
Thursday, 20 December 2007
PEATS RIDGE FESTIVAL CANCELLATION DUE TO EXTREME WEATHER CONDITIONS

Saturday, 15 December 2007
Out of the desert?

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) - Nearly 200 nations agreed at U.N.-led talks in Bali on Saturday to launch negotiations on a new pact to fight global warming after a reversal by the United States allowed a breakthrough.
Washington said the agreement marked a new chapter in climate diplomacy after six years of disputes with major allies since President George W. Bush pulled out of the Kyoto Protocol, the main existing plan for combating warming.
"This is the defining moment for me and my mandate as secretary-general," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said after making a return trip to Bali to implore delegates to overcome deadlock after the talks ran a day into overtime. Ban had been on a visit to East Timor. "I am deeply grateful to many member states for their spirit of flexibility and compromise," Ban told Reuters. The Bali meeting approved a "roadmap" for two years of talks to adopt a new treaty to succeed Kyoto beyond 2012, widening it to the United States and developing nations such as China and India. Under the deal, a successor pact will be agreed at a meeting in Copenhagen in late 2009. The deal after two weeks of talks came when the United States dramatically dropped opposition to a proposal by the main developing-nation bloc, the G77, for rich nations to do more to help the developing world fight rising greenhouse emissions. The United States is the leading greenhouse gas emitter, ahead of China, Russia and India. Indonesian Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar, the host of the talks, banged down the gavel on the deal to rapturous applause from weary delegates. "All three things I wanted have come out of these talks -- launch, agenda, end date," Yvo de Boer, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, told reporters. The accord marks a step towards slowing global warming that the U.N. climate panel says is caused by human activities led by burning fossil fuels that produce carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas.
Scientists say rising temperatures could cause seas to rise sharply, glaciers to melt, storms and droughts to become more intense and mass migration of climate refugees.
"The U.S. has been humbled by the overwhelming message by developing countries that they are ready to be engaged with the problem, and it's been humiliated by the world community. I've never seen such a flip-flop in an environmental treaty context ever," said Bill Hare of Greenpeace. The European Union, which dropped earlier objections to the draft text, was pleased with the deal. "It was exactly what we wanted. We are indeed very pleased," said Humberto Rosa, head of the European Union delegation. German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel was cautiously optimistic. "Bali has laid the foundations ...it was hard work and exhausting. But the real work starts now," he said in Bali. But a leading Indian environmentalist was disappointed. "At the end of the day, we got an extremely weak agreement," said Sunita Narain, head of the Centre for Science and the Environment in New Delhi. "It's obvious the U.S. is not learning to be alive to world opinion." Agreement by 2009 would give governments time to ratify the pact and give certainty to markets and investors wanting to switch to cleaner energy technologies, such as wind turbines and solar panels. Kyoto binds all industrial countries except the United States to cut emissions of greenhouse gases between 2008 and 2012. Developing nations are exempt and the new negotiations will seek to bind all countries to emission curbs from 2013.
DAY OF DRAMA
In a day of drama and emotional speeches, nations had berated and booed the U.S. representatives for holding out. A wave of relief swept the room when the United States relented.
"The United States is very committed to this effort and just wants to really ensure we all act together," said Paula Dobriansky, head of the U.S. delegation.
"With that, Mr Chairman, let me say to you we will go forward and join consensus," she said to cheers and claps.
James Connaughton, chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, said: "This is not a step taken alone by America. This is a step taken by all the countries that the time had come to open a new chapter."
(Reporting by Adhityani Arga, Sugita Katyal, Alister Doyle, Emma Graham-Harrison, Ed Davies, Gde Anugrah Arka and Gerard Wynn; Editing by Alister Doyle)(Reporting by Adhityani Arga, Sugita Katyal, Alister Doyle, Emma Graham-Harrison, Ed Davies, Gde Anugrah Arka and Gerard Wynn; Editing by Alister Doyle)
Friday, 7 December 2007
SATURDAY 8th DECEMBER ACTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE BEFORE ITS TOO LATE

2007 Bali Climate Declaration by Scientists

The 2007 IPCC report, compiled by several hundred climate scientists, has unequivocally concluded that our climate is warming rapidly, and that we are now at least 90% certain that this is mostly due to human activities. The amount of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere now far exceeds the natural range of the past 650,000 years, and it is rising very quickly due to human activity. If this trend is not halted soon, many millions of people will be at risk from extreme events such as heat waves, drought, floods and storms, our coasts and cities will be threatened by rising sea levels, and many ecosystems, plants and animal species will be in serious danger of extinction.
The next round of focused negotiations for a new global climate treaty (within the 1992 UNFCCC process) needs to begin in December 2007 and be completed by 2009. The prime goal of this new regime must be to limit global warming to no more than 2 ºC above the pre-industrial temperature, a limit that has already been formally adopted by the European Union and a number of other countries.
Based on current scientific understanding, this requires that global greenhouse gas emissions need to be reduced by at least 50% below their 1990 levels by the year 2050. In the long run, greenhouse gas concentrations need to be stabilised at a level well below 450 ppm (parts per million; measured in CO2-equivalent concentration). In order to stay below 2 ºC, global emissions must peak and decline in the next 10 to 15 years, so there is no time to lose.
As scientists, we urge the negotiators to reach an agreement that takes these targets as a minimum requirement for a fair and effective global climate agreement.
Tuesday, 4 December 2007
'Tropics expand' as world warms

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Expansion of the tropics could mean an increase in droughts
Climate change is causing the tropics to widen, with possible impacts on the global food supply, research suggests.
Scientists examined five different measures of the width of the tropical belt, and found it expanded by between 2 and 4.8 degrees latitude since 1979.
Other researchers meanwhile said climatic change could increase the number of thunderstorms in the US.
The findings emerged as delegates met in Bali for UN climate talks focusing on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
The capacity of poorer countries - many of them in the tropics - to respond and adapt to impacts of climate change will be another major theme of the talks.
Widening belts
The new analysis of tropical expansion comes from a team of US scientists who reviewed five separate strands of evidence, all gathered from satellite data.
While geographers define "The Tropics" rigidly as the region between 23.5 degrees North and 23.5 degrees South, to atmospheric scientists it is a more variable zone marked by features such as the jet stream and the circulation known as Hadley cells.
On these measures, the tropics have expanded since the era of reliable satellite observation began in 1979.
"The edges of the tropical belt are the outer boundaries of the subtropical dry zones, and their poleward shift could lead to fundamental shifts in ecosystems and in human settlements," the researchers write in the journal Nature Geoscience. "Shifts in precipitation patterns would have obvious implications for agriculture and water resources, and could present serious hardships in marginal areas."
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned in its series of reports this year that serious impacts on food and water supplies lie ahead, including:
- 75-250 million people across Africa could face water shortages by 2020
- Crop yields could increase by 20% in East and South East Asia, but decrease by up to 30% in Central and South Asia
- Agriculture fed by rainfall could drop by 50% in some African countries by 2020
The scientists behind the new study note that the tropical zone appears to be expanding much faster than predicted by computer models.
Thunder rolls
While impacts on agriculture could prove important for developing countries, a bigger concern for richer nations such as the US may be the damage wrought by extreme weather.
The IPCC forecasts stronger hurricanes in the future, but possibly fewer of them. Now another US team is suggesting an increase in thunderstorms over the country as well.
In the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers report a computer modelling study that projects a doubling of the frequency of weather conditions right for the formation of severe thunderstorms.
Already, they write, extreme weather events are costing the US economy more than $2bn (£970m) each year.
Friday, 30 November 2007
PRINCE OF WALES� BUSINESS INITIATIVE ON CLIMATE IS �MAJOR STEP FORWARD�

