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Amy Goodman
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Wednesday 14 December 2011
“The largest polluter in world history, the United States, never ratified the Kyoto Protocol and remains defiant.”

Climate Apartheid

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“You’ve been negotiating all my life,” Anjali Appadurai told the plenary session of the U.N.‘s 17th “Conference of Parties,” or COP 17, the official title of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa. Appadurai, a student at the ecologically focused College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor, Maine, addressed the plenary as part of the youth delegation. She continued: “In that time, you’ve failed to meet pledges, you’ve missed targets, and you’ve broken promises. But you’ve heard this all before.”

After she finished her address, she moved to the side of the podium, off microphone, and in a manner familiar to anyone who has attended an Occupy protest, shouted into the vast hall of staid diplomats, “Mic check!” A crowd of young people stood up, and the call-and-response began:

Appadurai: “Equity now!”

Crowd: “Equity now!”

Appadurai: “You’ve run out of excuses!”

Crowd: “You’ve run out of excuses!”

Appadurai: “We’re running out of time!”

Crowd: “We’re running out of time!”

Appadurai: “Get it done!”

Crowd: “Get it done!”

That was Friday, at the official closing plenary session of COP 17. The negotiations were extended, virtually nonstop, through Sunday, in hopes of avoiding complete failure. At issue were arguments over words and phrases—for instance, the replacement of “legal agreement” with “an agreed outcome with legal force,” which is said to have won over India to the Durban Platform.

The countries in attendance agreed to a schedule that would lead to an agreement by 2015, which would commit all countries to reduce emissions starting no sooner than 2020, eight years into the future.

“Eight years from now is a death sentence on Africa,” Nigerian environmentalist Nnimmo Bassey, chairperson of Friends of the Earth International, told me. “For every one-degree Celsius change in temperature, Africa is impacted at a heightened level.” He lays out the extent of the immediate threats in his new book about Africa, “To Cook a Continent.”

Bassey is one among many concerned with the profound lack of ambition embodied in the Durban Platform, which delays actual, legally binding reductions in emissions until 2020 at the earliest, whereas scientists globally are in overwhelming agreement: The stated goal of limiting average global temperature rise to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) will soon be impossible to achieve. The International Energy Agency, in its annual World Energy Outlook released in November, predicted “cumulative CO2 [carbon dioxide] emissions over the next 25 years amount to three-quarters of the total from the past 110 years, leading to a long-term average temperature rise of 3.5 [degrees] C.”

Despite optimistic pronouncements to the contrary, many believe the Kyoto Protocol died in Durban. Pablo Solon, the former Bolivian ambassador to the United Nations and former chief climate negotiator for that poor country, now calls Kyoto a “zombie agreement,” staggering forward for another five or seven years, but without force or impact. On the day after the talks concluded, Canadian Environment Minister Peter Kent announced that Canada was formally withdrawing from the Kyoto Protocol. Expected to follow are Russia and Japan, the very nation where the 1997 meeting was held that gives the Kyoto Protocol its name.

The largest polluter in world history, the United States, never ratified the Kyoto Protocol and remains defiant. Both Bassey and Solon refer to the outcome of Durban as a form of “climate apartheid.”

Despite the pledges by President Barack Obama to restore the United States to a position of leadership on the issue of climate change, the trajectory from Copenhagen in 2009, to Cancun in 2010, and, now, to Durban reinforces the statement made by then-President George H.W. Bush prior to the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, the forerunner to the Kyoto Protocol, when he said, “The American way of life is not up for negotiation.”

The “American way of life” can be measured in per capita emissions of carbon. In the U.S., on average, about 20 metric tons of CO2 is released into the atmosphere annually, one of the top 10 on the planet. Hence, a popular sticker in Durban read “Stop CO2lonialism.”

By comparison, China, the country that is the largest emitter currently, has per capita emissions closer to 5 metric tons, ranking it about 80th.  India’s population emits a meager 1.5 tons per capita, a fraction of the U.S. level.

So it seems U.S. intransigence, its unwillingness to get off its fossil-fuel addiction, effectively killed Kyoto in Durban, a key city in South Africa’s fight against apartheid. That is why Anjali Appadurai’s closing words were imbued with a sense of hope brought by this new generation of climate activists:

“[Nelson] Mandela said, ‘It always seems impossible, until it’s done.’ So, distinguished delegates and governments around the world, governments of the developed world, deep cuts now. Get it done.”

© 2011 Amy Goodman
Distributed by King Features Syndicate



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ABOUT Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman is the host of "Democracy Now!," a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 900 stations in North America. She is the author of "Breaking the Sound Barrier," recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

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9 comments on "Climate Apartheid"

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Always rfereishng to hear a rational answer.

Connie777

December 15, 2011 12:15am

Thank you Mr. Marlowe! I am a Canadian and happy to know that Canadian government stood up against the Kyoto hoax. Do people who think of themselves as intelligent wonder why Greenland is called Green - land? because there was a time when it was green, the time when it was discovered by the Vikings. Nowadays this land is covered by ice. I respect Amy Goodman and her opinions, but we should not focus on climate change or global warming. We should reasonably fight against the industrial and agricultural pollution, i.e. chemicals other than CO2 that intoxicate our waters and soil.

Christopher Marlowe

December 14, 2011 5:17pm

I think it is a better idea not to confute those ideas concerning economic/social injustice and those of "man made climate change".

