Showing posts with label earth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label earth. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2009

AQUECIMENTO GLOBAL

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Já podemos sentir o aquecimento global
Últimas notícias:
12 Jun 2009Negociadores do clima finalmente concordam:mas só sobre o que eles não concordamOs delegados presentes na última reunião das negociações de clima das Nações Unidas concordam em que discordam sobre quase todas as questões fundamentais para o novo acordo global, diz a Rede WWF. Esta foi a conclusão da organização ao término de mais uma longa rodada, na qual pouco avanço foi obtido em questões essenciais.
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No último relatório do IPCC (Painel Intergovernamental de Mudanças Climáticas, órgão das Nações Unidas responsável por produzir informações científicas) os cientistas afirmaram que há 90% de certeza que o aumento de temperatura na Terra está sendo causado pelos homens.O WWF-Brasil está trabalhando, em conjunto com a Rede WWF, para deter o aquecimento global. Navegue por esta página para saber o que fazemos e como você pode ajudar.
Fique por dentro:
Acompanhe as negociações de clima
Entenda o aquecimento global
Glossário: fique por dentro dos termos usados nas negociações

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

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Pegada ecológica. Espécie humana vai consumir o dobro do ideal até o ano 2050

"A WWF pisou fundo no conceito de "pegada ecológica" ("ecological footprint", em inglês). É um indicador simples da pressão exercida sobre o ambiente. Representa a quantidade de hectares necessários para sustentar a vida de cada pessoa no mundo. A média é 2,2 hectares, mas o espaço disponível para regeneração ("biocapacidade") é de apenas 1,8 hectare", escreve Marcelo Leite, doutor em Ciências Sociais pela Unicamp, em artigo publicado no jornal Folha de S. Paulo, 29-10-2006.Eis o artigo:
"O Fundo Mundial para a Natureza (WWF) prestou um novo serviço para o futuro do planeta -se é que ele tem mesmo algum futuro. Na última terça-feira, pôs no ar a versão de 2006 do relatório "Planeta Vivo" (
www.footprintnetwork.org/overshoot), que faz mais pelo ambiente global do que muitas exibições de histrionismo verde. Informação, não tanto emoção: a humanidade já retira da Terra 25% mais recursos do que a biosfera pode reciclar.
A ONG pisou fundo no conceito de "pegada ecológica" ("ecological footprint", em inglês). É um indicador simples da pressão exercida sobre o ambiente. Representa a quantidade de hectares necessários para sustentar a vida de cada pessoa no mundo. A média é 2,2 hectares, mas o espaço disponível para regeneração ("biocapacidade") é de apenas 1,8 hectare.
Alguns exemplos: Estados Unidos, 9,6; Reino Unido, 5,6; Japão, 4,4; Brasil, 2,1; China, 1,6; Índia, 0,8. Os três primeiros são devedores; os últimos, credores -usam menos do que a média. Conjuntamente, estão todos sacando a descoberto.
(Antes que alguém venha com o velho argumento condorcetiano/antimalthusiano de que a tecnologia aumenta a produtividade, cabe dizer que isso foi agregado na metodologia do estudo. E que dois pés de soja, por mais produtivos que eles possam ser, não podem ocupar um mesmo pedaço de chão.)
Se nada for feito, é óbvio que vai piorar. Em 2050, a espécie humana estará consumindo o dobro do que deveria. Provavelmente já terá então ocorrido o que se poderia chamar de "crise da dívida ambiental", que vai provocar saudade da crise do petróleo e da crise da dívida externa. Embora haja controvérsias quanto ao bom senso ser de fato a coisa mais bem distribuída do mundo, tudo indica que será preciso recorrer antes disso a ele -por puro pragmatismo.
Seria o caso de começar fazendo com que os inventores do termo "ecochato" engulam a ofensa, inaugurada em 1992, quando se realizou no Rio de Janeiro a Cúpula da Terra.
Sim, a conversa dos verdes sempre foi meio enfadonha, cheia de estimativas catastróficas difíceis de verificar e assimilar. Além disso, tinham e têm uma tendência irritante a insistir. Talvez seja porque têm razão.
Não, a preocupação com o ambiente global não é mero fastio de intelectuais desiludidos com o marxismo, nem último reduto de meia-oitos. Demorou, mas entrou no radar dos economistas, pelo menos dos mais antenados. E até de Al Gore, legítimo produto do establishment americano.
Retrospectivamente, a reviravolta prova que o rótulo de "ecochato", usado para matar a discussão, fazia tanto sentido quanto criticar freqüentadores de estádios de futebol como uns malucos que gostam de ver 22 marmanjos correndo atrás de uma bola. Esse mesmo pessoal com alergia a verde sempre babou por um relatório do Banco Mundial, cujos números apareciam como encarnação da racionalidade. Se o WWF ainda lhes causar urticária, e como a semana foi dos relatórios ambientais, fica aqui a sugestão de outro: "Em desacordo? Expansão Agrícola, Redução da Pobreza e Meio Ambiente nas Florestas Tropicais" (
www.worldbank.org/tropicalforestreport).
O autor principal é Ken Chomitz, economista do Banco Mundial. O volume defende que países ricos invistam na preservação de florestas tropicais, pagando para que países como o Brasil continuem a prestar esse serviço ambiental para o planeta. Até o governo brasileiro já concorda. Só os neochatos ainda não entenderam."

