำเสนอความคิดเห็นของท่าน ท่านสามารถแสดงความคิดเห็น ได้ ที่ www.ourchiangmai.com ในหัวข้อ  CONFERENCE GATHERS MOMENTUM AND SUPPORT

หรือ punika@apwld.org เราจะมีคณะทำงาน ช่วยนำเสนอความคิดเห็นของท่านส่งต่อไปยังที่ประชุม ที่ประเทศโบลิเวีย

และกรุณาส่งต่อ ไปถึงคนที่ต้องการมีส่วนร่วมในการครั้งนี้ด้วย

Punika Shinawatra

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Peoples´ World Conference on Climate Change and Mother Earth´s Rights

Please sign up and register (even if we are not yet sure if we can actually go to Bolivia) as a participant

You may follow this link to registerat http://cmpcc.org –    Cochabamba, Bolivia 19 al 22 de Abril 2010

after registering, you will get an email confirmation as well as your unique accreditation number. Only after receiving this will you be able to SIGN UP for the different working groups – themes that the conference will address.

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Not all lost at Copenhagen – Klima Forum Declaration

http://www.klimaforum09.org/Declaration?lang=en

The Klima forum09 Declaration – final version

System change – not climate change

A People’s Declaration from Klimaforum09

SUMMARY

There are solutions to the climate crisis. What people and the planet need is a just and sustainable transition of our societies to a form that will ensure the rights of life and dignity of all peoples and deliver a more fertile planet and more fulfilling lives to future generations.

We, participating peoples, communities, and all organizations at the Klimaforum09 in Copenhagen, call upon every person, organization, government, and institution, including the United Nations (UN), to contribute to this necessary transition. It will be a challenging task. The crisis of today has economic, social, environmental, geopolitical, and ideological aspects interacting with and reinforcing each other as well as the climate crisis. For this reason, we call for urgent climate action:

• A complete abandonment of fossil fuels within the next 30 years, which must include

specific milestones for every 5-year period. We demand an immediate cut in GHG of industrialized countries of at least 40% compared to 1990 levels by 2020.

• Recognition, payment and compensation of climate debt for the overconsumption of

atmospheric space and adverse effects of climate change on all affected groups and people.

• A rejection of purely market-oriented and technology-centred false and dangerous solutions

such as nuclear energy, agro-fuels, carbon capture and storage, Clean Development Mechanisms, biochar, genetically “climate-readied” crops, geo-engineering, and reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD), which deepens social and environmental conflicts.

• Real solutions to climate crisis based on safe, clean, renewable, and sustainable use of natural

resources, as well as transitions to food, energy, land, and water sovereignty.

Therefore, we demand that COP15 reach an agreement that will initiate the restoration of the environmental, social, and economic balance of planet Earth by means that are environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable and equitable, and finally come up with a legally binding treaty.

The adverse impacts of human-induced climate change cause gross violations of human rights. All nations have an obligation to cooperate internationally to ensure respect for human rights everywhere in the world in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations. Any specific agreement on climate change must be seen in the broader context of achieving a sustainable transition of our societies.

We, participating peoples and organisations at Klimaforum09, commit to continue our full and active engagement in promoting such a transition, which will require a fundamental change in social, political, and economic structures and a rectification of gender, class, race, generational, and ethnic inequalities and injustices.

This requires a restoration of the democratic sovereignty of our local communities and of their role as a basic social, political, and economic unit. Local and democratic ownership of, control over, and access to natural resources will be the basis for meaningful and sustainable development of communities and simultaneously for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. There is also a need for stronger regional and international cooperative arrangements to manage common and shared resources, as well as for a stronger and democratic UN.

We call upon every concerned person, social movement, and cultural, political or economic organization to join us in building a strong global movement of movements, which can bring forward peoples’ visions and demands at every level of society. Together, we can make global transitions to sustainable futures.

_________________________________________________________________________________________

System change – not climate change

A People’s Declaration from Klimaforum09

1. Preamble

There are solutions to the climate crisis. What people and the planet need is a just and sustainable transition of our societies to a form that will ensure the rights of life and dignity of all people and deliver a more fertile planet and more fulfilling lives to present and future generations. This transition must be based on principles of solidarity – especially on behalf of the most vulnerable – non-discrimination, gender equality, equity, and sustainability, acknowledging that we are part of nature, which we love and respect. To address the climate crisis, however, awareness creation and determined actions adhering to a rights-based framework are required. All nations have an obligation to cooperate internationally to ensure respect for human rights everywhere in the world, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.

We, participating peoples, communities, and all organizations at the Klimaforum09 in Copenhagen, call upon every person, organization, government, and institution, including the United Nations (UN), to contribute to this necessary transition. It will be a challenging task. The crisis of today has economic, social, environmental, geopolitical, and ideological aspects interacting with and reinforcing each other as well as the climate crisis. This very moment of conjunction of crises – climate, energy, financial, food, and water crises, among others –, urges us to unite and transform the dominant social and economic system as well as global governance, which currently block necessary solutions to the climate crisis. For this reason, a movement from below is called upon to act now.

