Post-Haiyan, Gloves Come Off On Climate Aid: US Encourages Developing World To STFU
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Weve reached a stage where we cannot adapt anymore, said Ronald Jumeau, the United Nations representative for the Seychelles, who is his countrys chief negotiator here. He noted the devastating effects not only of extreme storm events, but also of creeping desertification, salinization and erosion that could result in financial losses and even territorial issues that the modern world has never had to face. This is new, he said. This is like, The Martians are landing! What do you do?
John Kioli, the chairman of the Kenya Climate Change Working Group, a consortium of nongovernmental organizations, called climate change his countrys biggest enemy. Kenya, which straddles the Equator, faces some of the biggest challenges from rising temperatures. Arable land is disappearing and diseases like malaria are appearing in highland areas where they had never been seen before. Developed countries, Mr. Kioli said, have a moral obligation to shoulder the cost, considering the amount of pollution they have emitted since the Industrial Revolution. If developed countries are reasonable enough, they are able to understand that they have some responsibility, he said.
How to compensate those nations hardest hit by climate changes remains divisive, even among advocates for such action. Some have argued that wealthy countries need to create a huge pool of money to help poorer countries recover from seemingly inevitable losses of the tangible and intangible, like destroyed traditions. Mr. Jumeau noted that Congress allocated $60 billion just to rebuild from one storm, Hurricane Sandy, compared with the $100 billion a year that advocates hope to see pledged to a Green Climate Fund by all nations. The fund, intended to help poorer countries reduce emissions and prepare for climate changes, has remained little more than an organizing principle since its creation in 2010, its fund-raising goals unmet. Others have suggested a sort of insurance program.
The United States and other rich countries have made their opposition to large-scale compensation clear. Todd D. Stern, the State Departments envoy on climate issues, bluntly told a gathering at Chatham House in London last month that large-scale resources from the worlds richest nations would not be forthcoming.
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Appeals to rectify the injustice of climate change, he added, will backfire. Lectures about compensation, reparations and the like will produce nothing but antipathy among developed country policy makers and their publics, he said.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/17/world/growing-clamor-about-inequities-of-climate-crisis.html?ref=us&_r=0