Fairness is the driving subject of the “Green Technology and Finance —Striking a Fair Climate Deal” hosted by the Club of Madrid, Bellona, and Hafslund, that wrapped up today at Hafslund Manor in Sarpsborg south of Oslo, Norway.
“Climate change is happening now, I have family members living in small villages who find themselves struggling day to day with the effects of climate change on the poverty they already live in," said Ibrahim Wani, chief of the Development and Economic and Social Issues Branch of the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
"Climate change is a human crisis which threatens to overwhelm the humanitarian system and turn back the clock on development.”
Climate justice
These sobering words were echoed by a fellow speaker at a parallel working session on climate justice, Martin Frick, Deputy Director of the Global Humanitarian Forum.
“It is a gross injustice that poor people in developing countries bare over 90 percent of the burden—through death, disease, destitution and financial loss— yet are least responsible for creating the problem of climate change,” said Frick.
Club of Madrid Member Jennifer Shipley, former Prime Minister of New Zealand, called participants' attention with this question: “How can a new agreement address the issue of climate justice in a development perspective and ensure that action taken in the context of adaptation, mitigation and technology diffusion are in compliance with human rights frameworks on equity and gender?”
Ethical guidelines
The answer, stressed Frick, lies in the December Copenhagen negotiations on climate change considering the following eight guidelines for climate justice – presented in the Global Humanitarian Forum’s “Closing the Gaps” report – as basic ethical benchmarks for action:
1.) Take responsibility for the pollution you cause; 2.) Act according to capability and capacity: 3.) Share benefits and burdens; 4.) Respect and strengthen human rights; 5.) Reduce risk to the minimum; 6.) Integrate solutions; 7.) Act in an accountable, transparent and reliable manner, and, 8.) Act now.
Kennedy roused the crowd
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| Robert F. Kennedy Jr., exhorted world industrial leaders to join in what he called "the coalition of the willing" at the CC9 conference. |
| (Foto: Bo Mathisen/Hafslund) |
READ THE FINAL DOCUMENT OF THE CONFERENCE: KEY MESSAGES FROM CC9.
This article was contributed by Victor Arango of Hasflund.