UNIVERSITIES JOIN UN-LED INITIATIVE TO COMBAT CLIMATE CHANGE


Environmental Panorama
International
July of 2009


Posted on 09 July 2009 - WWF endorsed the World Bank’s call for countries to ban tiger farming because of the uncertainty that it will have for the long-term conservation of wild tigers.

“Extinction is irreversible, so prudence and precaution suggest that the risks of legalized farming are too great a gamble for the world to take,” World Bank Director Keshav Varma told the member countries of the 58th meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Standing Committee. “We cannot know for sure if tiger farming will work.”

Need to stop all trade in tiger parts now

“Stopping all trade in tiger parts, and phasing out these tiger farms, is of the utmost urgency if the tiger is to survive in the wild”, said Dr Susan Lieberman, Director of the Species Programme of WWF International, “It is time for the world community to join together, with tiger range state governments, to stop all poaching of tigers for illegal trade, and WWF welcomes the engagement of the World Bank in these efforts”.

Because of the unpredictability of the market environment and the small number of remaining tigers in the wild, there is “no room for experimentation,” Varma, who leads the World Bank’s Global Tiger Initiative, said after the meeting.

“Commercial trading in tiger parts and its derivatives is not in the interest of wild tiger conservation.”

Tiger trade is prohibited internationally and banned domestically in all of its range countries, including China - historically the largest market for tiger products.

However, owners of privately run tiger farms and a contingent of wealthy business men across China have been pressuring the Chinese government to allow legal trade in tiger parts within China and lift its domestic tiger trade ban, implemented in 1993.

“Having carefully weighed the economic arguments we urge the CITES community to uphold the ban on wild tiger products and for all countries to continue to ban the domestic trade of wild tigers,” the World Bank statement said.

“We also call upon the international community at large to join efforts in providing the necessary technical and other support to the respective countries in phasing out tiger farming. This is the only safe way to ensure that wild tigers may have a future tomorrow."

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G8 and MEF climate talks: It’s progress but still not fair!

Posted on 10 July 2009 - L’Aquila, Italy - Rich and poor nations have not been able to overcome divisions and mistrust during the Major Economies Forum (MEF) and the G8 summit and while some progress was made, leaders of wealthy nations failed to take responsibility for climate change, WWF said.

The two meetings saw positive developments such as a common goal to limit global average temperature increases to two degrees, an absolute minimum to avoid the worst impacts of global warming, but disappointed with the lack of ambitious reduction targets and serious financial commitments by industrialized countries.

"It’s all about money. Rich countries are telling poor nations: oh poor you. But they avoid committing to pay their fair share" said Kim Carstensen. "This is not enough and it is not fair."

"Wealthy nations have to show true empathy, real leadership, solid financial commitments and not comforting statements."

MEF requested Finance Ministers to report back at the G20 meeting in Pittsburg in September.

“We need Finance Ministers make a commitment which is at least as ambitious as what Gordon Brown proposed recently”, Carstensen said.

Brown proposed 100 billion USD per year for mitigation and adaptation. According to WWF, we need more funds up to 160 billion USD per year by 2017.

"The failure by MEF to agree on halving greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 is a sign of mistrust between developed and developing nations," Carstensen said.

During the meeting of the major economies, bringing together states responsible for approximately 80 percent of world’s emissions, some industrialized nations tried to blame emerging economies for insufficient progress.

"In order to achieve a compromise the blame game has to be abandoned and replaced by responsible and credible commitments of industrialized countries."

WWF welcomed MEF’s declarations on a two degree warming limit to and to double public funds’ for research in green technologies. It shows there is still some good will and therefore chance for agreement in Copenhagen.

"There are some signs of good will which if continued could result in an agreement. We are convinced that a deal in Copenhagen is still utterly achievable.”

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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