*
HAPPY EARTH DAY!! *
Please
celebrate accordingly
This
past year has been filled with debate and heightened awareness of
Global Climate Change. Many feel that this is a critical time for
actions to be taken to alleviates and even attempt to reverse the
damage humans contribute to Climate Change. Please consider some of the
following action suggestions. The text that follows is from a statement
delivered by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon at the Security Council
debate on energy, security and climate.
ACTIONS
1. Take Action locally and nationally, watch for
legislation to curb carbon emitters.
2. Get Educated, checkout http://www.climatejusticechicago.org
http://www.planetextinction.com
http://www.ipcc.ch
3.
Change your consumption patterns. We need to do more than recycle. We
need to stop creating things that eventually become trash.
4. Consider your dependency on cars.
5. Look for local food sources, less transport means less carbon
emitted.
6. Still new to the issue? Check out "An Inconvenient Truth" DVD from
the 8th Day video library.
STATEMENT BY THE UN SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN KI-MOON
AT THE SECURITY COUNCIL DEBATE ON ENERGY, SECURITY AND CLIMATE
Thank you for the opportunity to address the
Security Council on this serious and timely topic.
Throughout human history, people and countries have fought over natural
resources. From livestock, watering holes and fertile land, to trade
routes, fish stocks and spices, sugar, oil, gold and other precious
commodities, war has too often been the means to secure possession of
scarce resources. Even today, the uninterrupted supply of fuel and
minerals is a key element of geopolitical considerations.
Things are easier at times of plenty, when all can share in the
abundance, even if to different degrees. But when resources are scarce
-- whether energy, water or arable land -- our fragile ecosystems
become strained, as do the coping mechanisms of groups and individuals.
This can lead to a breakdown of established codes of conduct, and even
outright conflict.
At the 2005 World Summit, Member States renewed their commitment to
promoting a culture of prevention of armed conflict. They also pledged
to strengthen the capacity of the United Nations to this end. The
Security Council adopted resolution 1625 on conflict prevention,
particularly in Africa, and reaffirmed the need to address the root
causes of conflict.
In a series of reports on conflict prevention, my predecessor,
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, pointed to the threats emanating from
environmental degradation and resource scarcity. Let me quote from the
latest of the reports: “Environmental degradation has the potential to
destabilize already conflict-prone regions, especially when compounded
by inequitable access or politicization of access to scarce resources.
I urge Member States to renew their efforts to agree on ways that allow
all of us to live sustainable within the planet’s means.”
Excellencies, allow me to renew and amplify this call. Compared to the
cost of conflict and its consequences, the cost of prevention is far
lower -- in financial terms but most importantly in human lives, and
life quality.
I firmly believe that today, all countries recognize that climate
change, in particular, requires a long-term global response, in line
with the latest scientific findings, and compatible with economic and
social development.
According to the most recent assessments of the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change, the planet’s warming is unequivocal, its impact is
clearly noticeable, and it is beyond doubt that human activities have
been contributing considerably to it.
Adverse effects are already felt in many areas, including agriculture
and food security; oceans and coastal areas; biodiversity and
ecosystems; water resources; human health; human settlements; energy,
transport and industry; and extreme weather events.
Projected changes in the earth’s climate are thus not only an
environmental concern. They can also have serious social and economic
implications. And -- as the Council points up today -- issues of energy
and climate change can have implications for peace and security. This
is especially true in vulnerable regions that face multiple stresses at
the same time -- pre-existing conflict, poverty and unequal access to
resources, weak institutions, food insecurity, and incidence of
diseases such as HIV/AIDS.
Consider the following scenarios -- all alarming, though not alarmist:
-- The adverse effects of changing weather patterns, such as floods and
droughts, and related economic costs, including compensation for lost
land, could risk polarizing society and marginalizing communities.
This, in turn, could weaken the institutional capacity of the State to
resolve conflict through peaceful and democratic means, to ensure
social cohesion, and to safeguard human rights.
-- Extreme weather events and natural disasters, such as floods and
drought, increase the risk of humanitarian emergencies, and thus the
risk of instability and dislocation.
-- Migration driven by factors, such as climate change could deepen
tensions and conflicts, particularly in regions with large numbers of
internally displaced persons and refugees.
-- Scarce resources, especially water and food, could help transform
peaceful competition into violence.
-- Limited or threatened access to energy is already known to be a
powerful driver of conflict. Our changing planet risk making it more
so.
-- And of course, the economic costs and losses of all these scenarios
would impede the ability of countries to reach the Millennium
Development Goals.
These are, of course, only possible scenarios. But we cannot sit back
and watch to see whether they turn into reality. The entire
multilateral machinery needs to come together to prevent it from
becoming so.