ASGP - Kyoto Treaty Statement.
A STATEMENT FROM THE GREEN PARTIES OF THE
WORLD TO THE THIRD CONFERENCE OF THE PARTIES TO THE
CLIMATE CHANGE CONVENTION MEETING IN KYOTO, JAPAN,
2-13 DECEMBER 1997
Humanity stands on the threshold of
fundamentally destabilizing the climate it has known
throughout recorded history. The unprecedented
consensus reached by the world's leading climate
scientists through the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change in 1995 has clarified the issue.
No longer does any serious question exist
as to whether humans are altering the climate. Only
how much and how quickly remain uncertain.
The succession of record-breaking hot
years since the 1980s, the increasing frequency of
severe weather events across the globe including the latest
El Nino, and the spread of tropical diseases to higher
latitudes and elevations, are strong indications
climatic disruption is already upon us. Response equal
to the challenge is utterly imperative. The costs of
not acting or acting insufficiently are incalculable.
No country, no matter how rich, would be able to
insulate itself. Consequences would intensify in
our children's generation, and resound for centuries
and millennia to come.
The climate change negotiations in Kyoto
represent a vital juncture in world affairs where
humanity has a real opportunity to avert
ecological, human and economic disaster. Yet, in truth,
even the best proposals put forward for Kyoto fall
short of the mark. The European Union proposal for
a reduction of greenhouse gas emissions to 15 percent
below 1990 levels by 2010 should only be the starting
point for discussions on far deeper cuts. A recent
Japanese study shows that emission cuts of 21 percent by
2010 would be quite feasible. The US and Japanese
proposals, even weaker than those of the European
Union, are simply unacceptable.
The Greens believe legally-binding
reduction targets should minimally be set at 20 percent
below 1990 levels by 2005, 25 percent by 2010, and
50 percent by 2025. Targets must only be set for gases
that can be adequately monitored. A gas-by-gas approach
should be used.
It is of utmost importance that an
ambitious and coherent Kyoto protocol be adopted at the
Third Conference of the Parties. To be effective,
this protocol must secure legally-binding reductions in
greenhouse gas emissions by the industrialized
countries. The protocol must be clear
and straightforward with incentives that promote early
action. Clear, numerical targets must be set, with the
first to be reached by 2005. Regular reviews and a
satisfactory compliance mechanism must be established.
It is obvious that the Kyoto Protocol
will only mark the beginning of global action against
climatic disruption. The view must be
toward successively strengthening commitments for
greenhouse gas reductions. Credible scientific
authorities maintain that greenhouse emissions
must ultimately be reduced by 60-80 percent if we are
to avert severe consequences.
As political leaders throughout the world
face climatic destabilization, the contrast between
what is seen as politically feasible, and what
is understood to be ecologically necessary, is stark.
Prior civilizations crumbled under the weight of
ecological deterioration ignored for too long. If we
fail to adequately respond to climatic disruption, we are
vulnerable to a similar fate.
True leadership requires stepping beyond
the safe terrain of what appears politically feasible
at the moment, onto that risky ground where
global necessity is truthfully proclaimed. We must
undertake a rapid shift from fossil fuels, which will
be one of the most difficult yet rewarding projects
humanity has yet undertaken. We must transition into
highly efficient economies reliant on renewable and
climate-friendly energy.
Distorted statements spread by interests
attached to the fossil fuel status quo frame adequate
response to climate change as an economic threat.
Rather than giving credence to these poorly conceived
and backwards arguments, the Kyoto Summit must instead
focus on the economic menace posed by
inadequate response to climatic disruption and the
unprecedented economic opportunity that
climate-friendly economic transformation represents.
Consider the millions of jobs and widespread global
prosperity to be gained by:
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Replacing and retrofitting the
world's vehicle fleets for propulsion by
electricity, fuel cells and alternative fuels.
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Reconstructing human settlements in
compact forms that reduce reliance on the
automobile.
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Converting the world's electrical
generation to renewable sources and the world's
homes, businesses and industries to highly
efficient lighting, appliances, equipment and
motors.
These changes can be spurred and financed
by shifting taxes from income and labour to pollution
and resource use, particularly fossil fuel burning.
