new report: voices from communities affected by climate change
MEDIA ADVISORY
Friends of the Earth International
November 22, 2007
ADVANCE FOR NOVEMBER 26, 2007
NEW REPORT: VOICES FROM COMMUNITIES AFFECTED BY CLIMATE CHANGE
LONDON (UK), NOVEMBER 26, 2007- A new report launched on November 26 provides nine testimonies from community members around the globe who have dramatic first-hand experience of the devastating impacts of climate change.
The report is available for journalists preview In English: http://www.foei.org/en/publications/pdfs/climate-testimonies/
In French: http://www.foei.org/fr/publications/pdfs/climate-testimonies/
In Spanish: http://www.foei.org/es/publications/pdfs/climate-testimonies/
Ahead of the UN climate talks, 3-14 December in Bali, Friends of the
Earth International is today launching a new report “Voices from
Communities Affected by ClimateChange”. The report includes nine
stories from different countries around the world – chronicling
specific impacts, and providing testimonies from local community
members who have dramatic first-hand experience of devastating
climatic events.
Director of CENSAT Agua Viva/ Friends of the Earth Colombia Tatiana
Roa Avendaño said:
“We are on the brink of a global climatic catastrophe and poor,
vulnerable communities – who are the least responsible for climate
change – are already being hit by its impacts including displacement,
disease, the destruction of livelihoods and ecosystems."
Despite having to confront environmental disasters such as sea level
rises in the Pacific, melting glaciers in the Andean region and
drought in Africa, these communities are showing remarkable resilience.
Yet, nowhere near enough is being done to stop the roots causes of
climate change. Over-consumption – particularly in industrialised
countries – continues unabated and automobile, mining, oil and now
biofuel corporations are raking in the profits.
This drives home the need for a global, diverse movement to tackle
climate change and demand climate justice. This can only be achieved
by halting unsustainable consumption and production while promoting
genuine solutions including clean renewable energy, energy-efficiency,
the funding of adaptation, mitigation and forest conservation that
protects land rights.”
Indigenous peoples, women, local authorities, farmers, small business
owners and small-scale fisherfolk speak out from Honduras, Peru,
Brazil, Mali, Swaziland, the UK, Australia, Malaysia and Tuvalu. The
voices of these community members highlight strategies that they have
developed to attempt to adapt to the radical transformations that
climate change has imposed on their territories, lifestyles and
ecosystems.
Friends of the Earth International Climate Campaigner Stephanie Long said:
“Adaptation should be pro-poor, and protect ecosystems, livelihoods
and human security. Community-based adaptation provides the best
opportunity to ensure that adaptation projects are culturally,
technically and socially appropriate, and that they increase
resilience to the impacts of climate change.”
Friends of the Earth International will be demanding this in our
lobbying efforts for a post-2012 Kyoto agreement in UN climate talks
in Bali this December. Industrialised countries must accept
responsibility for deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions within the
coming fifteen years. The fate of these brave community members must
recognised by the international community.
The costs of climate adaptation in developing countries will amount to
many billions of dollars per year. [1] Industrialised countries should
assess the costs of climate adaptation and develop a detailed analysis
of how new financing schemes, through tax and state funding, can be
implemented to raise the billions necessary. Under the UNFCCC, rich
countries are obliged to finance developing country adaptation. [2]
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Tatiana Roa Avendaño, CENSAT Agua Viva/ Friends of the Earth Colombia director:
+ 57 1 2442465 or + 57 1 2440581 or + 57 1 3377709
Joe Zacune, Friends of the Earth International climate campaigner: UK mobile number +44-7967 877 593 or Friends of the Earth press office in London +44-20 7566 1649
Stephanie Long, Friends of the Earth International climate
coordinator: Australian mobile number + 61-414 136 461
NOTE TO EDITORS
[1] According to Kermal Dervis, head of UNDP, donors will need to
provide 50 to 100 per cent more finance over and above current aid –
equivalent to $50–100bn annually – to cover the impacts of climate
change.^ See
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/43af1a4a-c817-11db-b0dc-000b5df10621.html
[2] Article 4.3 of the UNFCCC commits Annex II countries to ‘provide
new and additional resources to meet the agreed full incremental cost
of implementing measures…’ including ‘preparing for the adaptation to
climate change’. In addition Article 4.4 states that Annex II
countries ‘shall also assist the developing country Parties that are
particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change in
meeting costs of adaptation to those adverse effects.’
[3] Friends of the Earth International is the world’s largest
grassroots environmental network, uniting 69 diverse national member
groups and some 5,000 local activist groups on every continent. With
over 2 million members and supporters around the world, we campaign on
today’s most urgent environmental and social issues. Our vision is of
a peaceful and sustainable world based on societies living in harmony
with nature.