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Thank You for Protecting an Acre

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LTFH Thank You Header

On behalf of Conservation International’s Board of Directors and staff, thank you for your gift of $15.00 in support of our efforts to protect millions of acres of forest around the world and the life that lives within them. Thank you for making a difference!

Your generous gift to CI will go to our scientists and management teams in the affected regions worldwide. These teams help develop programs in conjunction with local governments and business groups to achieve the triple benefits of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, conserving ecosystems and wildlife, and helping local communities survive.

Should you have any questions regarding your gift, please contact Linda Anzoleaga, Community and Membership Coordinator, at 703.341.2597. You can also e-mail any comments or concerns to membership@conservation.org.

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Learn about climate change

Out of the numerous contributors to global climate change, the destruction of tropical forests is among the largest. It is also one of the most preventable.

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See The Solutions

Conservation International, in conjunction with numerous partners, has protected 143 millions of acres of forest over the last 3 years through sustainable conservation projects.

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Harrison Ford and CI

Harrison Ford has been working with CI for more than 15 years to promote solutions to climate change and deforestation. Go backstage as he shoots a public service announcement about the issue and learn more about the problem and the solutions.

Pursuant to the 1993 U.S. Tax Act requirements, please consider this letter a receipt for your contribution of $15.00, received on 6/19/2008 3:37 PM. CI has provided no goods or services in consideration, in whole or in part, for this gift.

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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Republicans out...

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For the love of god (and the planet) can we vote the Republicans out?

Ok so straying into politics just for a littlew while. It seems important to note that however much McCain has spoken about climate change in the past he recieved a zero score from the leage of concervation voters and has been very quite on the topic thus far.

Obama on the other hand has indicated that Al Gore would be wellcome in his administration, and although that may not be likely, it shows just how big a shift we are talking about from the Bush administration.Obama's energy plan is here, it's a long way from perfect but atleast progressives are a core part of his constituency, lets see if we can improve this plant, and more than anything get the current bastard out and a brighter prospect in!And no, i dont think its at all odd that a Brit cares so much about the US president, in fact i wish the whole world had a vote, its quite a powerful job, and not limited to the US...

can see in: "http://climatechangeaction.blogspot.com/2008/06/for-love-of-god-and-planet-can-we-vote.html"

Friday, May 9, 2008

Climate Change...

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Fri/Saturday Timetable Includes:The state we're in: science from the front line. (Caroline Lucas MEP)Overcoming climate denial (George Marshall)
Biofuels (Biofuel watch) -

- Ethical Consumption: The Solution to What?
- The Trouble With Offsetting (Carbon Trade Watch)
- The Nuclear Option (Greenpeace)
- Corporate Social Responsibility and its green limits (corporate watch)
- Zero Carbon Britain: an alternative energy strategy (Zero Carbon Britain)
- Contraction and Convergence: a global solution? (GCI)
- Political Systems: Capitalism, Socialism or Anarchy?
- Eco-nomics? (New Economics Foundation)
- Running Effective Meetings and Negotiations
- How to use the Media (New Internationalist)
- Planning Your Campaign (People and Planet)
- Non-Violent Direct Action (Seeds for Change)
- What Role Does The N.U.S have in fighting Climate Change?
- Campaigning Success: Food and Flights in Universities (Food 4 US and Eco-Uni)
- The Importance of Universities in the Climate Campaign and what you can do about it - Students: Working with Workers (Workers Climate Action)


Monday, May 5, 2008

Minutes of April 23rd Global Climate campainign Conference Call

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Global Climate Campaign conference call 23rd of April On the call:


Reports from countries around the world on prospects for the Global Day of Action 2008 and other campaigning activities:Felix reports from Spain: on 20th April over 40 organisations including Greenpeace Spain and FOE Spain organised a rally through Madrid. There was a turnout of 3000, which was smaller than expected due to bad rain, but at the protest they started leafleting for the GDA demonstration, which will be on 29th November as 6th December is a bank holiday. Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth Spain will also be involved in the Spanish GDA protest this year.Dylan reports from Canada: they are starting a tour on biotechnology and biofuels, and are also planning a climate camp this summer at Parliament Hill. This event can be used to spread the word about the next GDA mobilisation.
There is one obstacle in Canada for the next GDA as the 6th of December is the Day against violence against women (remembering a massacre 20 years ago). However, Act for the Earth is trying to make as many links as possible to women’s groups and the gender aspect of climate change to turn this obstacle into an advantage. As an aftermath of the protests last year 6 people who got arrested will face trial this May. Act for the Earth will try to use these trials as an opportunity to put the national climate policies “on trial”. Another focus for Canadian organisations will be the G8 that will be back in Canada in 2010.Will reports from the US: in the US a team of campaigners (including former campaigners from Step it Up) are concentrating on a campaign called 350 to push the international community to adopt CO2 emissions reduction targets that will keep CO2 gases under 350ppm. The webpage will be ready end of May/beginning of June. The idea is to organise days of action around the number and to find people supporting this campaign in their countries.Mareike reports from Greenpeace International: For the build up to the Poznan talks GI are organising a boat tour with the first ship having already left from New Zealand to reach Poland later in the year passing China, India and Spain. In Poland itself Greenpeace will organise a climate camp next to an open coalmine. For the Poznan talks the Solar Generation Network (the global youth network of Greenpeace) is planning to get involved with actions.Susann reports from FOE Europe: FOE Europe supports the GDA 2008. They are focusing more on the talks in Copenhagen in 2009 rather than the Poznan talks. However, FOE youth groups will organise a meeting in Poland with about 50 delegates from around Europe and collecting messages from all around the world to display at the Poznan talks. Other FOE groups will get involved in actions in their own countries and it is also planned to use the ESF in Sweden for promotion.Christina reports from Germany: the Klima Allianz will organise local actions all around Germany for the GDA and they will also mobilise people from the eastern part of Germany to go to Poznan.
Beforehand there will be two big demonstrations at coal plants on September the 13th.Diana reports from Australia: the organisers of the Walks against Warming (climate demonstrations all over Australia that saw over 100.000 people out in the streets at the last two events) have reported that they will join in on the GDA this year (last year the Walks against Warming happened two weeks before their national elections to push climate change up the election agenda and get rid of a climate unfriendly government –successfully!) and will start preparations for this event soon.
At the moment they are getting their thinking caps on for how to make the Walks against Warming even bigger and more appealing this year.Fiona reports back from the UK: the three main campaign issues for groups in the UK are at the moment (1) Biofuels (CCC has just organised a public protest against the introduction of the RTFO -Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation - in the UK – working together with BiofuelWatch), (2) Aviation (together with Greenpeace UK, Hacan, NOTRAG and the 2M group CCC is organising a big rally against the plans for a third runaway at Heathrow Airport on 31st May) and (3) the building of new coal fired power plants (there is a proposal pending to build the first new coal plant in the UK for 30 years in Kingsnorth, Kent) For the GDA 2008 there are plans to bring all three of these issues together in a huge rally in London..Ben reports from GCAP: the Global Call against Poverty (GCAP) just recently started to work on climate change (they have focused more on development and poverty issues in the past) and make the connection between these two issues. They sent a small team to Bali and are now figuring out how to get involved and build alliances.Report back from Warsaw and Brussels meeting:Diana reports back from the Brussels meeting: on the 8th of March representatives from European groups from Belgium, France, Denmark, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Italy as well as representatives from Greenpeace International, FOE Europe and the European Green Party met to discuss their plans for the GDA 2008 and plans for the Copenhagen talks. It has been decided to meet again in Copenhagen this year in September before the ESF to discuss how the GDA can be expanded in Europe and the mobilisation in 2008 can build up to the next GDA in 2009 to ensure a huge mobilisation at the critical Copenhagen talks.Information about the upcoming meeting in Copenhagen will be distributed around the Global Climate e-mail list.The meeting in Warsaw initiated by Greenpeace Poland and CCC saw lots of energy coming from the Polish groups that attended the meeting to mobilise for this year’s GDA. The idea of a big rally followed by a concert was raised and the Polish climate alliance will follow up on that idea. The Polish groups will meet soon, both in Poznan and Warsaw, to build a steering group and discuss further details.Information about the mobilisation process in Poland will be distributed around the Global Climate e-mail list.Global Climate Campaign meetings in the build-up to the GDA 2008:Copenhagen meeting – see report back from the Brussels meeting aboveEvents we can use to promote the GDA 2008:

Global Greens meeting (1st-4th May): Fiona from CCC will attend and give a workshop about the Global Climate Campaign in cooperation with GCC colleagues from Nepal

Mini COP in Bonn (2nd-13th June): Christina and Mareike will be there; Greenpeace and FOE will have actions there.