Environmental and climate debts must be paid. No false, dangerous, or short-term solutions should be promoted and adopted, such as nuclear power, agro-fuels, offsetting, carbon capture and storage (CCS), biochar, geo-engineering, and carbon trading. Instead, we should implement a truly sustainable transition built on clean, safe, and renewable resources as well as energy conservation. We welcome alliances across social movements and sectors, representing all ages, genders, ethnicities, faiths, communities, and nationalities. We want to take the future into our own hands by building a strong and popular movement of youth, women, men, workers, peasants, fisher folks, indigenous peoples, people of colour, and urban and rural social groups; a movement that is able to act at all levels of society to deal with environmental degradation and climate change. We call for a new international economic order and support a strong and democratic UN as opposed to G8, G20 or other closed groups of powerful countries.

2. The challenge as we see it:

The concentration of greenhouse gasses (GHGs) in the atmosphere is already so high that the climate system has been brought out of balance. The CO2 concentration and global temperatures have increased more rapidly in the last 50 years than ever before on Earth, and will rise even faster in the coming decades. This adds to a multitude of other serious ecological imbalances, the impacts of which threaten the lives and livelihoods of the people of the world, most acutely, impoverished people and other vulnerable groups.

The imbalance of the climate system leads to greater and more frequent extremes of heat and rainfall patterns, tropical cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons, extreme flooding and droughts, loss of biodiversity, landslides, rising sea levels, shortage of drinking water, shorter growing seasons, lower yields, lost or deteriorated agricultural land, decreased agricultural production, losses of livestock, extinction of ecosystems, and diminished fish stocks, among others. These phenomena result in food crises, famine, illness, death, displacement, and the extinction of sustainable ways of life. Interacting with this is the introduction of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), monoculture farming, and industrialized agriculture, all strongly promoted by corporations. These seriously threaten the stability and diversity of ecosystems, marginalize and impoverish small-scale farmers, and undermine food sovereignty. Corporate controlled agriculture is geared to meet an inflated global demand generated by over-consumption especially in the North, rather than for local basic needs. The same can be said about modern industrial fisheries, intensive forestry and mining, which destroy ecosystems, diminish biodiversity and destroy the life and livelihoods of local communities.

These effects of climate change together with growing social inequalities and severe impacts on our common environment are already devastating the lives of millions of people as well as their local communities. However, we – the people – are not prepared to accept this fact as our fate. That is why there are fast growing popular movements determined to defend their livelihoods and stand up against those forces and causes that have led us onto this ultimately suicidal route of environmental destruction.

In Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Oceania and South and Central America, as well as the periphery of North America and Europe, popular movements are rising to confront the exploitation of their land by foreign interests, and to regain control over their own resources. A new type of activism has revitalized the environmental movements, leading to a wide variety of protests and actions against mining, dams, deforestation, coal-fired power plants, air travel, and the building of new roads, among others. There is a growing awareness about the need to change the present economic paradigm in a very fundamental way.

Among various movements, alternative ways of life are proliferating. At the same time it is becoming evident to the public that the present holders of power are unwilling to face and deal with the threats of climate change and environmental degradation. The so-called strategy of “green growth” or “sustainable growth” has turned out to be an excuse for pursuing the same basic model of economic development that is one of the root causes of environmental destruction and the climate crisis.

3. The causes as we see them:

The immediate and primary cause of human-induced climate change is an unprecedented emission of greenhouse gasses (GHGs) into the atmosphere originating from the increasing burning of fossil fuels for industrial, commercial, transportation and military purposes, to mention a few but significant sources.

Other important drivers of climate change are forest degradation – excluding indigenous people’s sustainable practice of shifting cultivations – deforestation, extractive industries, disturbance of the water cycle, expansion of industrial agriculture areas through land grabbing, increased industrial meat production, and other types of unsustainable use of natural resources.

Uneven control and ownership of resources

These immediate causes are the results of an unsustainable global economic system built on unequal access to and control over the planet’s limited resources and the benefits that accrue from their use. This system is premised on the appropriation of local, national, and planetary commons by local and global elites. What has been praised as great strides in technology, production, and human progress has in fact precipitated global ecological and development disasters. Still, a privileged global elite engages in reckless profit-driven production and grossly excessive consumption while a very large proportion of humanity is mired in poverty with mere survival-and-subsistence consumption, or even less. This is the situation not only in countries of the South but also in the North. The world’s largest transnational corporations (TNCs), based mainly in the northern countries and tax-havens, but with expanding operations, have long been at the forefront of these excesses.

