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	<title>Grist: David Sievers</title>
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		<title>Grist: David Sievers</title>
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			<title>IYD: Next global climate agreement must safeguard survival of all countries, all peoples</title>
			<link>http://grist.org/article/poznan-survival-is-not-negotiable/</link>
			<comments>http://grist.org/article/poznan-survival-is-not-negotiable/#comments</comments>
			<dc:creator>David&nbsp;Sievers</dc:creator>
			<pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2008 00:09:00 +0000</pubDate>

					<category><![CDATA[Climate & Energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[climate change impacts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[climate change mitigation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[greenhouse-gas emissions]]></category>
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			<description><![CDATA[I am writing in the midst of a dramatic shift in global climate policy. The official President&#8217;s Summary of COP-14 bears witness to this shift and signals the guiding principle of a just and equitable post-2012 climate agreement next year in Copenhagen. And this outcome is due in large part to the work of young people. Over the past 48 hours, youth from around the world have been instrumental in changing the terms of the debate around climate change by refocusing the international community around a unifying concept: Survival. Survival strikes to the very core of humanity. It is the &#8230;<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=grist.org&#038;blog=5104299&#038;post=27379&#038;subd=grist&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>

			
									<content:encoded><![CDATA[ <p>I am  writing in the midst of a dramatic shift in global climate policy. The official  President&#8217;s Summary of COP-14 bears witness to this shift and signals the  guiding principle of a just and equitable post-2012 climate agreement next year  in Copenhagen. And this outcome is due in large part to the work of young  people. Over the past 48 hours, youth from around the world have been  instrumental in changing the terms of the debate around climate change by  refocusing the international community around a unifying concept:</p>
<p>Survival.</p>
<p>Survival strikes to the very core of humanity. It is the most basic and  powerful of all human needs, a precondition for literally any further  evaluation in anthropocentric terms. And, perhaps because it is the foundation  upon which any debate around climate can occur, it has been entirely left out  of the discussion.</p>
<p>In the last few days international youth have gotten over 80 countries have  signed a pledge promising to &#8220;safeguard the survival of all countries and  peoples.&#8221; The United States was notably absent from industrialized  countries signing on.</p>
<p>In turning discount rates upon their head, Sir Nicolas Stern&#8217;s findings on the  economic necessity of drastic action on behalf of the climate pointed out the  inadequacy of traditional concepts to negotiate the importance of survival. But  the humanistic simplicity of his assertion is lost in its translation into  economic concepts. Economics lacks the moral clarity of those in the direst  vulnerability from climatic crisis.</p>
<p>But the Alliance of Small Island States is not so privileged to think in the  abstract. Rising sea-levels threaten to literally wipe low-lying countries off  the face of the earth. A global climate deal is about survival for these  countries. AOSIS came out strong at the beginning of these proceedings by  taking countries to task for hedging on the very existence of countries. The  International Youth Delegation, a group of 500+ young people from 50+  countries, heard in this dramatic language the essence of our call for action  that safeguards our future taking place in a world worth inheriting. In an unprecedented  effort, we did something that our leaders have failed to do: We came together  to ensure that the guiding principle for Copenhagen meets the basic bar of  humanity.</p>
<p>Survival.</p>
<p>This principle, if manifest, has serious real-world implications. Let me be  clear &#8212; survival is a radical departure from business as usual. We are  currently on a path to global ruin from a destabilized climate. Even the  wealthiest countries will feel the force of climate change within our century  without a peak and decline in global emissions in the next few years. But  safeguarding the survival of the most vulnerable &#8212; that is a tall order.  Tuvalu, a small island state in the Pacific, is decades away from ceasing to  exist. Poor people and others on the margins of society in countries around the  world are in peril from climate change now, not at some distant point in the  future.</p>
<p>Inclusion of this language in the Copenhagen vision was so critically strategic  because in order to actually follow through with it, deep emissions cuts by  industrialized countries would be necessary in the immediate future. According  to the scientific consensus emerging in response to key indicators that we are  nearing a climatic point-of-no-return, we need to stabilize atmospheric CO2  below 350 ppm. Even at 450 ppm, the mid-level projection in the latest IPCC  report, we would need large-scale action now. By signing on to safeguard the  survival of the world&#8217;s vulnerable people, world leaders have endorsed a loaded  goal with serious implications.</p>
<p>Realizing the opportunity to frame the discussion around Copenhagen (and  beyond) in the universal call for survival, the youth took action. We embarked  upon a simple effort &#8212; to get every country to acknowledge that the next global  climate agreement has to safeguard the survival of all countries and peoples,  and to pledge their delegation to uphold that vision. In less than two days,  youth secured signatures from over 80 countries out of 193 present. More  procedurally important than widespread support, was the explicit inclusion of  the principle by key speakers in the &#8220;informal ministerial  round-table&#8221; plenary. We systematically set out to achieve the inclusion  of our principle in the speeches of countries in high risk and high emission.  And we were successful. Countries like Sweden and Uganda displayed  &#8220;Survival.&#8221; placards when speaking and Norway, Australia, and Grenada  included our text in their speeches.</p>
<p>In short, we organized on the international stage and won! One of the many  lessons to take from this feat is that this grassroots model can work at the  U.N., something to keep in mind over the next year in planning the lead-up to  Copenhagen.</p>
<p>Including this language in the official COP summary was a tremendous victory,  but guaranteeing that the language receives the weight it deserves is a new  challenge. We need to elevate these particular words as one of the main  accomplishments to come from Poznan. And while giving the survival principle  its due weight is one challenge, defending its integrity is an even taller  order. Italy exemplifies this challenge. On Thursday morning their delegates in  Poznan pledged to an agreement that safeguards survival for all countries and  peoples. On Thursday afternoon, their Prime Minister pledged to veto the E.U.  domestic climate package because it would set the E.U. on the path to following  through on that commitment. Empty words from Italy.</p>
<p>The next high-priority country to watch is Australia. Environment Minister  Penny Wong quoted verbatim the IYD vision statement as the closing words of her  round-table speech after a constructive dialogue with the Australian youth  delegates. This statement was received with great enthusiasm amongst the IYD,  as it indicates a willingness to follow through with the promise initiated by  the election of new PM Rudd to take bold action on climate change. When Rudd  announces domestic carbon targets and timelines on Monday (conspicuously after  the session in which they could be most useful on the international stage) we  will see whether Australia intends to follow Italy&#8217;s lead in sabotaging global  action while making progressive statements or whether they will take the moral  and economic high-road.</p>
<p>If the survival principle is to govern our shared future, we need the  grassroots from every corner of the world. We need to ask ourselves as  individuals if our actions are safeguarding the survival of the world&#8217;s most  vulnerable people and force our countries to grapple with the same question.  And then we need action, not just words.</p>
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