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By Stefanie Balogh
The Daily Telegraph AU
Wednesday 16 May 2007
Australia's drought is a "wake-up call" on global warming, the C40 Large Cities Climate Summit has heard.
New
York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is hosting the conference in NY along
with former US President Bill Clinton, made the call overnight at the
summit's launch.
Mayors
from some of the world's largest urban areas - including Sydney's Lord
Mayor Clover Moore - have united and called on cities to unite and take
the lead in tackling climate change.
"As
cities produce three-fourths of the carbon emissions, we must act,"
said London Mayor Ken Livingstone, the head of the C40 large cities,
describing climate change as "the single biggest threat to the future
of humanity."
"Whatever
the discussions within our governments, as cities we are not waiting,"
he told leaders from 46 of the world's most polluted cities, from Cairo
to Shanghai and Los Angeles to Bangkok.
Livingstone
said the summit aimed to "create a critical mass that puts the world on
the path to avoid a catastrophic climate change ... We came to take
decisive actions to reduce our own carbon emissions," he said.
The
summit, which opened late yesterday and runs through Thursday, is
expected to include several joint initiatives that harness the cities'
combined purchasing power.
The
event is being organised in conjunction with the Clinton Climate
Initiative, part of the foundation set up by former US president Bill
Clinton, who is due to address the summit on Wednesday.
The
summit has also attracted dozens of major corporations, including GE,
Deutsche Bank, Swiss Re, JP Morgan Chase, Shell and Siemens, who are
either offering technological expertise or financial backing for green
projects.
New
York Mayor Michael Bloomberg criticised governmental inaction on
climate change, telling delegates: "We need no new technology, we need
no new invention, all that is required is political will."
"If
they don't act, we will. Shame on them but we cannot sit around and
watch our environment deteriorate and put this world in jeopardy," he
said. "We are willing to stand up, we think it is one of the seminal
issues of our time."
Other
topics up for discussion at the summit include beating traffic
congestion, making water systems more efficient, adopting renewable
energy sources, increasing recycling, reducing waste and improving mass
transit.
When
London hosted the inaugural large cities summit in 2005, only 18 cities
took part. With climate change now one of the most pressing hot-button
issues, the number of cities represented has more than doubled.
"Even
here in the United States things are beginning to move," said New
York's deputy mayor, Daniel Doctoroff. "The time for debate is over,
the time for action is now."
He
explained how a plan to manage an expected boom in the city's
population over the coming decades had evolved into proposals to trim
carbon emissions by 30 per cent before 2030 and restrict vehicle access
into Manhattan.
"So many companies are now taking it seriously," he said.
Some
500 US mayors were also at the summit to show their objections to the
policies of President George W Bush, who has refused to sign up to the
Kyodo Protocol, which commits countries to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions.
"Mayors
took action because we have to, because the federal government was
silent," said Douglas Palmer, head of the United States conference of
Mayors.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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