I used to believe in "global warming". I studied environmental law, and I voted for Al Gore and watched his movie TWICE. But then I started READING about what the critics were saying, and I noticed that many, including Goldman Sucks and Al Gore himself, stood to make billions from trading carbon credits. The lady who made the "Story of Stuff", who still believes in MMGW, did a video on carbon credit trading that shows why that idea, however well-intentioned is pretty stupid.

I no longer believe in MMGW, and note that we call it "climate change" now instead of "global warming" because there hasn't been any rise in temps since 1995. I believe that the planet heats up and cools down in 30 year cycles, and that this is not caused by carbon emissions.

I believe that we should conserve and manage out forests wisely and we shouldn't put poisons into the air, but we don't need lies about climate change to enforce these policies.

I was proud to hear that Canada finally marched out of that Kyoto madness.

William Malo

December 14, 2011 10:04pm

If you follow the science and not the political 'science' you would rethink your decision.

Christopher Marlowe

December 16, 2011 1:47pm

I suppose I could say the same thing to you. I have followed the science, and the methodology, and that helped me to understand that the MMGW theory is wrong. I remember after seeing the Al Gore move, I was trying to convince a scientist friend of mine that Gore was correct. The scientist, a biologist said that the science did not support what we had just seen on the silver screen. At the time, I thought he was just being stubborn, but then later I realized that I had only seen a movie, and had not done any real investigation.

Here are some interesting FACTS:

1: At 385 parts per million (ppm), CO2 is a minor constituent of earth's atmosphere – less than 4/100 of 1 percent of all gases present. Compared to earlier geologic times, earth's current atmosphere is CO2-impoverished.
2: CO2 emissions do not stay in the atmosphere. They are continually recycled by terrestrial plant life and earth's oceans – the watery repository for most terrestrial carbon dioxide.
3: Water vapor is by far the most abundant greenhouse gas, accounting for about 95 percent of Earth's greenhouse effect, and man’s contribution to it is insignificant. Anthropogenic (man-made) CO2 contributions are responsible for only about 0.117 percent of Earth's greenhouse effect. Using a real-world comparison, 0.117 percent of a football field would equal just over 4 inches.
4: When other anthropogenic greenhouse gases – methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), and trace elements such as CFCs – are added to the above CO2 figure (.117 percent), the total human contribution to greenhouse gases is .28 percent.
5: Despite all of the continued increase use of Carbon-based fuels, the hottest year on record is still 1934.

Proposition: It has not been proven that Man Made CO2 causes global warming.
Proposition: The Kyoto protocols basically end up being a tax on people for using something involving a carbon-based fuel.
Proposition: The Kyoto Protocols might not even reduce MM CO2.
Conclusion: We're going to tax people billions of dollars; and this might have no effect on reducing this miniscule trace of a gas that hasn't been proven to cause global warming.

The Science makes me think that Kyoto is stupid. The political science makes me think that carbon credit trading is a scam.

Vvvvvv Vvvvvv

December 14, 2011 11:51am

NEW DIALOG FROM REPUBLICANS AND THE 1% .

Did you ever wonder what Republican / Wall Street big shots say in their ivory towers?
Here you go.
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“Global warming, pollution, deteriorated o-zone, blah, blah, blah. What can happen?”

“What oil spill? People will love these self-igniting shrimp.”

“Get your fresh dolphin filets here!”

“ I ran the numbers J.B., and it’s cheaper to pay out for a few dead people than build safety controls into our food processing equipment.”

“Uh, Mr. Cantor, did you say…Michael Moore is a hit, or…put out a hit on Michael Moore?” …Ohhhh…right…we’re Republicans.

“We use Walgreen’s for our women’s healthcare. They have drive-up breast exams now.”

“So J.B., is bringing back slavery still off the table, or…..?”

“The Koch brothers new how-to book, “Fun with World Domination” is a must read.”

“Cantor, Ryan, Walker, Bachman, are all actually Cybernetic Robots. Wow, you really gotta hand it to those Koch brothers!”

“These grapes from Argenovia are dirt cheap. Of course I don’t eat ‘em, are you crazy? They use their own urine as a pesticide.”

“A classroom size of 85 gives kids the “tools” to understand a kill-or-be-killed work environment.” said Governor Walker.

“Let’s cut more Firemen. People have garden hoses don’t they?”

“Let’s cut more Policemen. People can run can’t they? Hey, remember that Seinfeld episode where that fat guy got mugged? Now that…was funny!”

“So J.B., you never answered me about that slavery thing…”

“Get your fresh polar bear burgers here!”

“Nice job killing off Planned Parenthood. Sweet! Now we’ll have enough new product coming in to launch our “Buy a Baby at Wal-Mart” program.”

“We made billions each time we moved our off-shore manufacturing from America to Japan, to China, to India, and now…to Africa. Ha, ha, ha! Sure, it’s great sticking it to the Germans, British, and Italians…but we really love screwing the French!”

“Hey boss, that’s a great idea, putting nicotine in baby pacifiers. “Start ‘em young” we always say right? Haw, hawww!”

“FEMA was too costly, but now we’ll give you earthquake victims the “tools” to be self-sufficient. Here’s a shovel. Oh, and we’ll want that back later.”

“Get your fresh snow leopard fritters here!

President (!?) Walker said today, “As a cost cutting measure, every state will only be allowed ONE air traffic control tower…but it should be really, really tall.”

“Hmm…you know J.B., I’m really warming up to this slavery thing….”

“We’re cloning chickens for KFC, making mystery meat for McDonald’s…hey, so why not Soylent Green in school lunches?

“Hey kids, get your fresh Soylent Green meat-balls here! Mmmmm…yummy…”

By V