The competition among global corporations and rich nations for resources and greater market shares, as well as trade agreements and treaties, have led to a neo-colonial suppression of southern peoples, denying them rightful ownership and control of their resources. The World Trade Organization (WTO) and international financial institutions, as well as the European Union (EU) and United States (US), using bilateral trade agreements, are increasing the privatization and commoditization of public resources, intensifying the plunder of natural resources of underdeveloped countries, and imposing conditions that increase their dependence.

Prevailing patterns of thought and alternatives

The development model promoted by these institutions is not only a question of “economics.” The prevailing economic paradigm is strongly related to a system of thought that is based on an imagination conception of the human being as “economic man.” This ideology is reinforced by corporate media and marketing firms that promote egoism, competition, material consumption, and boundless accumulation of private wealth in utter disregard of the social and ecological consequences of such behaviour. This system of thought is intimately intertwined with patterns of patriarchy and paternalism.

If we really want to address this crisis, we need to recognize that the human species is part of both nature and society and cannot exist without either. Therefore if humanity is to survive, we need to respect the integrity of Mother Earth and strive for harmony with nature and for peace within and between cultures.

We are at once citizens of different nations and of one world. Everyone shares responsibility for the present and future well-being of the human family and the larger living world. The spirit of human solidarity and kinship with all life is strengthened when we live according to the principle of “One among many.”

4. A just and sustainable transition

It is clear that solving the climate crisis requires far-reaching transformations, which are currently excluded from the agenda of policy-makers in governments and multilateral institutions. People are calling for system change, not “business-as-usual” and the uncritical use of technology and market fixes to which powerful interests have confined the climate agenda.

People’s movements embrace a number of alternative visions for society and concrete steps that must be taken in order to move towards a sustainable future while addressing the climate, water, food, and economic crises at the same time. Such a sustainable transition will begin by many different initiatives. Some of these steps towards sustainable transition are:

• Food sovereignty and ecological agriculture: Uphold the rights of people, communities, and countries to determine their own systems of production, including farming, fishing, food, forestry, and land policies that are ecologically, socially, economically, and culturally appropriate to the circumstances. People’s, especially women’s access to and control over productive resources such as land, seeds, and water must be respected and guaranteed. Agricultural production must rely principally on local knowledge, appropriate technology, and ecologically sustainable techniques that bind CO2

in the diverse and native plant systems, bind water, and return more nutrients to the soil than were taken out. Food and agricultural production must be primarily geared towards meeting local needs, encourage self-sufficiency, promote local employment, and minimize resource use, waste and GHG emissions in the process.

• Democratic ownership and control of economy: The reorganization of society’s productive units around more democratic forms of ownership and management, in order to meet people’s basic needs, such as employment creation; access to water, housing, land, health care, and education; food sovereignty; and ecological sustainability. Public policy must make sure that the financial system serves public interests and channel resources for the sustainable transformation of industry, agriculture, and services.

• Energy sovereignty: A dramatic reduction of energy consumption especially in the enriched countries, combined with a mix of renewable and public energy sources such as solar, wind, geothermal, mini-hydro, wave, and tidal; the development of off-the-grid electricity distribution to secure energy supplies to communities; and public ownership of the grid.

• Ecological planning of urban and rural zones: The aim is a radical reduction in the inputs of energy and resources and the outputs of waste and pollution, while encouraging locally based supply of basic needs of the citizens. An urban and rural planning built on social justice and equal service to all, reducing the need for transport. Promoting public transport systems such as light and high-speed rail-systems and bicycles, reducing the need for private motor vehicles and thus decongesting the roads, improving health and reducing energy consumption.

• Education, science and cultural institutions: Re-orientate public research and education to meet the needs of people and the environment, rather than the present bias for developing commercially profitable and proprietary technologies. Research and development should be primarily an open and collaborative endeavour in the common interest of humankind. Eliminate patents on ideas and technology. Fair and just exchange of appropriate technologies, traditional knowledge, and indigenous innovative practices and ideas between countries should be encouraged.

• An end to militarism and wars: The present fossil fuel based development model leads to violence, war, and military conflict over control of energy, land, water, and other natural resources. This is demonstrated by the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as militarization across the globe in regions rich in fossil fuels and other natural resources. Peasants and indigenous communities are also being violently displaced from their lands to make way for agrofuel plantations. Trillions of dollars are spent on the military-industrial complex, thus wasting enormous material and human resources, which should instead be devoted to implementing a sustainable transition.

By taking steps forward, we can learn by doing. These steps will help us to convince the broad majority of people that a sustainable transition entails the promise of a more fulfilling and good life.

The social, political, economic, and environmental fields are closely interrelated. A coherent strategy must therefore address them all, which indeed is the central idea behind the concept of sustainable transition.

One aspect of this concept is the restoration of local communities rather than the global market as a basic social, political, and economic unit. Social cohesion, democratic participation, economic accountability, and ecological responsibility can only be accomplished by restoring decision-making at the lowest appropriate level. This is a basic lesson we have learned from ethnic cultures and local communities.

