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Amy Goodman
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Wednesday 30 November 2011
“Coincident with the disappointing U.N. proceedings has been a growing movement for climate justice in the streets.”

Cry, the Beloved Climate

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The United Nations’ annual climate summit descended on Durban, South Africa, this week, but not in time to prevent the tragic death of Qodeni Ximba. The 17-year-old was one of 10 people killed in Durban on Sunday, the night before the U.N. conference opened. Torrential rains pummeled the seaside city of 3.5 million. Seven hundred homes were destroyed by the floods.

Ximba was sleeping when the concrete wall next to her collapsed. One woman tried to save a flailing 1-year-old baby whose parents had been crushed by their home. She failed, and the baby died along with both parents. All this, as more than 20,000 politicians, bureaucrats, journalists, scientists and activists made their way to what may be the last chance for the Kyoto Protocol.

How might the conference have prevented the deaths? A better question is, how might the massive deluge, which fell on the heels of other deadly storms this month, be linked to human-induced climate change, and what is the gathering in Durban doing about it? Durban has received twice the normal amount of rain for November. The trends suggest that extreme weather is going to get worse.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is a group with thousands of scientists who volunteer their time “to provide the world with a clear scientific view on the current state of knowledge in climate change.” The group won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007. Last week, the IPCC released a summary of its findings, clearly linking changing climate to extreme weather events such as drought, flash floods, hurricanes, heat waves and rising sea levels. The World Meteorological Organization released a summary of its latest findings, noting, to date, that 2011 is the 10th-warmest year on record, that the Arctic sea ice is at its all-time low volume this year, and that 13 of the warmest years on record have occurred in the past 15 years.

Which brings us to Durban. This is the 17th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, or, simply, COP17. One of the signal achievements of the U.N. process to date is the Kyoto Protocol, an international treaty with enforceable provisions designed to limit greenhouse-gas emissions. In 1997, when Kyoto was adopted, China was considered a poor, developing country, and, as such, had far fewer obligations under Kyoto. Now, the U.S. and others say that China must join the wealthy, developed nations and comply with that set of rules. China refuses. That is one of the major, but by no means the only, stumbling blocks to renewing the Kyoto Protocol (another major problem is that the world’s historically largest polluter, the United States, signed Kyoto but did not ratify it in Congress).

In Copenhagen in late 2009 (at COP15), President Barack Obama swept in, organized back-door, invite-only meetings and crafted a voluntary—i.e., unenforceable—alternative to Kyoto, angering many. COP16 in Cancun, Mexico, in 2010 heightened the distance from the Kyoto Protocol. The prevailing wisdom in Durban is that this is make-or-break time for the U.N climate process.

© 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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12 comments on "Cry, the Beloved Climate"

RobertMStahl

December 01, 2011 6:44am

Sound science is at the heart of human compassion, and is the only means to separate the sloth from the moss, or the scum from the lichen. We share this planet with 4 other kingdoms making it animals, plants, fungi, bacteria, and protoctista. Horizons such as this must be put into a context and delivered from those who control the debates, presently, only to foster an Old Guard. Lynn Margulis died this past week, a true scientist and a colleague of James Lovelock where, together, they brought new meaning to ecology. She is, also, a defender of AE911Truth, www.RememberBuilding7.org. So, where is Indira Singh? The Old Guard will only be brought down by a sense of music and an understanding of what flanking can, and does, produce where productivity is understood differently from growth as a singularity. Look for the Golden Thread and become its Silver Needle by googling Indira Singh Guns and Butter. Let's turn upside down right side up.

Matthew Jacobs

December 01, 2011 10:21am

Well Said Grasshopper

Avera Bullchatter

December 01, 2011 3:04am

It might have to be all considered evidence....for people to become alerted enough to overcome our natural defense against the supposedly unbelievable in life .....

Avera Bullchatter

December 01, 2011 3:04am

It might have to be all considered evidence....for people to become alerted enough to overcome our natural defense against the supposedly unbelievable in life .....

Jeffery Orel Bucove

December 01, 2011 12:37am

Humans are so self absorbed. A rock falls from the sky and they think it's a message from god just for them. But if they swarm the whole planet and consume all the resources and fill the skies with exhaust smoke they can't see any difference and just assume it's all 'natural'... Kyoto is the sane preaching to the deaf dumb and blind.Guess what? God doesn't care. Reality will obey the laws of physics whether you 'believe' it or not. Keep burning the precious air with geological fuels and the sulphuric life forms will take the planet back from the oxygen breathers and rule it like they did 3ga ago.

Norothschilds

November 30, 2011 8:42pm

What a complete load of globalist lies. At least we know who Ms. Goodman is working for. Please, give this a watch folks.http://youtu.be/YtevF4B4RtQ

Yogi Bare

November 30, 2011 5:42pm

Global Warming = Climate Change. I strongly suggest you do some reading on the subject before making misinformed comments.

Norothschilds

November 30, 2011 8:45pm

Global cooling/warming/climate change = globalist lies. I'd suggest you cough up that blue pill and do some research yourself.

http://youtu.be/YtevF4B4RtQ

Matthew Jacobs

December 01, 2011 12:19am

Yogi
I thought you where smarter then the average bear. Why don't you yourself point out where my brief comment is misinformed, instead of doing the Equivalent of a drive by with "Suggest you do some Reading" Why does this smack of Dogma? Someone else at another time might say ....Read Your Bible?

Matthew Jacobs

November 30, 2011 1:49pm

So we ~well some have gone from "Global Warming" which required Warming as Evidence to "Climate Change" Where Everything becomes Evidence.

Wm. A. Weasel

November 30, 2011 8:11pm

"Cliimate change" is more accurate. Overall the world is warming, but some places may get cooler as circulation patterns change. Europe will get pretty cold if the Gulf Stream shuts down. Not only warming is occurring, but precipitation is changing. Think flood damage and crop failure. In 50 or 100 years, sea-level rise will really take hold. Most of the world's big cities will be permanently flooded.

Matthew Jacobs

December 01, 2011 3:22pm

Wm
OMG The world is ending....Again
Sorry that was flip of me but Climate is not static it is dynamic I think you would agree with that. So we come to the Question... How do you Know that the Change is caused by Mankind's Activities, seeing how other swings happened before mankind was Industrialized?
Ooops did I ask the un Answerable