Friends of the Earth Release
Today's call by over 150 business leaders from around the world [1] calling for a comprehensive, legally-binding UN framework to tackle climate change has been warmly welcomed by Friends of the Earth.
The initiative, has been led by HRH the Prince of Wales's UK and EU Corporate Leaders Groups on Climate Change, and comes ahead of the UN climate negotiations which start next week in Bali, Indonesia.
Friends of the Earth's director Tony Juniper said:
"This initiative from the Prince of Wales is a major step forward in facing the urgent challenges posed by global climate change. The opportunity for governments to agree the necessary reduction in emissions is now very much greater. Now we need real political leadership".
"The shift to a low carbon economy is not only an environmental imperative but also an unprecedented economic and social opportunity. Scaling up clean energy systems and using energy more efficiently could not only slash emissions but help to improve the quality of life for billions of people and create millions of jobs. However, time is now short and if we are to have a good chance of cutting emissions by a sufficient amount we need to act right away. That is why we need a strong outcome from the Bali talks, and why it is so important that so many companies have signalled their support for governments to negotiate a deal that is up to the task at hand".
Tony Juniper, who is also vice chair of Friends of the Earth International, will be attending the UN climate negotiations in Bali. A briefing on the Bali talks is available from Friends of the Earth.
http://www.balicommunique.com/
Sunday, 25 November 2007
Quickie slow one

248 milliion people drowning

It says rich countries must move first and fastest since they are most responsible for climate change.
Oxfam International - which has its administrative headquarters in Oxford - wants the governments of rich countries and the UN to make humanitarian aid faster, fairer and more flexible.
It also wants them to find better ways to prepare for disasters but also to reduce the risk.
Oxfam said the increase in extreme climatic events is in line with climate models developed by the international scientific community.
The report said the number of people affected by disasters has risen by 68%, from an average of 174 million a year between 1985 to 1994 to 254 million a year between 1995 to 2004. Earlier this year the Asian floods alone affected 248 million people.
There has been a six-fold increase in floods since 1980. The number of floods and wind-storms have risen from 60 in 1980 to 240 last year. The number of geothermal events, such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, has stayed relatively static.
Sunday, 18 November 2007
Bangladesh

DHAKA (Reuters) - Grieving survivors and rescuers picked through the rubble left in the wake of a super cyclone that battered Bangladesh as the death toll neared 1,900 on Sunday and a government official declared the disaster "a national calamity".
Military ships and helicopters were trying to reach thousands of people believed stranded on islands in the Bay of Bengal and in coastal areas still cut off by the devastating storm.
Officials expected the death toll to rise further as the search for hundreds of people missing after Thursday night's storm intensified. The disaster ministry in Dhaka had recorded 1,861 deaths by Sunday noon, but local media put the figure at more than 3,000. A much improved disaster preparedness plan has been credited with saving scores of lives.
"It will take several days to complete the search and know the actual casualty figure and extent of damage to property," said food and disaster ministry official Ayub Miah.
A huge effort was underway to get food, drinking water and shelter to tens of thousands affected by the storm, the worst to hit disaster-prone Bangladesh since 1991 when nearly 143,000 people died.
Cyclone Sidr smashed into the country's southern coastline late on Thursday night with 250 kph (155 mph) winds that whipped up a five metre tidal surge.
Most of the deaths came from the surge washing away homes and strong winds blowing down dwellings. Many others drowned or were lost at sea.
In Barisal, one of the worst hit districts, authorities used elephants to clear uprooted trees blocking highways. Helicopters flew sorties to devastated areas, dropping food, drinking water and medicine for the survivors. "There are not many places where we can land," said one pilot, as large areas were still under water. Several fishermen picked up by a trawler from sea said they saw dozens of bodies floating in the waters near the Sundarban mangrove forest, a world heritage site and home to the endangered Royal Bengal tiger. They also saw scores of dead deer and other wildlife floating in the Pashur river, near the forest. Navy ships scoured coastal areas and sought to clear river channels clogged with sunken vessels. Red Crescent officials said some 1,000 fishermen and about 150 boats were still unaccounted for in the Bay of Bengal.
Tapan Chowdhury, a government adviser for food and disaster management, described the cyclone as a "national calamity" and urged all to come forward to help the victims.
"Everybody, including all political parties, should join the relief efforts," he said, adding that "aid pledges from the international community have so far been good",
Relief operators on the ground said supplies were still inadequate and that the government should make an immediate plea for more international aid to avert a "human disaster." In many areas there is still no electricity, and officials have warned it could take weeks to restore.
Aid officials said damage from the storm was very severe. "Our relief teams have started emergency distribution, with an initial coverage of 100,000 people," Vince Edwards, national director of World Vision Bangladesh. In many areas, 95 percent of rice crops due to be harvested in a few weeks have been badly damaged, officials said. Hundreds of shrimp farms have also been washed away.
Saturday, 17 November 2007
UN calls for joint climate effort (Link to latest IPCC Report)

