G8 SHOULDN'T EXPECT TO SIDESTEP CLIMATE DANGER


Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2010


Posted on 25 June 2010
Huntsville, Canada – The G8 needs to address the discrepancies between its recognition of a danger threshold of a two degrees centigrade or less rise in average global temperatures and the world’s current course towards a temperature rise this century of up to twice that, WWF said today as leaders assembled for the meeting.

“The real measure of success for the G8 will be showing leadership on the fast-track finance commitments made in Copenhagen to support low-carbon development and climate adaptation in developing countries ," said Kim Carstensen, the leader of WWF’s Global Climate Initiative.

“As the first leaders’ gathering this year, G8 presents an ideal opportunity for demonstrating the Copenhagen Accord is not just more hot air.

“For host country Canada, this has been a chance to make an announcement of $400 million per year for climate change as promised in Copenhagen. WWF hopes that these funds are new and additional to Official Development Assistance (ODA) and looks forward to seeing more leadership in a positive direction from Canada”

Under the Copenhagen Accord, signed by all the G-8 nations, $US 30 billion in fast track funding is to be provided to developing countries between 2010 and 2012.

The G-8 is expected to make a headline commitment to improving maternal and child health in the poorest countries, with WWF warning that achievement of the goal will hinge on improving the security and status of “the most vulnerable of the vulnerable”.

These are the people most dependent on the health of the environment and those most in the path of climate change impacts on water availability, food security, health and social stability.

“The studies we have, even from developed countries, show that women and children will suffer more from increases in natural disasters, more from weather extremes, more from the spread of diseases to wider areas and more from reduced food and water security,” said WWF International president and former Ecuadorian Environment Minister Yolanda Kakabadse.

“Delivering on maternal and child health is going to involve much more than more maternal clinics, medicines and medical practitioners.”


WWF experts at the Summits:
Kim Carstensen, leader of WWF Global Climate Initiative, WWF International, k.carstensen@wwf.dk, +45-40-34-36-35 (English, Danish)
Zoe Caron, Climate Policy and Advocacy Specialist, WWF Canada, zoe.caron@wwf.panda.org, +1 647-993-5251 (English, French)

+ More

Most vulnerable of the vulnerable will need more than promises from G8

Posted on 25 June 2010
Quito, Ecuador: As G8 leaders prepare to enshrine improving maternal and child health in the poorest countries as a global priority, WWF International President Yolanda Kakabadse has warned it is going to involve much more than more maternal clinics, medicines and medical practitioners.

"Getting results is also going to be about ready access to clean water and sanitation, continued access to adequate food supplies, safe access to education and social services and security and a say for women," Ms Kakabadse wrote in an article that also warned of the dangers of climate change to the "most vulnerable of the vulnerable".

"In the developing world, women collect, grow or purchase most of the food and the fuel to prepare it and acquire most of the water. This burden significantly impedes the progress of women towards education and decision making involvement in their communities," she said.

Ms Kakabadse said the indications from the G8 were that there was little recognition that an environment under pressure from over-consumption, development and loss of its biological resources "is already delivering the food and fuel more sparingly and the water less reliably".

Climate change is already worening the situation, with studies even in developing nations showing that women and children will suffer more and usually dramatically more from increases in natural disasters, increases in weather extremes, the spread of diseases to wider areas and reduced water security.

This is before we factor in the major impacts of climate change, already severe in some areas and set to worsen significantly under the most optimistic scenarios.. Should this not be addressed effectively, the burden of obtaining food, fuel and water will dramatically worsen.

"In such a context, it is difficult to see the mechanisms by which the barriers to recognition, education and involvement for women will fall. Most likely, the barriers will intensify," Ms Kakabadse said.

 

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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