Africa considering
tough demands
According
to a draft text, 50 African countries are considering demanding
five percent of rich nations' GDPs for developing countries,
plus deep emission cuts, reports Danish daily Politiken.
Marianne Bom - 12/12/2009 - The African Group is discussing
tough financial demands of the developed countries at the
UN climate conference.
In
a draft text quoted by Danish daily Politiken, the group
of 50 countries proposes that rich countries pay five percent
of their GDPs to developing countries in support for their
fight against climate change.
Asking
for five percent would be a very ambitious demand, compared
to the funding so far mentioned at the climate negotiations.
Five percent of the United States’ GDP alone amounts
to 722 billion US dollars (2008 figures). In comparison,
the EU has calculated the developing countries’ total
need for climate funding to 130 billion dollars (100 billion
euro) annually by 2020.
According
to the draft, the African Group asks for 400 billion dollars
for developing countries from 2010-2012, while the UN estimates
the need to be 10 billion dollars each of the three years.
Finally,
the text – dated 11 Dec. – suggests that rich
countries cut emissions by 50 percent by 2017 compared to
1990 levels, rising to 65 percent by 2020, which are much
deeper cuts than offered so far during the negotiations.
The
50 African countries now debate what numbers should be posted
in the final text, Politiken reports. The African Group
had announced a press briefing on Saturday, however the
chairman of the group, Algerian Kamel Djemouai, never turned
up, writes www.politiken.dk.
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Global
activists: Seal the deal Saturday is “great demo day”
globally – especially in Copenhagen, host city of
the UN climate conference. Organizers forecast up to 80,000
marching for a climate deal in the Danish capital.
Marianne
Bom - 12/12/2009 - Environmentalists from all over the world
have traveled to Copenhagen during the last few days to
participate in what is planned for Saturday afternoon as
a large-scale demonstration calling for a global climate
deal.
The
demonstration, masterminded by 515 organizations from 67
countries, will start with music and speeches at the Danish
parliament at 1 p.m. From the Copenhagen city center, up
to 80,000 participants – according to the organizers
– will continue on a six kilometer march to Bella
Center, the venue hosting the UN climate change conference.
Danish
model and climate activist Helena Christensen, Bollywood
actor Rahul Bose of India, and Greenpeace International
Executive Director Kumi Naidoo will all be part of the climate
cortege. And at the end of the demonstration, former Anglican
Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa will lead a candlelight
vigil, one of some 3,000 set to take place in 130 countries
around the world.
Danish
police have for days been massively present in the streets
of Copenhagen, ready to suppress potentially violent episodes.
The police expect between 40,000 and 60,000 to participate
in the demo on Saturday.
“We
strive to be as little visible as possible,” a police
spokesperson told the Danish daily Politiken, but shopkeepers
along the route and in other parts of the city were informed
to prepare for possible trouble.
In
other countries, demonstrations have already taken place
on Saturday.
In
Australia (photo above), organizers said 50,000 people had
taken to the streets, wearing sky-blue shoelaces in a call
for a strong and binding agreement at UN talks in Copenhagen,
AFP reports.
Demonstrations
were also reported in the Philippines, Hong Kong, Indonesia
and Afghanistan – in what might in the space of 24
hours become a global civic call for a climate deal in Copenhagen.
Do UNFCCC