Launching the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, he said it made clear that real and affordable ways to deal with the problem exist.
He called for action at next month's climate change conference in Bali.
The IPCC report states that climate change is "unequivocal" and may bring "abrupt and irreversible" impacts.
After a week of arduous talks in Valencia, Spain, the UN panel of scientists agreed the document which says the planet is being driven toward a warmer age at a quickening pace by human activity.
The scientists concluded that carbon dioxide emissions are rising faster than they were a decade ago, prompting the panel's chairman, Rajendra Pachauri, to highlight the need to deal with impacts which are coming whether or not global emissions are curbed.
Even if levels of CO2 in the atmosphere stayed where they are now, he said, research showed sea levels would rise by between 0.4 and 1.4 metres simply because water expands as it warms.
"This is a very important finding, likely to bring major changes to coastlines and inundating low-lying areas, with a great effect in river deltas and low-lying islands.
"If you add to this the melting of some of the ice bodies on Earth, this gives a picture of the kinds of issue we are likely to face," he said after the landmark report was published.
The report was officially unveiled by UN chief Ban Ki-moon in Valencia.
As he began Mr Ban congratulated the IPCC and the thousands of scientists involved in its work on their recent award of the Nobel Peace Prize.
"I come to you humbled after seeing some of the most precious treasures of our planet threatened by humanity's own hand," said the UN chief, who has just been on a fact-finding trip to Antarctica and South America. "All humanity must assume responsibility for these treasures." "Let us recognise that the effects of climate change affect us all, and that they have become so severe and so sweeping that only urgent global action will do. We are all in this together - we must work together," Mr Ban added.
IPCC PROJECTIONS
Probable temperature rise between 1.8C and 4C
Possible temperature rise between 1.1C and 6.4C
Sea level most likely to rise by 28-43cm
Arctic summer sea ice disappears in second half of century
Increase in heat waves very likely
Increase in tropical storm intensity likely
The synthesis summary finalised late on Friday warned that climate change may bring "abrupt and irreversible" impacts.
Such impacts could include the fast melting of glaciers and species extinctions.
"Approximately 20-30% of species assessed so far are likely to be at increased risk of extinction if increases in global average temperature exceed 1.5-2.5C (relative to the 1980-1999 average)," the summary concludes.
Other potential impacts highlighted in the text include:
between 75m and 250m people projected to have scarcer fresh water supplies than at present
yields from rain-fed agriculture could be halved
food security likely to be further compromised in Africa
widespread impacts on coral reefs
The IPCC findings will feed into the next round of negotiations on the UN climate convention and Kyoto Protocol, which open in Bali on 3 December.
"Today the world's scientists have spoken clearly and with one voice," Mr Ban said in Valencia. "In Bali I expect the world's policymakers to do the same."
Sunday, 11 November 2007
Climate change: Rising tides

An apocalyptic vision of a deluged Britain is one of the most potent, chilling and seductive images to emerge from the debate about climate change. All at sea: A 60-metre rise in sea levels could leave the Houses of Parliament semi-submerged, and would fundamentally redraw the map of Britain.
The power of such pictures helps account for the success of Al Gore’s Oscar-winning environmental documentary, An Inconvenient Truth; its warnings over rising sea levels helped win the former US Vice-President a Nobel Prize.
But just before Gore shared the prize for raising global awareness of climate change, a High Court judge ruled that the film contained errors, not least an “alarmist” assertion that the sea would rise up to 20ft “in the near future” as the ice in Greenland or Western Antarctica melts.
He pointed out that scientists believed that the ice would take millennia to melt: “The Armageddon scenario [Mr Gore] predicts, insofar as it suggests that sea level rises of seven metres might occur in the immediate future, is not in line with the scientific consensus.”
But as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which shared the Nobel with Gore, prepares to deliver its latest report next week, the truth is that there is no such scientific consensus at all.
While scientists agree that sea levels rose by six inches over the course of the 20th century, Professor David Vaughan of the British Antarctic Survey admits that estimates of future rises remain alarmingly hazy.
A Doomsday scenario, such as our map of Britain after a 60m rise in sea levels (inset), is highly unlikely - it would involve the bulk of the planet’s ice melting. But a rise of just a metre or more would wipe out the Norfolk Broads and the Wash, boosting the risk of devastating storm surges.
“With around 17 million people living near the coast in the UK, this is something we cannot afford to ignore,” says Prof Vaughan. One financial disaster zone would be the Thames Estuary, in which 1.25 million people live, 1.5 million commute and there are assets worth up to £100 billion.
In some areas, insurance cover might be withdrawn, leading to the collapse of the property market. The Environment Agency’s “Thames 2100” project, so named because it aims to protect the capital for the rest of this century, is intended to upgrade London’s defences by 2030.
This alone could cost around £20 billion – and Prof Vaughan warns that because billions more could be spent on coastal defences over the coming decades, we must have a better understanding of how to use this money efficiently and wisely, with a minimum of alarmist hysteria.
Later this month, in the Natural History Museum’s annual science lecture, Prof Vaughan will explain how the IPCC, the pre-eminent body engaged in crystal-ball gazing, cannot make firm predictions about sea-level rises - because scientists remain in the dark about how the Earth’s ice will behave, despite the efforts of 2,500 experts in more than 130 countries, including Prof Vaughan himself.
Understanding the effects of vanishing ice sheets “is the number one priority in the coming decade”, he insists. These experts are not concerned about sea ice: just as the level of a gin and tonic remains unchanged as the ice cubes in it melt, so the fate of sea ice is mostly irrelevant to sea levels.
It is land ice that is the problem: if it all melted, sea levels would rise a staggering 70m. Fortunately, 57 of those metres are locked up in Eastern Antarctica, which has been stable for 20 million years and looks likely to cope with global warming.
But there are bodies of land-borne ice that give cause for concern in Greenland and Western Antarctica, which could contribute up to seven and five metres respectively. Prof Vaughan’s research focuses on the ice sheet cloaking 99 per cent of Antarctica, the coldest, windiest and most remote spot on Earth, which holds 70 per cent of the planet’s fresh water.
Previously, it was thought that the 6,500ft-thick blanket was gaining more ice than it was losing. In recent years, however, sophisticated satellite measurements have revealed that the West Antarctic ice sheet, which is some eight times smaller than that in the east, is thinning over an area the size of Texas.
The ice lost, up to two metres a year, is enough to add 0.4mm annually to sea levels, though it is hard to say whether this is part of the natural life cycle of the continent. That is also why experts remain sceptical when Green groups join the dots between TV footage of vast icebergs “calving” and global warming; icebergs are launched every decade or so as glaciers - great rivers of ice - slide into the ocean.
Even so, Prof Vaughan is worried. The flow of Pine Island Glacier, the largest in the west of the continent, has accelerated over the past 15 years. The picture is equally bleak when it comes to Greenland, which has seen “decades of rapid warming”.
Over 30 years, the extent of Arctic sea ice has shrunk by 2.7 per cent per decade. Some models predict an Arctic free of sea ice in summer by 2100. But the reason for the controversy, and the row over Gore’s claims, is that there are many uncertainties, mostly arising from the lack of data on what ice sheets did in the past.
In particular, there are insufficient long-term satellite data to unpick the effects of natural climate change from that caused by man. To add to the muddle, temperatures in Greenland do not seem to exceed those seen during a warm period in the 1930s.
Antarctica shows no evidence of overall warming, though its peninsula, which extends towards South America, has recently grown hotter five times more rapidly than the rest of the world, warming by almost 3ºC over 60 years.
In fact, the effects of warming on Antarctica are still not understood. Higher temperatures increase atmospheric water content and the rate of snowfall that feeds the glaciers. How much more quickly this will enable glaciers to slip into the seas (their top speed is currently around six miles a year) is hard to say, because these rivers of ice run on an abrasive mix of rubble and rocks that bulldoze the underlying geological record, erasing traces that could help link temperature and melting.
There are also “second order effects”. The most important concerns the way the warming oceans expand, just as a railway track stretches in sunshine. This could add inches to sea levels.
Another depends on the gravitational tug of the ice itself: the great lump of Antarctic ice exerts a pull on nearby waters, so that when it melts, and its gravity lessens, this piled-up water ripples back worldwide.
Current climate forecasting focuses on the atmosphere, when it is the warmth of neighbouring oceans, and the way they circulate, that has the biggest effects on the Antarctic ice. Scientists know that they do not know how these factors work together, because current predictions underestimate changes seen in both Greenland and Antarctica.
All this confusion, and the multiplicity of factors to take into account, helps explain why the topic is so strongly argued over. Prof Vaughan says the main message is not to panic – the effects of melting will be gradual, in the order of three metres per century if the evidence of the past 20,000 years is anything to go by.
But even then, the costs of holding back the flood could be huge. That is why, as Prof Vaughan insists, “scientists need to nail down their predictions of sea level rise pretty quickly”.
The Natural History Museum’s Annual Science Lecture is a leading forum for scientific debate. Prof David Vaughan will deliver 'Flood Warning? The Global Impact of the Melting Ice Sheets’ on Tuesday, November 27, at 7.30pm. Admission: £12, concessions and members £9, students £6. Call 020 7942 5555 or see http://www.nhm.ac.uk/visit-us/whats-on/special-events/annual-science-lecture/. See the impact of rising sea levels at http://flood.firetree.net/
Friday, 9 November 2007
Get a bike