A community-based approach does not, however, contradict the need for extensive international cooperation. On the contrary, it will need stronger alliances within and across all borders between direct producers in agriculture, forestry, fisheries, and industry. Alliances also built on the strength of gender equality and on recognizing and overcoming unjust power relations at all levels. It also includes the need for stronger regional and international cooperative arrangements to manage common and shared resources, such as cross-border water resources. Furthermore, international cooperation will promote the full mutual exchange of ideas, technologies, and expertise across all boundaries, as well as an open-minded dialogue between different cultures, based on mutual respect.

5. Paths to transition

Many people are involved in the practical creation of more sustainable industry, agriculture, forestry, and fishery as well as in the renewable energy sector. These initiatives within the system have furthermore created alliances with other sectors of society, trade unions, consumers, city dwellers, teachers, and researchers, all of whom are striving towards sustainable ways of life.

United Nations (UN) and Conference of Parties (COP)

We need to address the UN negotiations on Climate Change, and the 15th Conference of Parties (COP15) on the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The lessons from previous rounds of negotiations are not very promising. Despite the high-profile schemes for concerted action launched first in the 1992 Framework Convention on Climate Change of Rio de Janeiro and later in the 1997 Kyoto protocol , results are meagre and the problems have not been solved. Indeed, it has worsened as the principles, targets, and timelines of both the Convention and the Protocol have made little headway.

The same big corporate interests that are largely responsible for causing the climate crisis appear to have immense influence on climate policies at the national and global level. We strongly oppose this undemocratic influence of corporate lobbyism in the current COP-negotiations. Contrary to this, we call on states to put in place an appraisal mechanism for all policies and policy instruments under the UNFCCC, to ensure inclusive and deliberative multi-stakeholder processes that repair existing inequalities, whether based on gender, colour, age, disability or other forms of discrimination in the COP-negotiations.

We demand that COP15 reach an agreement that will initiate the restoration of the environmental, social, and economic balance of planet Earth by means that are environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable and equitable, and finally come up with a legally binding treaty.

Our demands

We are raising our voices to the leaders in the UNFCCC to put forward the people’s demands and alternatives.

1. Phasing out fossil fuel: We call for a clear strategy for dismantling the fossil fuel era within

the next 30 years, which must include specific milestones for every 5-year period. We demand an immediate cut in GHG emissions of industrialized countries of at least 40% compared 1990 levels by 2020.

2. Reparations and compensation for Climate Debt and crimes: We demand full reparations for southern countries and those impoverished by northern states, TNCs, and tax-haven institutions. By this, we partly address historical injustices associated to inequitable industrialization and climate change, originating in the genocide of indigenous nations, transatlantic slave trade, colonial era, and invasions. This must be accompanied by an equally clear strategy for compensating impoverished people for the climate and broader ecological debt owed by the enriched. A global and democratic fund should be established to give direct support to the victims of climate change. Developed countries must provide new, mandatory, adequate, and reliable financing as well as patent-free technologies so that

developing countries can better adapt to adverse climate impacts and undertake emission reductions. This would allow developing countries to play their part in curbing climate change, while still meeting the needs and aspirations of their people. International financial institutions, donor agencies, and trade mechanisms should have no part in reparations.

3. An immediate global ban on deforestation of primary forests and the parallel initiation of an ambitious global tree-planting program based on native and diverse species in partnership with indigenous peoples and forest-dependent communities. Similarly, a ban on large-scale industrialized fishing methods and a return to primarily local and sustainable fishing practices. Finally, a ban on land grabbing by foreign interests and the full acceptance of people’s sovereignty over natural resources.

4. We express strong opposition to purely market-oriented and technology-centred false and dangerous solutions put forward by many corporations, governments, and international financial institutions. These include nuclear energy, agro-fuels, carbon capture and storage, Clean Development Mechanisms, biochar, genetically “climate-readied” crops, geoengineering, and reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) as currently defined by the UNFCCC. These only produce new environmental threats, without really solving the climate crisis. Carbon trading and offsetting are also false and unjust instruments, because they treat a common planetary resource – the atmosphere – as a commodity that can be owned and traded. So far, the system has not proven its merits, and by allowing rich countries to offset their reduction obligations, it has maintained this unjust

and unsustainable system.

5. Equitable tax on carbon emissions: Instead of the regime of tradable emission quotas we demand an equitable tax on carbon emissions. Revenues from this carbon tax should be returned equitably to people, and a portion should be used to compensate and contribute to finance adaptation and mitigation. This is, however, not a substitute for repayment of already accumulated climate debt. This compensation and funding should be unconditional and free of market mechanisms and financial institutions. Reduction of emissions must be strongly encouraged by a briskly increasing, transparent carbon tax, in addition to direct regulations to drive the phase-out of fossil fuels, while enabling safe, clean and renewable energy.

