Personal tools
You are here: Home English Media Archive 2010 Cancun package merely prevents collapse and leaves kyoto protocol on life support
2010 press releases
News Item Cancun package merely prevents collapse and leaves kyoto protocol on life support
News Item governments urged not to rush into redd deal and focus on effective forest conservation
News Item World Bank should stay out of carbon markets and climate finance
News Item cancun week 2: friends of the earth international analysis
News Item nnimmo bassey to receive 'alternative nobel prize'
News Item the people’s voices: mobilizations in cancun
News Item rich countries must reject any secret text that puts in place process that could kill kyoto
News Item Japan threatens progress at climate talks in Cancun
News Item Forest deals set to harm the environment and reward corporate investors
News Item Governments urged to turn away from carbon trading at climate talks
News Item EUROPE'S BIOFUELS PLANS DRIVING SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL DESTRUCTION
News Item GLOBAL DAY OF REMEMBRANCE: 15TH ANNIVERSARY OF KEN SARO-WIWA'S MURDER
News Item UN ADVISORY GROUP ON CLIMATE FINANCE REPORT FALLS FLAT
News Item high level advisory group on climate change must avoid pitfalls
News Item Market mechanisms are a false solution to biodiversity loss
News Item CLIMATE CHANGE: RICH NATIONS BACKTRACKING
News Item Climate Talks : Developed Countries Must Stop Stalling
News Item 'Alternative Nobel Prize' Awarded to FoEI Chair Nnimmo Bassey
News Item HEADS OF STATE MUST TAKE FIRM STEPS TO HALT BIODIVERSITY LOSS
News Item TREE PLANTATIONS CAUSE GRAVE PROBLEMS
News Item WORLD BANK LAND GRAB REPORT COMMENT: BIOFUELS CAUSE LAND GRABS
News Item Biofuels for Europe driving land grabbing in Africa
News Item OUTRAGE AT SHELL-FUNDED UN REPORT ON NIGERIA OIL SPILLS
News Item un climate talks: developed nations strangle hope of progress
News Item eu-brazil biofuels deal: "land-grabbing charter"
News Item g20 summit: leaders should aim for 'robin hood tax'
News Item US actions in Bonn threaten strong and just climate agreement
News Item Launch of 'responsible soy' label faces global opposition
News Item Developed countries attempt to launder aid money through World Bank and call it 'climate funds'
News Item Fairness must guide Bonn climate talks: UN must not cede to weak US proposals
News Item biodiversity lost at unprecedented rate
News Item european union complicit in human right violations in latin america
News Item European Transnationals Accused of Rights Violations in Latin America
News Item 2010 photo competition winners announced
News Item world bank accused of promoting land grabbing
News Item Bolivian Government Increases its Moral Authority on Climate Change
News Item friends of the earth swaziland director wins prestigious goldman prize
News Item BOLIVIAN CLIMATE CONFERENCE SIGNALS HOPE
News Item FAO Accused of Favouring Polluting Industrial Agriculture
News Item GM crops failing to tackle climate change
News Item 'Solidarity and Movements' Photo Competition Starts Today
News Item 2010 BIODIVERSITY YEAR: URGENT ACTION NEEDED
 

Cancun package merely prevents collapse and leaves kyoto protocol on life support

CANCUN, MEXICO, 11 December 2010 – The agreement adopted at the UN climate talks in Cancun has failed to make progress on the most essential part: steep, binding emissions cuts for developed countries. Friends of the Earth International warns that this agreement provides a platform for abandoning the Kyoto Protocol, replacing it with a weak pledge and review system as a legacy of the Copenhagen Accord, that would lead to a devastating five degree Celsius warming.

Nnnimmo Bassey, chair of Friends of the Earth International said: “The agreement reached here is wholly inadequate and could lead to catastrophic climate change. The rich countries that are primarily responsible for climate change, lead by the US, with Russia and Japan, are to blame for the lack of desperately needed greater ambition. This is a slap in the face of those who already suffer from climate change. But in the end all of us will be affected by the lack of ambition and political will of a small group of countries”

To prevent catastrophic climate change, an agreement is needed that includes science-based, aggregate targets for developed countries under the Kyoto Protocol, whereby rich countries reduce emissions by at least 40 percent with no role for carbon markets, offsets and loopholes. Carbon markets are not the solution for climate change but just a means for rich countries to continue business as usual.

Despite the lack of advancement on key issues, some progress has been made in other areas. The establishment of a Global Climate Fund is a step forward to build on. The 100 billion dollars put on the table for this fund, however, is not commensurate with equity and need. Rich countries must live up to their obligations to provide sufficient public funds to developing countries so they can grow cleanly and adept to the impacts of climate change they already suffer from.  Progress has also been achieved in adaptation to help poor countries address the impacts of climate change. The World Bank having a role in climate finance is not acceptable.

Lucia Ortiz of Friends of the Earth Brazil said:

 

"Mechanisms to stop deforestation are not supposed to allow rich countries to continue emitting carbon. Forests are not just stocks of carbon and they should not be commercialized. Money to protect forests must come from the developed
countries.”

Nnimmo Bassey said:

 

"The UN remains key to humanity’s collective response to this crisis and we see that the multilateral process is moving forward. However, the UN is only as strong as the countries that compose it. We could not achieve the progress that is needed in Cancun because the rich countries that are primarily responsible for climate pollution have prevented it. Rich countries tried to assassinate the Kyoto Protocol and it is now on life support, we have to redouble our efforts in the coming year to revive it.”

Lucia Ortiz of Friends of the Earth Brazil, said:

 

"We applaud the principled and courageous position of Bolivia, which has consistently called for and worked for ambitious action. Bolivia came here with a mandate from the Cochabamba agreement and listened to the thousands of people in Cancun. All over the world people are taking to the streets and demanding real solutions to the climate crisis. The movement is growing, as we have seen here in Cancun, and Friends of the Earth International will continue to pressure governments to reach a global agreement the world needs, next year in Durban.”

FOR MORE INFORMATION

-Meena Raman, +52 (1) 9982036601 (Mexican mobile), meenaco@pd.jaring.my
-Nnimmo Bassey    +52 (1) 998 137 74 93 (Mexican mobile), nimmo@eraction.org

Document Actions

Journalists

niccolo

 

For media inquires contact Niccolo Sarno, FoEI media coordinator.

 

Tel: +31-20-6221369 (Office landline in Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

If you wish to receive our press releases by email please contact
media [at] foei.org