Indonesia has responded to the West's demand for cheap vegetable oil - a bio-diesel fuel - by rapidly increasing production. But as palm oil plantations replace virgin rain forest, peat swamp forests and traditional agriculture, the true environmental cost of the changes is becoming clear. Greenpeace has joisted a report pointing out that an area the size of Switzerland is now under threat in Riau, Sumatra, where peatland swamp forests are scheduled for clearance and replanting with palm. The forest clearance could result in a carbon footprint equal to the world's annual greenhouse gas emissions and the report says could trigger a 'climate bomb'. The report says that the new vegetable oil industry depends on an industry involved in deforestation and conversion of peat forests into plantations. Greenpeace say that 1.8 billion tonnes (4% of total world emissions) of carbon comes from the destruction of peatlands and peat swamp forests. Riau already has 1.3 million hectares of palm oil plantations - and another 3 million acres are planned. In all Riau has an estimated 14.6 billion tonnes of carbon locked in - lets leave it there! Its it VITAL everyone in the music industry responsibly sources alternative fuels - please please dont encourage deforestation.
Bring a bag

Hats off to Islington grocer Unpackaged who have got rid of all packaging - if you want to buy something - take your own bag or bags! Its amazing that just a few years ago the supermarket industry told us it was impossible to get rid of plastic bags - and now - bingo - we are all changing! Store owner Catherine Conway points out that saving on packaging helps the environment AND saves money - so consumers benefit financially too. The shop was opened by Green party mayorial candidate Sian Berry and is also supported by Mayor Ken Livingstone who said the idea was 'forward thinking' hoping other businesses follow the idea.
Sunday, 28 October 2007
International Demonstrations on Climate Change

Coinciding with the UN Climate Talks (MOP 3, COP 13) in Bali,Indonesia, from the 3rd to the 14th December 2007
This webpage http://www.globalclimatecampaign.org/ has been set up to publicise and promote plans for demonstrations on climate change, to coincide with the United Nations Climate Talks(COP13/MOP3) in Bali, Indonesia, December 3rd to 14th 2007.
We intend synchronised demonstrations around the world on Saturday December 8th 2007 - in as many places as possible - to call on world leaders to take urgent action on climate change.
The 'Call to Action' for these demonstrations and related events that will take place on December 8th 2007 is as follows :
"We demand that world leaders take the urgent and resolute action that is needed to prevent the catastrophic destabilisation of global climate, so that the entire world can move as rapidly as possible to a stronger emissions reductions treaty which is both equitable and effective in preventing dangerous climate change.
We also demand that the long-industrialised countries that have emitted most greenhouse gases up to now take most of the responsibility for the adaptive measures that have to be taken, especially by low-emitting countries with limited economic resources."
We feel that there is an overwhelming need to create a groundswell of global opinion to push for the urgent and radical action on climate change, without which we risk a global catastrophe of unimaginable proportions.
To help build for these demonstrations please find the contact for your country, on the website, or if there is not yet one listed there contact us at info@globalclimatecampaign.org
Saturday, 27 October 2007
Unsustainable development 'puts humanity at risk'

NewScientist.com news service
Catherine Brahic
Humans are completely living beyond their ecological means, says a major report published by the UN Environment Programme on Thursday.
The 550-page document finds the human ecological footprint is on average 21.9 hectares per person. Given the global population, however, the Earth's biological capacity is just 15.7 hectares per person.
The report is UNEP's latest on the state of the planet's health, taking five years in the making. It was put together by about 390 experts and peer-reviewed by an additional 1000.
It reviews the state of Earth's natural resources, from the atmosphere and water, to land surfaces and biodiversity. It concludes that instead of being used and maintained as a tool for the sustainable development of human populations, the environment is being sucked dry by unsustainable development.
Examples of how humans are over-exploiting natural resources to their own detriment include:
• Water – by 2025, 1.6 billion people will live in countries with absolute water scarcity; 440 million school days are already missed every year because of diarrhoeal diseases.
• Land use – modern agriculture exploits land more intensively than it has in the past. In 1987, a hectare of cropland yielded on average 1.8 tonnes of crops, today the same hectare produces 2.5 tonnes. This increased productivity comes at a cost – overexploited land is degraded and becomes less productive.
• Fish – 2.6 billion people rely on fish for more than 20% of their animal protein intake, yet as the intensity of fishing increases, the biodiversity of the ocean and the ocean's capacity to produce more fish decreases.
• Air – more than 2 million people die each year because of indoor and outdoor pollution.
Unsustainable consumption
The individual average footprint of 21.9 hectares per person estimated by UNEP, includes the areas required to produce the resources we use, as well as the areas needed to process our waste.
"About half of the footprint is accounted for by the areas that are required to absorb our greenhouse gas emissions," says Neville Ash of the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre, underlying the scale of the climate change problem. "The other half is the land which produces our food, the forests which produce our timber, the oceans and rivers which produce our fish."
The inflated size of the footprint, says Ash, is partially the result of the growth of the human population. The population is currently estimated at 6.7 billion people, and is expected to reach 8 to 10 billion by 2050.
But for Ash, the main driver of the size of our footprint is our unsustainable consumption. "There is no doubt that we could sustain the current and projected population if we lived sustainably," he told New Scientist.
'Inexorable decline'
According to the report authors, energy efficiency is key to sustainability. Johan Kuylenstierna of the Stockholm Environment Institute says that the growth of greenhouse gas emissions in developing nations could be halved by 2020 simply by using existing technologies for energy efficiency.
According to Jo Alcamo, at the University of Kassel in Germany, who led the group which looked at future development for the report, open borders and free trade could also be important. In models of the future where trade between countries is made simpler, technologies that improve the sustainable use of resources are adopted more quickly.
"Much of the 'natural' capital upon which so much of the human wellbeing and economic activity depends – water, land, the air and atmosphere, biodiversity and marine resources – continue their seemingly inexorable decline," warns Achim Steiner, UNEP executive director.
"The cost of inaction and the price humanity will eventually pay is likely to dwarf the cost of swift and decisive action now."
Climate Change – Want to know more about global warming: the science, impacts and political debate? Visit our continually updated special report.
Endangered species – Learn more about the conservation battle in our comprehensive special report.
Energy and Fuels – Learn more about the looming energy crisis in our comprehensive special report.
Time emissions