6. Multilateral institutions and TNCs: Unjust, unsustainable, and unaccountable global economic and financial institutions like the WTO, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), regional development banks, donor institutions, and trade agreements should be replaced by democratic and equitable institutions functioning in accordance with the United Nations Charter, that respect people’s sovereignty over resources, and promote solidarity between people and nations. A mechanism for strict surveillance and control of the operations of TNCs should be created as well.

Finally, we commit ourselves to a full and active involvement in carrying our sustainable transitions of our societies along the lines put forward in this Declaration.

6. A global movement for sustainable transition

Irrespective of the outcome of the Copenhagen Summit on Climate Change, there is an urgent need to build a global movement of movements dedicated to the long-term task of promoting a sustainable transition of our societies. Contrary to the prevailing power structures, this movement must grow from the bottom and up. What is needed is a broad alliance of environmental movements, social movements, trade unions, farmers, civil societies, and other aligned parties that can work together in everyday political struggle on the local as well as national and international level. Such an alliance entails at the same time the creation of a new mindset and of new types of social activisms, and must be capable not only of reacting to unsustainable practices, but also showing by example how a new sustainable economy can indeed function.

We, participating peoples, communities, and social organizations at Klimaforum09 are all committed to build on the results achieved at this event in the further development of a global movement of movements.

This Declaration aims to inspire the further development of such a movement by pointing to the general direction in which we choose to move. Together, we can make global transitions to sustainable future. Join us.

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Climate Crisis – Add your weblink here

Please help keep our friends up-to-date with stories from the web and your favourite websites by pasting details into the comments area below. Here are some to begin with:

Evo Morales at Copenhagen: `Shameful’ for West to spend trillions on war and just $10 billion for climate change  http://links.org.au/node/1411

http://climatecodered.blogspot.com/ Australian David Spratt with easy links

From Jeff @ Copenhagen http://www.fairearthfarm.com/community/lines-drawn-in-the-sky-in-copenhagen.html

http://www.democracynow.org/ Naomi Klein & friends

Soot & Himalayan glaciers at http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2009/12/07/0910444106.full.pdf+html

& http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/hansen_14/ (Thanks to Jim Hansen & Jere Locke)

Mekong Delta disappearing  http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=02MIS141209

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LEONARDO DI CAPRIO'S THE 11 TH HOUR Free screening 17th December 2009

FREE ADMISSION
FILM NIGHT AT THE AUA
THURSDAY 17 TH DECEMBER AT 7 PM
CONTINUING THE SUCCESSFUL EVENTS IN CHIANG MAI
SUPPORTING THE COPENHAGEN GLOBAL SUMMIT
WE ARE PRESENTING
LEONARDO DI CAPRIO’S
THE 11 TH HOUR

in ENGLISH with THAI SUBTITLES

A THOUGHT PROVOKING DOCUMENTARY ON GLOBAL WARMING AND CLIMATE CHANGE AND MOST IMPORTANTLY SOLUTIONS AND HOPE with a discussion to follow please bring your thoughts,questions and local solutions!
Students, Teachers, Parents, Visitors…All Welcome!
information: info@trekkingcollective.com or 0831523621
FREE ADMISSION DONATIONS WELCOME TO COVER COST SUGGESTED 30 BAHT FREE FOR STUDENTS
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Shade vs Aircon

IMGP0191IMGP0188

Compare these two Chiang Mai buildings:

Left a Government School, facing the hot West Sun, Cooled by shady     eaves and trees at ground level.

Right a Private Hotel, facing hot West Sun, No shade

Cooled by air-con, electricity from Mae Moh dirty coal

The hotel pollutes the air, kills people in Lampang and pours CO2 into the atmosphere making the World Hotter.

Once Chiang Mai had no air-con.  Now we has thousands of hotel rooms and apartments with little or no shade and poor or no ventilation.  Some apartment residents can spend upwards of 2000 baht per month on air-con.

Our architects can help remedy this situation by:

1 – Providing designs for window shades appropriate to the direction faced (South facing need to be much longer than North and similarly West than East).  Designs that are typhoon proof, for new and for existing structures.

2 – Urging Local & Central government to adopt shading and ventilation standards and provide loan finance through organisations such as EGAT for modifying existing buildings and progressively restrict air-con use.

Governments can listen to this and act accordingly while restricting polluting vehicles and planting tall growing trees.

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Call for Coordinated Activities and Actions for Climate Justice

As background to this call from Jubilee South you may wish to look at http://climatecodered.blogspot.com/2009/11/copenhagen-reality-check-25-by-2020.html look at the computer model graph and its assumptions toward the end.

The Call below I believe in its original form had fundamental weaknesses – a failure to recognize the class nature of society as cause of our problems,  a continued use of notions of trade and debt taken from the ruling class in its discussion and an apparent ignorance of the ongoing crisis affecting industrialised countries which in the context of the Climate Catastrophe have far more real liabilities than assets.  I have attempted to keep its original structure with suggested amendments in italics. Please Read and discuss in the comment space below.