Tax incentives should be provided for energy efficiency
and alternatives. No matter what takes place at Kyoto,
local and national governments should and will
implement such policies. In fact, if the European Union
implements its proposed greenhouse gas reductions
through a shift in taxation, it stands to gain 2-4
million jobs. Increased efficiency and reduced labour
costs will also strengthen the competitiveness of
exports from any nation that undertakes such
shifts.
At the same time, nuclear power is not a
feasible alternative. Accident risks are much too high
and the waste disposal problem remains
unsolved. Indeed, the energy requirements of
constructing nuclear plants impose a greenhouse burden
of their own. Nuclear plants require 25-30 years of
operation before they deliver more energy than is needed to
built and maintain them. For fossil-fuel powered plants
the equivalent figure is 6-8 years. Renewable energy
comes out by far the winner. Photovoltaic solar cells
require less than three years, while wind turbines yield net
energy afteronly 4-6 months.
If status quo interests have distorted
the economic debate surrounding climate change
response, they have also skewed the discussion in
another highly significant respect. They have argued
that newly industrializing and non-industrial countries
of the South must immediately bind themselves to any
greenhouse gas reduction treaty made by the industrial
countries. This position has already had a tragic
impact in countries such as the US.
Of course, response to climate change
must be truly global. All nations have
responsibilities. But the industrial countries, which have
dumped a far larger measure of greenhouse gases into
the atmosphere and gained great wealth in the process,
must act in good faith and take the lead. Asking
for commitments for developing countries too early
would torpedo the process. After all, the
Framework Convention on Climate Change states, "The
extent to which developing country Parties will
effectively implement their commitments under the
Convention will depend on the effective implementation
by developed country Parties..."
It should not be doubted that the South
will find reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in its
own interest. The South is particularly vulnerable
to drought, severe storms and disease outbreaks
associated with climate change. Studies show that in
the medium term the tropical countries stand to lose
around five percent of their gross domestic product if
climate change is allowed to continue unabated,
compared to 1-2 percent for temperate zone countries.
Of course, in the longer term, the effects would be far
worse for all countries.
As a first step in good faith after
Kyoto, a global-level system under UN supervision must
be put in place to transfer climate-friendly
technologies to the South and financially assist them
in climate stabilization actions. This must be the
topic of a new worldwide meeting of the Parties of
the Convention that should follow closely on the heels
of the Kyoto Summit.
The industrial countries must help the
newly industrializing and non-industrial nations
leapfrog over climate-disrupting technologies, even as
the industrial nations move beyond their own wasteful ways.
Direct financial and technical assistance for
preservation of tropical rainforests, in recognition of
their vital role in stabilizing world climates, must
also take a far higher priority. Assistance from the
North to the South should be viewed not as a burden,
but as an investment in a new era of mutual, global
prosperity.
Militaries across the world are still
absorbing unconscionable sums of money despite the end
of the Cold War. Unquestionably, a significant portion
of the transition to climate-friendly economies in both the
North and South should be funded by a redirection of
budgets away from armaments to the greatest security
threat now faced by all nations -
environmental disruption.
The people of this planet, attentive to
the world they will be leaving their children and their
children's children, will be watching the Conference of
the Parties as you meet in Kyoto. The future of humanity
and the many other species affected by climatic
disruption requires that you take profound steps to
preserve the stability of the climate on
which generations both present and future depend. Green
parties and federations of the world thus call upon you
to:
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Set legally-binding greenhouse gas
reduction targets for industrialized countries of
at least 20 percent by 2005, 25 percent by 2010,
and 50 percent by 2025, with regular reviews and a
satisfactory compliance mechanism.
-
Schedule a new, worldwide meeting at
an early date to put in place a global-level system
that financially and technologically assists
developing countries in climate stabilization actions.
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Set the stage for global
transformation to climate-friendly
energy, production and transportation systems, in
order to ensure that all nations have an
economically prosperous and environmentally secure
future.
-
A response from the Conference of the
Parties equal to the fundamental
challenge posed by global climatic disruption demands
that you do no less.
Email: info@greenpartyus.org
Office: PO Box 57065 Washington, D.C. 20037 Toll-Free:
866-41GREEN
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