Friday, 26 October 2007
Early endgame??

Greenhouse gas emissions hit danger mark
By Michael Perry
Tue, 09 Oct 2007 13:05:32 GMT
SYDNEY (Reuters) - The global economic boom has accelerated greenhouse gas emissions to a dangerous threshold not expected for a decade and could potentially cause irreversible climate change, said one of Australia's leading scientists.
Tim Flannery, a world recognized climate change scientist and Australian of the Year in 2007, said a U.N. international climate change report due in November will show that greenhouse gases have already reached a dangerous level.
Flannery said the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report will show that greenhouse gas in the atmosphere in mid-2005 had reached about 455 parts per million of carbon dioxide equivalent -- a level not expected for another 10 years.
"We thought we'd be at that threshold within about a decade," Flannery told Australian television late on Monday.
"We thought we had that much time. But the new data indicates that in about mid-2005 we crossed that threshold," he said.
"What the report establishes is that the amount of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere is already above the threshold that could potentially cause dangerous climate change."
Flannery, from Macquarie University and author of the climate change book "The Weather Makers," said he had seen the raw data which will be in the IPCC Synthesis Report.
He said the measurement of greenhouse gas in the atmosphere included not just carbon dioxide, but also nitrous oxide, methane and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs). All these gases were measured and then equated into potentially one gas to reach a general level.
"They're all having an impact. Probably 75 percent is carbon dioxide but the rest is that mixed bag of other gases," he said.
COLLISION COURSE
Flannery said global economic expansion, particularly in China and India, was a major factor behind the unexpected acceleration in greenhouse gas levels.
"We're still basing that economic activity on fossil fuels. You know, the metabolism of that economy is now on a collision course, clearly, with the metabolism of our planet," he said.
The report adds an urgency to international climate change talks on the Indonesian island of Bali in December, as reducing greenhouse gas emissions may no longer be enough to prevent dangerous climate change, he said.
U.N. environment ministers meet in December in Bali to start talks on a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol on curbing climate change that expires in 2012.
"We can reduce emissions as strongly as we like -- unless we can draw some of the standing stock of pollutant out of the air and into the tropical forests, we'll still face unacceptable levels of risk in 40 years time," he said.
Flannery suggested the developed world could buy "climate security" by paying villages in countries like Papua New Guinea not to log forests and to regrow forests.
"That 200 gigatonnes of carbon pollutant, the standing stock that's in the atmosphere, is there courtesy of the industrial revolution, and we're the beneficiaries of that and most of the world missed out," he said.
"So I see that as a historic debt that we owe the world. And I can't imagine a better way of paying it back than trying to help the poorest people on the planet."
Climate controversy

CO2 equivalents
Filed under:
IPCC
Greenhouse gases
Climate Science— gavin @ 5:40 PM
There was a minor kerfuffle in recent days over claims by Tim Flannery (author of "The Weather Makers") that new information from the upcoming IPCC synthesis report will show that we have reached 455 ppmv CO2_equivalent 10 years ahead of schedule, with predictable implications. This is confused and incorrect, but the definitions of CO2_e, why one would use it and what the relevant level is, are all highly uncertain in many peoples' minds. So here is a quick rundown.
Definition: The CO2_equivalent level is the amount of CO2 that would be required to give the same global mean radiative forcing as the sum of a basket of other forcings. This is a way to include the effects of CH4 and N2O etc. in a simple way, particularly for people doing future impacts or cost-benefit analysis. The equivalent amount is calculated using the IPCC formula for CO2 forcing:
Total Forcing = 5.35 log(CO2_e/CO2_orig)
where CO2_orig is the 1750 concentration (278 ppmv).
Usage: There are two main ways it is used. Firstly, it is often used to group together all the forcings from the Kyoto greenhouse gases (CO2, CH4, N2O and CFCs), and secondly to group together all forcings (including ozone, sulphate aerosols, black carbon etc.). The first is simply a convenience, but the second is what matters to the planet. Many stabilisation scenarios, such as are being discussed in UNFCCC negotiations are based on stabilising total CO2_e at 450, 550 or 750 ppmv.
Magnitude The values of CO2_e (Kyoto) and CO2_e (Total) can be calculated from Figure 2.21 and Table 2.12 in the IPCC WG1 Chapter 2. The forcing for CO2, CH4 (including indirect effects), N2O and CFCs is 1.66+0.48+0.07+0.16+0.34=2.71 W/m2 (with around 0.3 W/m2 uncertainty). Using the formula above, that gives CO2_e (Kyoto) = 460 ppmv. However, including all the forcings (some of which are negative), you get a net forcing of around 1.6 W/m2, and a CO2_e (Total) of 375 ppmv with quite a wide error bar. This is, coincidently, close to the actual CO2 level.
Implications The important number is CO2_e (Total) which is around 375 ppmv. Stabilisation scenarios of 450 ppmv or 550 ppmv are therefore still within reach. Claims that we have passed the first target are simply incorrect, however, that is not to say they are easily achievable. It is even more of a stretch to state that we have all of a sudden gone past the 'dangerous' level. It is still not clear what that level is, but if you take a conventional 450 ppmv CO2_e value (which will lead to a net equilibrium warming of ~ 2 deg C above pre-industrial levels), we are still a number of years from that, and we have (probably) not yet committed ourselves to reaching it.
Finally, the IPCC synthesis report is simply a concise summary of the three separate reports that have already come out. It therefore can't be significantly different from what is already available. But this is another example where people are quoting from draft reports that they have neither properly read nor understood and for which better informed opinion is not immediately available. I wish journalists and editors would resist the temptation to jump on leaks like this (though I know it's hard). The situation is confusing enough without adding to it unintentionally.
Sunday, 21 October 2007
Vote for Gore