Ricky

To all JS-APMDD Members and Friends

Call for Coordinated Activities and Actions

for Climate Justice

On December 7 to 18, almost 200 governments will be meeting in a Conference of Parties (COP) in Copenhagen in an attempt to reach agreements that will have major impacts to the future of our peoples and the planet. JS-APMDD urges all its members and friends to use this occasion to raise the demands for climate justice and call on governments all over the world to take decisive steps towards solving the climate crisis.

In particular, we urge you to organize actions during the following dates:

  • Nov 29 to Dec 5, when government negotiators prepare to leave for Copenhagen . We urge you to hold mobilizations in front of embassies of the G8 and G20 governments.
  • Dec 12 -  the day of the massive mobilization in Copenhagen joined by all groups and movements.  We urge you to hold counterpart events and actions in various Asian cities.
    • December 14  -  which will be the day of action not on Ecological Debt and Climate Debt but  but on ending and reversing Economic Growth and reversing the negative effects of Imperialism & Neo-colonialism. We urge you to organize actions raising no rejecting the call for Reparations. The call for reparations is misguided in two respects. Firstly looking at history and the punitive reparative outcomes forced on Germany after WWI can be regarded as a cause of the rise of Nazism and WWII. In contrast the Marshall plan was a success which brought peace. Secondly apart from assets such as developed educational and health systems, the so-called developed countries will be found to be close to bankruptcy while faced with the need for an urgent transformation of every aspect of economic life. .

Through these actions, we will put forward the following demands:

1. Not for North countries to give full reparations for the ecological debt and climate debt they owe to the South as these are historically too long (going back to the destruction ofNorth Africa by the Romans and Greeks) , too great and in cases such as the thousands of species extinctions and countless cases of genocide, without meaning. Neither of these are the responsibility of the North alone.

Rather we call for the canceling of all debts both national and international; the socialization of housing, productive property, infrastructure and superstructure;  and the internationalization of the World’s natural wealth to be managed sustainably and equitably with the local people .
2. We demand not only that the North countries to undertake deep, drastic cuts of GHG emissions through domestic measures but they do so drawing on positive experiences on lifestyles and transformative measures of the South and East and that parallel cuts and transformations also take place amongst sectors of Southern & Eastern societies which hitherto have been developing along the capitalist, consumerist road.
3. The Peoples of the Southern nations to assert their right to eliminate the greedy elites that run them for the benefit of the few and to develop and meet the needs of their people through a system that is ecologically sound, just, equitable and democratic.
4.  No to false solutions that:

  • Violate the rights of indigenous peoples, women and other marginalized groups; Undermine ecological balance and have no significant contribution to reduction in GHG emissions
  • Allow northern and southern governments to evade their responsibilities; Pave the way for private corporations to continue in existence and thereby generate profits from the climate crisis and for elites to exercise greater control over natural resources.

5.     End the policies, operations and projects of IFIs (International Financial Institutions) that exacerbate climate change.  Stop IFIs, especially the WB (World Bank) and regional development banks, from claiming major roles in addressing the climate crisis by developing a new World Currency giving equitable access to all humanity and abolishing existing national currencies and gold as currency .
6. Cancel all illegitimate and fair debts claimed from the South as a matter of justice and as a major step towards enabling countries to deal with the economic and climate crises as the first step

towards No 5.
7.  End trade and related agreements that continue the destructive exploitation of the environment and local social and economic systems, obstruct climate justice and exacerbate peoples’ vulnerability.
8. Fulfillment of the basic rights of indigenous peoples, working people, farmers, fisher folk, forest peoples, women, youth and other marginalized groups in all processes and programs addressing the climate crisis.
9. An end to War and immediate nuclear disarmament.
We will give prominence to the following calls:

SYSTEM CHANGE, NOT CLIMATE CHANGE

ECONOMIC CONTRACTION NOT GROWTH

CLIMATE JUSTICE NOW!

Please share with us information on your plans and send us news and photos of your activities immediately after they have taken place so we can help circulate and disseminate them and post them at our website.