G8 (5th-9th July): someone from CCC will probably attend, GCAP will be there and Greenpeace and FOE have local offices there that could be contacted to find out what Greenpeace Japan and FOE Japan are planning around climate and the G8

Major Emitters meeting (in July):Mini COP Ghana (in August): Ghana National CSO Youth Coalition just launched – Dylan will send out more information on the Global Campaign e-mail listESF (17th-21st September): Global Climate Campaign meeting in Copenhagen shortly before the ESF. CCC will organise workshops there and are looking for other organisations to work together to push the climate issue at the ESFGCC newsletter and collation of reports, photos, videos from GDA 2008:One idea at the Brussels meeting was to start a platform for exchanging news and ideas from different climate campaigns in Europe and around the world – Diana offered to start by using the news section of the Global Climate campaign webpage to put up news bits etc. and to develop this into a regular short e-mail update later in the year (depending on time capacity in the CCC office). So all climate campaigns are invited to send their recent updates, news etc… to info@globalclimatecampaign.org and Diana will put the info up on the GCC webpage. John mentioned that the GCC webpage gets 400-500 hits per day during the year and 4000-5000 hits per day in the run up for the GDA in November/December.Dylan reported from their plans in Canada to produce a YouTube video to promote the GDA 2008. They had a good experiences with this last year and he reckons that we could use also the video outside Canada and translate it into other languages. He asks for help with translation as well as video footage from the last GDA from around the world. Mareike mentions that GI is working with volunteer translators who may help with that.AOB:Ben points out that the 10th of December is the 60th anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights and suggests building up good links to human rights groups in the run-up to the GDA 2008.Next call:The next conference call will be on the 21st of May at 12 noon, GMT.
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See more in: http://climatechangeaction.blogspot.com/
Posted in: http://climatechangeaction.blogspot.com/

Credits:
On the call:
Fiona Dear Campaign against Climate Change (UK)Fiona.dear@globalclimatecampaign.org (moderator)
John Ackers Campaign against Climate Change (UK)john.ackers@mail.com (technical support)
Diana Vogtel Campaign against Climate Change (UK)Diana.vogtel@globalclimatecampaign.org
Ben Margolis GCAP (Global Call against Poverty) (UK)Bmargolis@oxfam.org.uk
Dylan Penner Act for the Earth (Canada)climatechaos@actfortheearth.org
Felix Nieto Globalizate (Spain)fxraya@yahoo.es
Will Bates 350.org (US)will@350.org
Christina Hering Klima Allianz (Germany)hering@forumue.de
Mareike Britten Greenpeace InternationalMareike.britten@greenpeace.org
Susann Scherbarth FOE EuropeSusann.scherbarth@foeeurope.org

Monday, April 28, 2008

Stabilizing Climate

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When climate change is in the news, it is rarely talked about positively. Record-shattering droughts are leading to massive wildfires and battles over freshwater resources. Intense hurricanes and storms rampage coastlines and communities. Shifting and unreliable weather patterns are making farming and living more difficult for communities across the planet.
Underneath, they are the same story. Climate change is affecting the way we live. But the solution is clear: reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Every day is an opportunity to slow climate change and preserve life on Earth. Thankfully, the world is finally awakening to the urgency of this global issue. This new consciousness means that all of us – governments, industries, businesses, and individuals – have the opportunity to incorporate responsible environmental choices into the way we govern, build, design, buy, vote, and live. We need everyone to do their part.
There are ways to make an immediate impact. One significant way to mitigate climate change is to protect and restore forests, and we’re hard at work doing both. Burning and clearing forests contributes over one-fifth of total global greenhouse gas emissions – more than the emissions of all of the world’s cars, trucks, trains, and planes combined. In the Makira rain forest in Madagascar we have worked in conjunction with our partners to prevent more than 8 million tons of CO2 from entering our atmosphere. That’s equal to taking 145,000 cars off the road for 10 years. CI now has more than a dozen similar projects planned or underway around the world, all of which aim to find sustainable models for protecting biodiversity – models that also provide for human welfare.
And when it comes to the oceans, which absorb one-third of the carbon emitted into the atmosphere by fossil fuel, new studies are showing potential negative effects to corals and the species they support if the oceans continue to warm. In places like Madagascar and the Galapagos, we are studying the effects of climate on marine species and how these changes are impacting local communities that depend on healthy marine resources.
Climate change is tearing healthy ecosystems apart on land and in our oceans. Protecting these ecosystems is core to what we have done for more than 20 years. Together with our partners we are developing innovative global solutions that will help people and nature adapt to Earth's changing climate.