Gore: Back to work on environment
By Jim Christie
Fri, 12 Oct 2007 20:53:51 GMT
PALO ALTO, California (Reuters) - Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, said he was getting straight back to work on the "planetary emergency" of climate change.
But he refused to answer reporters' questions on whether the award would make him change his mind and enter the U.S. presidential campaign as a Democratic candidate before the November 2008 election.
"We have to quickly find a way to change the world's consciousness about exactly what we're facing," Gore said, appearing in public nearly nine hours after the award was announced in Oslo.
Gore shared the Nobel prize with the U.N. climate panel for their work helping galvanize international action against global warming.
"It is the most dangerous challenge we've ever faced but it is also the greatest opportunity that we have ever had to make changes that we should be making for other reasons anyway," said Gore, standing with his wife, Tipper, and four Stanford University faculty members who work with the U.N. climate panel.
"This is a chance to elevate global consciousness about the challenges that we face now."
"I'm going back to work right now. This is just the beginning," Gore added, leaving the 70 journalists hanging by not taking questions.
That left unanswered a question on the minds of many in the United States after his Nobel win: would Gore, who narrowly lost the 2000 presidential election to Republican George W. Bush, jump in to join a crowded Democratic field of candidates ahead of the presidential election next year.
Gore has made it known he is not interested, although some Democratic activists are campaigning for him to get into the race, and the Nobel award on Friday further fueled their hopes.
Gore has campaigned on climate change since leaving office in 2001 after the bruising and disputed election result that put Bush in the White House.
BUSINESS AS USUAL
Gore, who appeared somber rather than elated over the award, said, "For my part, I will be doing everything I can to try to understand how to best use the honor and recognition of this award as a way of speeding up the change in awareness and the change in urgency."
"It truly is a planetary emergency and we have to respond quickly," he said.
Gore carried on with his plans despite the life-changing announcement, attending a scheduled meeting in Palo Alto in the heart of the Silicon Valley, where innovators are eager to jump start the clean technology industry.
Stanford biology professor Chris Field said the prize "adds tremendous momentum" to work on conservation, efficiency, new technology and carbon capture and storage.
"I think we are seeing there is no single solution ... but there are great opportunities in all four areas," Field said.
Gore said in a statement earlier that he would donate all of his share of the Nobel prize winnings to the Alliance for Climate Protection -- a nonprofit group Gore founded last year to raise public awareness of climate change.
"This award is even more meaningful because I have the honor of sharing it with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change -- the world's pre-eminent scientific body devoted to improving our understanding of the climate crisis -- a group whose members have worked tirelessly and selflessly for many years," Gore said in his earlier written statement.
(Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu in Washington)
Saturday, 20 October 2007
Gore, scientists share Nobel Peace Prize

By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS, Associated Press Writer
Fri, 12 Oct 2007 21:00:35 GMT
GENEVA - Plenty of people share the glory of the Nobel Peace Prize — thousands of scientists have been studying and documenting climate change under a U.N. body set up in 1988 as concerns grew about global warming. And they hope the award will help — or prod — governments to do more to curb global warming or avert disasters on the scale of a Hurricane Katrina or the deadly effects of the 2003 heat wave that killed up to 35,000 people in Europe.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, named co-winner with former Vice President Al Gore in Oslo on Friday, has been cranking out reports that have built up knowledge "about the connection between human activities and global warming," said the Nobel prize committee.
"Mother Nature keeps helping us along because the evidence just keeps piling up," said Kevin Trenberth, a lead author on the 1995, 2001 and 2007 reports.
Trenberth, the New Zealand-born head of the climate analysis section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., said he hopes the prize increases the impact of the explanations he and other scientists give to audiences ranging from town hall meetings to Congress.
"All the scientists that have contributed to the work of the IPCC are the Nobel laureates who have been recognized and acknowledged by the Nobel Prize Committee," said Rajendra Pachauri, the Indian engineer who chairs the panel.
"They should feel deeply encouraged and inspired. It is their contribution which has been recognized," said Pachauri. "I only happen to be a functionary that essentially oversees the process."
Leo Meyer, a climate and energy specialist with the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, said the award underscores the panel's role in encouraging policy makers to address the problem of climate change.
"There is still an important task of better explaining the findings of IPCC to a larger audience and this Nobel Prize of course helps to underline the credibility of the IPCC reports," Meyer told the AP.
Piers Forster from the School of Earth and Environment at England's University of Leeds said in a statement: "It's every scientist's dream to win a Nobel Prize, so this is great for myself and the hundreds that worked on their reports over the years. It's perhaps a little deflating though — that one man and his PowerPoint show has as much influence as the decades of dedicated work by so many scientists."
Thursday, 18 October 2007
DO YOU KNOW YOUR OWN CARBON FOOTPRINT?

Julie’s Bicycle has appointed a team of environmental auditors who can provide environmental audits – or we can recommend other companies to do this. Don’t think of it as a cost – think of it as a long term investment in energy savings.
The audit is a five step process which includes (1) an initial meeting (2) a site visit (3) a report (4) developing your next steps and (5) a follow up meeting 6-12 months later. . Our focus is on energy use, water, transportation and travel, waste disposal and recycling, and purchasing.
Julie’s Bicycle is committed to supporting the whole industry in its efforts to tackle climate change. Sign up and register at http://www.juliesbicycle.com/ or call Alison Tickell on 07817 270711, or email us on juliesbicycle@yahoo.co.uk.
Thursday, 11 October 2007
More than 16,000 Species are at Risk of Extinction