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Hot Earth Calling Everyone – โลกร้อน – ขอเรียกร้องทุกๆท่าน – Draft

In Thai & English below is a pamphlet draft for Chiang Mai – please add your comments

โลกร้อน - ขอเรียกร้องทุกๆท่าน

โลกกำลังสิ้นหวังกับความเป็นผู้นำในการเปลี่ยนแปลงสภาพอากาศ . ถ้าเราต้องการจะหลีกเลี่ยงสภาวะล้มเหลวของสภาพอากาศที่ไม่สามารถจะกลับคืนแก้ไขได้รัฐบาลทั่วโลกจะต้องสร้างนโยบายที่เข้มแข็ง ก่อนที่จะมีการประชุม สภาพอากาศของโลก กำลังจะมีขึ้น ที่เมืองโคเป็นเฮเกน ในเดือนธันวาคมนี้. โลกกำลังเข้าสู่ภาวะวิกฤตอันสืบเนื่องมาจากสภาวะโลกร้อน เกินกว่ามนุษย์จะสามารถควบคุมได้ เพราะผลตอบสนองของระบบโลก มนุษย์ทำให้โลกร้อน เกิดน้ำแข็งละลายจนทำให้แสงอาทิตย์ สะท้อนกลับไปยังอวกาศน้อยลง การระเหยของน้ำในบรรยากาศมากขึ้น สัดส่วนเพิ่มมากขึ้น ทำให้อุณหภูมิสูงขึ้นอย่างต่อเนื่อง.  ก๊าซมีเทนถูกปลดปล่อยออกมามากจากชั้นดินน้ำแข็งและชั้นโคลนใต้มหาสมุทร  ก๊าซคาร์บอนไดออกไซด์ถูกขับออกมามาก เนื่องจากการย่อยสลายของ ผืนป่าที่มากขึ้นของชั้นดินที่มีการทับถมและการลดลงของ photosynthesis ( พืชใช้คาร์บอนไดออกไซด์) และจากความจริงที่คาร์บอน เนื่องจากความร้อนที่เพิ่มขั้นอย่างมากไฟป่า เชื้อโรคต่างๆ และศัตรูพืช. กระบวน การตอบสนองเหล่านี้เป็นผลมาจากการเพิ่มขึ้นของก๊าซที่ทำลายชั้นบรรยากาศที่ห่อหุ้มโลกและยังคงเพิ่มขึ้นอย่างต่อเนื่อง, และยังคงมี GHG (green house gases)  (ก๊าซเรือนกระจก  สิ่งเหล่านี้มีทำให้เกิด ความแห้งแล้ง ไฟป่า อุทกภัย โรคระบาด  ความแห้งแล้งพืชผลเสียหาย  และโรคระบาดในสัตว์ต่างๆ การเพิ่มระดับของน้ำทะเล และ ความเป็นกลดในมหาสมุทร ที่จะเป็นผลกระทบอันเลวร้ายสู่รุ่นลูก รุ่นหลานต่อๆไป หรือพูดง่ายๆ  คือสภาวะโลกร้อน อาจกลาย เป็นสิ่งที่มนุษย์ชาติไม่สามารถจะควบคุมและทำให้ อุณหภูมิโลกสูงขึ้นมากกว่า  6 องศา  นั่นจะทำให้ ประชากรบนโลกจำนวนมาก จะไม่สามารถดำรงชีวิตอยู่ได้  บางทีพวกเราอาจจะมีเวลาเหลือแค่ 2 ปีข้างหน้า เพื่อที่จะป้องกันไม่ให้เราต้องเผชิญชะตากรรมเหล่านี้

ความหนาแน่นของคาร์บอนไดออกไซด์ในชั้นบรรยากาศในปัจจุบันนี้มีอยู่ประมาณ 390 ppm และเพิ่มขึ้น 2 ppm  ในอดีต IPCC (intergovernmental panel on climate change) (คณะกรรมการเรื่องการเปลี่ยนแปลงภูมิอากาศระหว่างรัฐบาลทั่วโลก)รวมถึงนักวิทยาศาสตร์ จากประเทศผู้ผลิตน้ำมัน  ได้เรียกร้องให้มีการลดมลพิษจากไอเสียลงอีก 25-40 % จากระดับในปี ค.ศ.1990 ให้ได้ภายในปี 2020 เพื่อที่จะคงไม่เกิน 450 ppm   ซึ่งจะหมายความว่า อุณหภูมิโลกจะสูงขึ้น  2 องศาเซลเซียสโดยประมาณ ซึ่งจะสามารถหลีกเลี่ยงความหายนะที่จะเกิดขึ้นได้ อย่างไรก็ตาม การศึกษาค้นคว้าเกี่ยวกับประวัติศาสตร์ธรณีวิทยา แสดงให้เห็นว่า เราจะต้องให้ความร่วมมือลดความหนาแน่นของคาร์บอนไดออกไซด์ให้เหลือ 350 ppm เพื่อป้องกันการละลายของน้ำแข็งขั้วโลกอยู่ในระดับคงที่ดังนั้น , เราจะต้องตัดการแพร่กระจาย ของคาร์บอนไดออกไซด์ให้ลดลงมากกว่า 40 % ให้ต่ำกว่าในระดับปี ค.ศ.1990โดยปี 2020 และต้องให้ลดอย่างต่อเนื่องจนอยู่ระดับศูนย์ในระยะยาว. แต่อย่างไรก็ตาม, การลดระดับความหนาแน่นนี้ยังไม่ประสบผลสำเร็จ เนื่องจากการช่วยเหลือจากรัฐบาลทั่วโลกในการที่จะหลีกเลี่ยงไม่ให้อุณหภูมิโลกเพิ่มขึ้นอีก 2 องศาเซลเซียส นั้นล้มเหลวอย่างสิ้นเชิง , ยังส่งผลให้เกิดความเสี่ยงต่อภัยพิบัติที่จะเกิดอย่างใหญ่หลวง

