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By Charles J. Hanley
The Associated Press
Tuesday 04 December 2007
Bali,
Indonesia - Victims of climate change, real and potential, appealed
Tuesday for a vast increase in international aid to protect them from
and compensate them for rising seas, crop-killing drought and other
likely impacts of global warming.
"We
cannot wait. We need to do something now," said climatologist Rizaldi
Boer of Indonesia, some of whose farmers are already suffering from
unusual dry spells blamed on climate change.
The
"Adaptation Fund," being developed under U.N. climate agreements to
enable poorer countries to adjust to a warmer world, has thus far drawn
a mere $67 million for a task the World Bank estimates will cost tens
of billions of dollars a year.
The
almost 190 nations assembled here for the annual U.N. climate
conference are taking up the fund's future among other issues on an
agenda aimed chiefly at launching a two-year negotiating process to
seal a deal to replace the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.
That
175-nation accord requires 36 industrial nations to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions, a key source of global warming, by an average 5 percent
below 1990 levels by 2012. The United States is the only industrial
nation that has rejected Kyoto.
The
European Union and others are seeking a post-Kyoto agreement that would
mandate much deeper reductions by industrial nations - including, they
hope, the U.S. - in carbon dioxide and other such emissions from power
plants, factories, vehicles and other sources.
Many
here also want to see China and other major emerging economies take
steps to curtail the increase in their emissions. The two weeks of
talks promise to be difficult, with success far from guaranteed.
Operation,
control and funding of the Adaptation Fund has been debated for years
at these meetings of U.N. climate treaty parties.
The
U.N. climate chief, Yvo de Boer, told reporters Tuesday he hoped it was
possible that this meeting would finally make the fund operational, "so
that perhaps in as little as a year before real resources for
adaptation can begin to flow to developing countries."
The
fund is expected to finance climate-change projects ranging from sea
walls to guard against expanding oceans, to improved water supplies for
drought areas, to training in new agricultural techniques.
All acknowledge, however, that the available money is relatively paltry.
The
fund is financed by a 2 percent levy on revenues generated by the Clean
Development Mechanism, the program whereby industrial nations pay for
"carbon credits" produced by emissions-reduction projects in the
developing world - credits then counted against reduction targets at
home.
Those
levies thus far are "tiny compared to the need," said Kate Raworth, a
senior researcher with the Oxfam International aid group.
Oxfam
and other advocacy groups favor a broadening of Adaptation Fund revenue
sources, perhaps to include aviation taxes or direct taxes on all
fossil-fuel use.
"The
money should come from the countries most responsible and most
capable," Raworth said, listing the United States, the European Union,
Japan, Australia and Canada.
An
Oxfam news conference was joined by a representative of the people of
Papua New Guinea's Carteret Islands, in the far western Pacific,
believed to be among the world's first "climate refugees."
As
seas expand from warming and from the runoff of melting land ice,
higher and higher tides are eating away at tiny places like the
Carterets, a sandy atoll of a half-dozen islands.
Its
3,000 people, no longer able to grow taro, their staple crop, are
preparing to abandon the islands over the next several years,
resettling on designated land on nearby Bougainville island.
The
islanders have a relocation appropriation of 2 million kina in local
currency ($800,000), but to move 600 families that "doesn't go a long
way," said their representative, Ursula Rakova.
"We still need more money, from people like America," she said.
Later
Tuesday, a small group from Kiribati, a central Pacific island nation,
entertained conference attendees with a subdued, traditional "canoe
dance," and then delivered a stark and up-to-date message in a video
and first-person accounts about the threats to their tiny country.
"We
can move inland, but where can we move to?" asked schoolteacher
Tangaroa Arobati, explaining that his islands in places are just 100
yards wide.
"We can build solid sea walls," he said. "But where do we get the money?"
On the Web:
UN Climate Change Conference: http://unfccc.int/2860.php
(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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