The United Nations' estimates that the current rate of species extinction is 1,000 times greater than it would be without human-induced habitat change, introduction of invasive species, and overexploitation. Last month, the World Conservation Union's (IUCN's) 2007 Red List, an annual report on the conservation status of the world's species, provided a more thorough accounting of this biodiversity loss. The IUCN reports that one in four mammals, one in eight birds, and one in three amphibians are in jeopardy.
More than 7,000 species experts from around the world collaborate to evaluate the status of more than 41,000 species. The Red List is unique in its global scope and the breadth of life that it examines; it includes invertebrates, plants, fungi, and algae. However, while many species groups, such as birds and mammals, are evaluated comprehensively, only a small percentage of invertebrates, plants, and fish are classified. In total, fewer than three percent of the world's 1.6 million described species have been systematically evaluated. As a result, the number of species that are actually under threat could be much higher.
This year's report includes some success stories. The Mauritian parakeet (pictured at the top of this post) was upgraded from Critically Endangered to Endangered after years of intensive recovery management. However, many other species, including the Indian crocodile, the Western gorilla, Speke's gazelle and the Egyptian vulture were assigned a more threatened status in this assessment (see http://earthtrends.wri.org/updates/node/” for more information).
For the first time this year, the Red List included species of corals. Several species endemic to the Galapagos Islands, facing the twin threats of El Nino and climate change, have been classified as endangered. Marine species are typically underrepresented in these assessments, and the IUCN is working to classify the conservation status of 15,000 additional marine species by 2010.
Sunday, 7 October 2007
Arctic ice shrinks to record low

Catherine Brahic and Reuters
Arctic sea ice shrank this year to its smallest area of coverage since satellite measurements began some 30 years ago. The record low is a result of long-term climate change combined with particular weather conditions during 2007, say US scientists.
The remarkable decline made international headlines in September when European and US space agencies announced that the ice-clogged North-West Passage had completely opened for the first time, allowing vessels to sail from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
Scientists at the US National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) have revealed satellite measurements showing the full extent of summer melt during 2007. Ice is now starting to reform in the Arctic as winter approaches.
"We've got the final numbers now for this September, and it's a really dramatic record low," says Walt Meier, a member of the team studying the ice. "It didn't just break the record, it shattered the record. This year just obliterated everything else."
The average sea-ice coverage for September, when it was lowest, slipped to 4.28 million square kilometres. This is 23% less than the previous record low, set in 2005, and 39% less than the annual average between 1979 and 2000 (see image, top right).
Ice-free Arctic?
Meier says the ice coverage has followed "a steep and significant downward trend" since scientists began getting good satellite data in 1979. This long-term shrinking is attributed to greenhouse-gas emissions and the global warming they cause. He says that it would not be surprising if the Arctic became ice-free during the summer sometime in the next 25 years.
"Computer projections have consistently shown that as global temperatures rise, the sea-ice cover will begin to shrink," adds Mark Serreze, a senior research scientist at the NSIDC. "While a number of natural factors have certainly contributed to the overall decline in sea ice, the effects of greenhouse warming are now coming through loud and clear."
In addition to long-term global warming, three factors have contributed to low levels of ice in 2007. Firstly, Arctic ice was thinner than usual last winter. "Thinner ice takes less energy to melt than thicker ice, so the stage was set for low levels of sea ice this summer," explains Julienne Stroeve, another researcher at the data centre.
Secondly, temperatures were particularly high during the summer because winds brought warm air northwards. And thirdly, Arctic skies were remarkably clear. Satellite images show that skies over the Beaufort Sea were clear, or mostly clear, for 43 of 55 days between 1 June and 23 July, just as the sun was highest over the Arctic.
Tuesday, 2 October 2007
Message from The Big Chill, Herefordshire, UK

Sunday, 23 September 2007
GAIYA RAPED BY SEED FOR BIOFUEL

The Times (22nd September) has reported on a new piece of independent research that shows that rapeseed and maize biofuels may actually produce more harmful greenhouse gases than burning fossil fuels. Fossil fuels tend to produce CO2, the most common greenhouse gas. But Carbon Dioxide is not the most effective greenhouse gas. The problem with CO2 is that globally we produce huge and growing quantities of it but Methane, Nitrous Oxide, HFCs and CFCs are also greenhouse gases and these can be far far worse in terms of heating up the planet. Nitrous Oxide is an estimated 296 times more powerful as a greenhouse gas than Carbon Dioxide and this is the issue with biofuels from maize and rapeseed. Maize for ethanol is the main biofuel in the USA and scientists have found that the nitrogen used in fertilisers ends up being concerted and emitted as a harmful gas. The new research, which appears in the Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics journal is written by scientists from the UK, US and Germany includes Noble prize-winner Professor Paul Crutzen, an expert on the ozone layer, and Professor Kevin Smith from the University of Edinburgh. Dr David Reay, also from the University of Edinburgh, projected that with the US Senate aiming to increase maize ethanol production sevenfold by 2022, the greenhouse gas emissions from transport will rise 6 per cent. The researchers have pointed to the importance of ensuring that the measures put in place to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are assessed thoroughly before being hailed as a solution whilst another academic, Dr Franz Cohen from the University of Basel added 'it is to be hoped that those taking decisions on subsidies and regulations will in the future take N20 emmissions into account and promote some forms of biofuel production whilst abandoning others.
Saturday, 15 September 2007
Hot shortcut

LONDON (Reuters) - The Arctic's Northwest Passage has opened up fully because of melting sea ice, clearing a long-sought but historically impassable route between Europe and Asia, the European Space Agency said.
A shipping route through the Northwest Passage in the Canadian Arctic has been touted as a possible cheaper option to the Panama Canal for many shippers.
"We have seen the ice-covered area drop to just around 3 million square km," said Leif Toudal Pedersen of the Danish National Space Centre, describing the drop in the Arctic sea ice as "extreme".
The figure was about 1 million sq. km less than previous lows in 2005 and 2006, Pedersen added.
The Northeast Passage through the Russian Arctic remained partially blocked, but in the light of the latest developments it may well open sooner than expected, Pedersen said.
Polar regions are very sensitive to climate change, ESA said, noting that some scientists have predicted the Arctic would be ice free as early as 2040.
Almost all experts say global warming, stoked by human use of fossil fuels, is happening about twice as fast in the Arctic as elsewhere on the planet. Once exposed, dark ground or sea soak up far more heat than ice and snow.
September and March generally mark the annual minimum and maximum extent respectively of Arctic sea ice.
The ESA announcement on its Web site came amid a scramble for sovereignty rights in the Arctic.
Russia, which recently planted its national flag on the seabed beneath the ice of the North Pole, has been staking its claim to a large chunk of the resource-rich Arctic region.
Countries such as Russia are hoping for new shipping routes or to find oil and gas.
Canada has also been pressing its Arctic sovereignty claim and has announced plans for a deep-water port at Nanisivik near the eastern entrance of the Northwest Passage, which will allow it to refuel its military patrol ships.
Tuesday, 11 September 2007
GREAT BIG GREEN IDEAS COMPETITION

