The Anti-Kyoto Partnership

authordefault
onJan 10, 2006 @ 06:54 PST

Google Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate and you will find a host of stories lauding a new international group nominally dedicated to reducing climate change by developing newย technology.

Great, youย say.

But, if you read very far into the material, you will find an international industrial spin project – a blatant effort to distract the public from the Kyoto process and to justify huge increases in the production and consumption of fossil fuels, especiallyย coal.

Look at what weย know:

1. The meeting of this new partnership, which begins tomorrow in Australia, is being co-chaired by Australia’s Industry Minister Ian MacFarlane and U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman. Not an environment minister inย sight.

2. The parters include Australia, the U.S., India, China, Japan and Korea – the biggest producers and comsumers of coal in the world and, in the case of Australia and the United States, the only developed nations that have refused to bind themselves to the mandatory carbon reduction targets of the Kyotoย Protocol.

3. While environmental groups have been banished from the conference, industry – especially the energy industry – will be there in force. Coal giant Rio Tinto and ExxonMobil are footing the bill for a harborย cruise.

To the degree that the parties are actually paying lipservice to the goal of addressing climate change, this is a positive development. But in the way this partnership is being touted as an appropriate alternative to Kyoto, it is a full-frontal assault on the world’sย climate.

The goal of those who are committed to the Kyoto process is to make real and measurable gains in reducing the human effect on climate change. Globally, we need specific targets for the reduction of greenhouse gases and we need political and industrial leaders who are committed to taking those targetsย seriously.

This process, on the other hand, appears dedicatedย to:

a) convincing the public that, despite all evidence to the contrary, certain recalcitrant governments are taking climate change seriouslyย and;

b) that all our problems will be solved by some magic technology that no one has yetย discovered.

In the meantime, we will be encouraged to continue our addiction to fossil fuels. No mention of energy alernatives and, for profit sake, no suggestions that we conserveย energy.

So, watch the news coverage, and if the political and industrial leaders at this conference offer substantive policy proposals or technological solutions, we’ll join in the celebration. But if they spend all their time suggesting that this voluntary process is good – and Kyoto is bad – we should all dismiss this whole event as an international sham, a shame and humiliation on all those governmentsย involved.

authordefault
Admin's short bio, lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Voluptate maxime officiis sed aliquam! Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit.

Related Posts

onNov 4, 2025 @ 04:09 PST

The government has signed vast deals with gas-loving, Trump-donating AI giants.

The government has signed vast deals with gas-loving, Trump-donating AI giants.
onNov 3, 2025 @ 12:59 PST

The agency โ€” LLYC Brasil โ€” promoted the upcoming Earthshot Prize ceremony in Rio de Janeiro while under contract to oil giant Petrobras.

The agency โ€” LLYC Brasil โ€” promoted the upcoming Earthshot Prize ceremony in Rio de Janeiro while under contract to oil giant Petrobras.
onNov 3, 2025 @ 07:59 PST

Empresas de alimentos e do agronegรณcio vรฃo se apresentar como soluรงรฃo para a crise climรกtica na cรบpula no Brasil โ€” embora os alimentos sejam responsรกveis por um terรงo do aquecimento global.

Empresas de alimentos e do agronegรณcio vรฃo se apresentar como soluรงรฃo para a crise climรกtica na cรบpula no Brasil โ€” embora os alimentos sejam responsรกveis por um terรงo do aquecimento global.
onNov 3, 2025 @ 02:00 PST

With Brazil about to host COP30, DeSmog has obtained copies of checks Exxon mailed to the right-wing Atlas Network in the 1990s to turn Latin America against climate treaties.

With Brazil about to host COP30, DeSmog has obtained copies of checks Exxon mailed to the right-wing Atlas Network in the 1990s to turn Latin America against climate treaties.