ประชากรชาวโลกต้องการแรงสนับสนุนและความช่วยเหลือจากทุกๆท่าน  เพื่อที่จะลดก๊าซ มลพิษคาร์บอนเราอาจต้องเรียกร้องความสนับสนุนช่วยเหลือจากบุคคลที่มีศักยภาพและอำนาจ โดยเฉพาะอย่างยิ่งจากทุกๆรัฐ บาลทั่วโลกที่จะผลักดันนโยบายเพื่อที่จะลดมลพิษคาร์บอน ทุกๆประเทศจะต้องช่วยกันขยายความร่วมมือนี้ให้เกิดขึ้นทั่วโลก.

Calling Everyone

The World is desperate for leadership on climate change. If we are to avoid Irreversible Climate Breakdown, governments must strengthen their policies before the next global climate meeting in Copenhagen this December. The world is getting perilously close to a state in which global warming will be out of human control because of earth system feedback. Human induced warming means that melted ice results in less sunlight reflected back to space, more water vapour in the atmosphere more methane emitted from permafrost and ocean beds, more carbon released due to increased breakdown of forest debris, and reduced carbon uptake due to increased heat stress, forest fires, disease and pests. These feedback processes cause a rise in greenhouse gases and still further warming, then still more GHG and so on. This will mean much more serious droughts, fires, floods, storms, human, crop and animal diseases, rises in sea level and acidification of the oceans that could be catastrophic for our children and grandchildren. It could easily mean that global warming could become beyond human influence and rise six or more degrees creating a state in which few humans would survive. We have perhaps a couple of years to start to take serious action to avoid this fate.

Carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere is now about 390 ppm and rising at 2 ppm per year. The IPCC in the past, including scientists from oil-producing countries, recommended 25-40 percent cuts in emissions below 1990 levels by 2020 in order to achieve a maximum CO2 concentration of 450 ppm so as to confine temperature rises to an estimated 2 degrees Celsius, a concentration and temperature considered adequate to just avoid an Earth driven catastrophe.

However, the latest research on the geological history of climate shows that we must lower the atmospheric concentration to 350 ppm for ice stability. Thus, we must lower emissions by more than 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 and continue to lower them to zero in the long term. Nevertheless, cuts so far offered by nearly all governments will almost certainly fail to avoid temperature rises above 2 degrees, and thus risk catastrophe.

The people of the World need your personal effort to lower net carbon emissions but particularly to contact influential and powerful people especially in governments to persuade them to strengthen their policies to reduce net national carbon emissions. All nations must help to the extent of their capability.

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NEW CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION STRATEGIES & website

as the UN Climate talks drag on to a Copenhagen Catastrophe …..

Dr. Michael Tuckson, Chiang Mai resident writes:

If we are to avoid irreversible climate breakdown, the world’s greenhouse gas strategies must be upgraded to reflect the latest science, notably that of the NASA team in 2008, and the reality that technological change may not be fast enough to stop a state of irreversibility. Not only is political leadership not reflecting the science, but many in ’modern’ sectors of the world would benefit from learning support on climate science and strategies. New ways of educating the powerful are needed, but if this is not possible in the short-term, some hope lies in a people’s web strategy.

This web site http://www.stopglobalwarming-newstrategies.net/ proposes that:

1. Assuming human compassion, the common weak government policies on emission reduction indicate that most people do not sufficiently understand the latest scientific research and surface earth systems feedback and irreversibility. We have already passed safe global greenhouse gas concentrations and temperatures. Without a deeper, up-to-date, more widely spread understanding, especially among senior people in all types of organization in all major emitting nations, catastrophe looms.

2.  Leadership implies public articulation of up-to-date understanding, in this case particularly the lastest scientific research that is more frightening than that known just two years before.

3. The world’s ‘modern’ sectors need crash courses in up-to-date climate change science and strategies, particularly for senior personnel in government, parties, unions and corporations. What the world’s major government’s are proposing may merely delay the tipping stage by a few years.

4. Its too late to depend only on the spread and innovation in appropriate technology. We must lead with behavioural change, globally coordinated.*

5. We should use lifetime emissions in negotiations, and separate rich and poor sectors in analysis of the larger developing countries.

6. Thousands of knowledgeable people could contribute to a strategy working up important organizational hierarchies to spread understanding.

7. The people can use the web to globally coordinate a people’s strategy

* for more details on this see the entry on Minqi Li’s work on ourchiangmai.com – Ricky

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