Green advice website http://www.agreenerfestival.com/ is launching a new competition for festival fans to suggest new ideas to promote environmental friendliness at festivals and get events greener. The new competition, Great Big Green Ideas, will launched at the Bestival Festival on the Isle of Wight on the 7th September. Bestival, The Glastonbury Festival and Peats Ridge Festival in Australia will all be asking their fans for their best ideas. Agreenerfestivals co-founder Ben Challis explained that 'some of the very best ideas that improve festivals come from fans and its time we ask people who go to events how they want to get greener. This year we have seen a huge increase in the number of tents abandoned at festivals and these, along with personal carbon footprints, are just two of the things we want fans to think about. Sometimes really simple ideas are the best so any ideas on reducing waste, recycling and preventing pollution would be really welcome as well.'
Five lucky winners will get a goody bag of DVDs and CDS including albums from Travis, LCD Sound Systems, Take That, Jamie T, Badly Drawn Boy and the Orbital Live and Glastonbury Anthems DVDs.
Great Green Ideas should be emailed to agreenerfestival@aol.com and should be in English or with an English translation and not more than 100 words long.
The AGreenerfestival.com team are committed to helping music and arts festivals around the world adopt environmentally friendly practices through providing information, education and the simple exchange of ideas. http://www.agreenerfestival.com/ is a not for profit company. Recent initiatives launched by the site include a message board for swapping ideas, a new cartoon character, EcoGirl, who can be used to promote recycling and car-sharing and a new award for Green Festivals called the Greener Festival Award. The first winners of the new awards will be announced at the UK Festival Awards on November 6th 2007.
Monday, 10 September 2007
Climate cycle
Friday, 7 September 2007
Global warming: Too hot to handle for the BBC

By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor
Published: 06 September 2007
The transformation of climate change from a scientific to a political issue became clear last night when the BBC dropped plans for a day-long TV special on global warming.
The scrapping of Planet Relief, an awareness-raising broadcast similar in concept to programmes such as the poverty-focused Comic Relief and Live8, and planned for early next year, marked a watershed moment: it showed that opining about climate change is now as significant in Britain as scientific fact.
Environmentalists and politicians fiercely criticised the BBC for abandoning the programme, for which Ricky Gervais and Jonathan Ross had been provisionally lined up as presenters. The corporation said that it had decided it was not the BBC's job to lead opinion on the global warming issue. However, critics complained that the effect of the decision was to imply that there was no scientific consensus on the reality of climate change and its human causes, and accused the corporation of being swayed by increasingly vocal climate-change sceptics.
Chris Huhne, Liberal Democrat spokesman on the environment, said: "The consensus about global warming in the science community is now overwhelming, so accusing the BBC of campaigning on such an undisputed threat is like suggesting it should be even-handed between criminals and their victims."
The green activist and author Mark Lynas said that the decision showed "a real poverty of understanding among senior BBC executives about the gravity of the situation we now face.
"The only reason why this became an issue is that there is a small but vociferous group of extreme right-wing climate 'sceptics' lobbying against taking action, so the BBC is behaving like a coward and refusing to take a more consistent stance," he said.
Planet Relief was a working title for the TV special, which was being developed by Jon Plowman, head of BBC Comedy. While the event might have been similar in scale to Comic Relief or Children in Need, it would not have involved fundraising.
It was intended to raise awareness of the issue of climate change. The BBC had been in discussions with the National Grid about the possibility of calling on viewers to participate in a mass electricity "switch-off" or if that had not proved feasible, to turn off the electricity at selected iconic landmarks.
The abandonment of the programme came about after an intense in-house debate about exactly how the corporation should treat the global warming issue, now becoming increasingly politicised in Britain. It could be broadly said that action on climate change, while favoured by many across the political spectrum, has a particular appeal for radical groups, not least because industrial capitalism is seen as being the principal cause of the problem.
By extension, some voices on the right regard it as just another radical cause, oppose it instinctively and seek to cast doubt on its scientific basis. The BBC has been under fire, especially from right-wing commentators, for proselytising in its presentation of some concerns, and some senior executives had doubts about the Planet Relief proposal in particular, suggesting it would leave the corporation open to the charge of bias.
Speaking at the Edinburgh International Television Festival this month, Newsnight's editor, Peter Barron said: "It's abso- lutely not the BBC's job to save the planet." The head of television news, Peter Horrocks, wrote in the BBC News website editor's blog: "It is not the BBC's job to lead opinion or proselytise on this or any other subject."
However, a spokeswoman for BBC1, the channel on which Planet Relief would have been shown, insisted that last night's decision was not made "in light of the recent debate around impartiality." She added: "BBC1 aims to bring a mass audience to contemporary and relevant issues and this includes the topic of climate change.
"Our audiences tell us they are most receptive to documentary or factual-style programming as a means of learning about the issues surrounding this subject, and as part of this learning we have made the decision not to go proceed with the Planet Relief event. Instead we will focus our energies on a range of factual programmes on the important and complex subject of climate change."
Mark Lynas dismissed the argument that Planet Relief was dropped for purely editorial reasons as "PR guff". "This is all to do with the fact that climate change is such a political issue and it's too hot for the BBC to handle," he said. "It's intellectual bankruptcy. The entire scientific community is telling the world that it's the biggest threat to human civilisation. What more evidence do you need?" Tony Juniper, executive director of Friends of the Earth, said the decision was very disappointing "considering the huge potential for the BBC in helping us more quickly make the shift toward a low-carbon society."
Andrew Neil, who presents the Daily Politics and This Week on the BBC, said: "I'm delighted the BBC has cancelled it. Our job is to cover these things, not to comment on them. There's a great danger that on some issues we're becoming a one-party state in which we're meant to have only one kind of view. You don't have to be a climate-change denier to recognise that there's a great range of opinion on the subject."
Tuesday, 4 September 2007
Iced Lemming

Around 600 naked volunteers formed a “living sculpture” on Switzerland’s largest glacier earlier this month to raise awareness of climate change and glacial melting.
Standing on the Aletsch Glacier with only a warm sense of self-satisfaction to keep them warm, the assembled masses endured temperatures of around 10C while being photographed in the all-together by acclaimed New York artist Spencer Tunick.
Standing on a stepladder and bellowing through a megaphone, Tunick directed five separate camera crews and the eager participants who had travelled from all over Europe.
“The melting of the glaciers is an indisputable sign of global climate change,” said environmental group Greenpeace, who co-organised the event.
A spokesperson for the campaign said the aim of the project was to “establish a symbolic relationship between the vulnerability of the melting glacier and the human body”.
The spokesperson added that this was managed in an eco-friendly way to minimise any impact on the environment, before warning that Swiss glaciers could disappear by 2080 if global warming continues at its current pace.
Tunick’s previous projects have featured mass nudity in London, Newcastle and Amsterdam, but these events were dwarfed in May 2007 when the artist photographed 18,000 people in the buff in the centre of Mexico City.