English, asked by RivinRoy1832, 6 hours ago

Speech on climate change hype larger than reality

Answers

Answered by shrishtipangtey10
5

Answer:

Ladies and gentlemen

Climate Change has become a reality much faster than all scenarios predicted.

Climate change is not just an environmental issue, as too many people still believe. It

is an all-encompassing threat, to health, to agriculture, to peace and security, to the

very ground millions of people live on, to the global economy. We are now at a point

where even the last government has given up denying this reality. Storms, droughts

and rising sea levels are bleak signs of what we are facing. Large regions will

become uninhabitable because they will be either flooded or get hardly any rainwater

at all. Developing countries are going to suffer disproportionately if the global

community continues the game that almost everybody waits for someone else to take

action. As Kofi Annan said when he opened the Nairobi climate conference in

November, there remains a frightening lack of leadership on climate change.

The new IPCC assessment report says that humanity has time until 2020 to reverse

the path of constantly growing GHG emissions. If we don’t act in these remaining 13

years dangerous climate change will become irreversible.

All governments sitting here are signatories to the UNFCCC and that means you are

legally obliged to a »stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the

atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with

the climate system«.

Yet listening to the energy debate yesterday it seems that many governments do not

take this commitment seriously. We cannot burn all existing fossil fuels if we want to

avoid a climate disaster. The policies promoted by many governments yesterday

clearly favour the further expansion of the fossil energy system and put renewable

alternatives on the sidelines. Such policies are incompatible with a stabilization of the

GHG emissions. Again I would like to quote Kofi Annan: The question is not whether

climate change is happening but whether, in the face of this emergency, we

ourselves can change fast enough.

Countries that have made the energy revolution their political priority have clearly

demonstrated that this creates more jobs than fossil fuels, they have enjoyed more

economic growth and it puts those countries in the vanguard of the future energy

technology markets. But those countries that are now listening to the tune of the

fossil lobby will be paying dearly in the decades to come. And this applies both to

industrial and developing countries alike. Countries are now deciding whether they

are going to import the windmills, solar panels and efficiency technologies in the

future, just as they do import petroleum now, or whether they will create their own

booming renewable energy markets.

The CSD needs to send a clear signal to the climate talks that will continue in May in

Bonn during the second week of the CSD and in December in Bali that it expects a

swift official start of the negotiations for the second commitment period of the Kyoto

Protocol with deeper and more comprehensive commitments. The environment

ministers face a lot of resistance on this path. When the Secretary-General is already

thinking of a special summit on climate change, it would be embarrassing if the CSD

would let them down. Thank you.

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