Argentine President Nestor Carlos Kirchner opened the high level
segment of the United Nations climate change conference Wednesday by
urging the industrialized countries to acknowledge that their
development has been achieved by using global communal property
without cost. Now the entire world is experiencing global warming,
which is linked to the emission of greenhouse gases from the burning
of coal, oil and gas.
The developing countries must pay their debts to "implacable
creditors," said Kirchner whose economy is just recovering from a
severe crisis, "but the evolved and powerful societies avoid the
basic commitment to the preservation of the life embodied in this
Convention and the Kyoto Protocol."

President Nestor Carlos Kirchner of Argentina urged the
industrialized countries to do more to reverse climate change.
(Photo courtesy Earth Negotiations Bulletin
(ENB))
"We who are loaded with debts of
incredible weight in financial matters are simultaneously the
greater environmental creditors of the planet," he said, stressing
that rich countries are failing to meet commitments on climate
change and pay off their “environmental debt.”
"Argentineans value the right to the life as the supreme good,"
Kirchner said, and for that reason, "we cannot accept that whole
societies are condemned to disappear only because in another place
of the world the necessary political will is not applied to avoid
it."
Sea level rise predicted to result from the melting of the polar
ice caps is expected to inundate low-lying countries and cities, and
has already forced the leaders of the island nations of Tuvalu and
the Maldives to seek other places to evacuate their people, to date
without success.
The lives of the indigenous people of the Arctic, the Inuit, are
already being destroyed by the warming climate, the elected
chairperson of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference (ICC), told
conference participants Wednesday. The ICC represents the Inuit
people from Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and Russia.
Sheila Watt-Cloutier said the ICC has decided to petition the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, seeking a declaration
that the emissions of greenhouse gases are a violation of Inuit
human rights.
She said warming in the Arctic is predicted to increase at twice
the global average rate, and indicated that the threshold of
dangerous anthropogenic interference defined in the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Article 2 has already been
reached in the Arctic.

Sheila Watt-Cloutier of Canada chairs the Inuit Circumpolar
Conference. (Photo courtesy ENB)
Watt-Cloutier
told the delegates that permafrost melting, erosion, infrastructure
damage, longer ice-free seasons, new species, and deteriorating
animal health are all occurring today in the Arctic due to
greenhouse gas emissions. She said accidents are increasing as
melting glaciers make sea ice unpredictable.
These changes result in destructive social behavior in Inuit
communities, she said, stressing the urgent need for action, and
asking industrialized countries to exceed their Kyoto Protocol
commitments to limit their greenhouse gas emissions.
Klaus Toepfer, executive director of the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP), on the panel with Watt-Cloutier,
praised the Inuit leader for having, "ably articulated the concerns
of your people in the face of the devastating effects of climate
change and its relentless assault on Inuit traditional life."
Attorneys from Earthjustice and the Center for International
Environmental Law (CIEL) are working with the Inuit to file the
petition. Donald Goldberg, a senior attorney from CIEL who moderated
the panel said, "Climate change is a human rights concern on an
unprecedented scale. It poses an immediate danger for Inuit and
other Arctic inhabitants, but millions of people in mountain areas,
low-lying island and coastal regions, and other vulnerable parts of
the world will soon face similar threats."
"Protecting human rights is the most fundamental responsibility
of governments," said Martin Wagner, International Program managing
attorney for Earthjustice. "Climate change is threatening the
health, culture, and livelihoods of the Inuit. It is the
responsibility of the United States, as the largest source of
greenhouse gases, to take immediate action to protect the rights of
the Inuit and others around the world."

Polar bears and gulls enjoy a whale feast on an Arctic beach.
This ecosystem is at risk from global warming. (Photo
courtesy Ian
Macrea)
In March, Watt-Cloutier presented the
Inuit case to the United States Senate Committee on Commerce,
Science and Transportation by explaining, “Inuit are facing the
beginning of a possible end of a way of life that has allowed us to
thrive for millennia because of the climate changes caused by global
warming. It is predicted that in some 50 years polar bears, walrus
and some species of seals will be pushed to extinction," she said.
"What will be left of our culture if this comes to pass?”
The United States, with five percent of the world's population,
contributes 25 percent of the world's greenhouse gases, the Inuit
leader pointed out. The administration of President George W. Bush
"has consistently ignored the international scientific consensus
that links rapid climate change to man-made greenhouse gas emissions
and refused to take concerted action," she said.
“It is our hope that the White House will listen to its own
scientists and to the international community," Watt-Cloutier said.
"We need strong measures now to dramatically curb greenhouse gas
emissions. Without such immediate action, not only are Inuit in
peril but the entire planet is at risk.”
But the United States has balked at commitments to make targeted
cuts in its emissions of greenhouse gases, and will not consider
ratifying the Kyoto Protocol, an amendment to the UNFCCC.
Instead, the official science advisor to President George W. Bush
said in Washington Wednesday that that United States will introduce
new technologies, improve scientific tools, and "enlist the
cooperation of other nations" to address climate change.
Dr. John H. Marburger, III said in a "vision" statement that,
"U.S. climate-oriented technology initiatives are ambitious on a
scale commensurate with the challenges: development of hydrogen
technologies that can enable more efficient and carbon-free means of
transportation and other applications; new kinds of power plants -
"FutureGen" plants - that generate power from hydrocarbons, but
release no carbon to the atmosphere; and renewed commitment to
research on carbon-free forms of power generation such as nuclear
fusion that can be scaled to an economically significant size."
"The vision here is to forge new energy technologies that all
nations can use to meet their goals of limiting greenhouse gas
emissions, without compromising the sustained improvements in living
standards to which all nations aspire," Marburger said.
These technologies are in development, but hydrogen fuel cell
cars are generally thought to be at least 15 years from the market,
while the $1 billion, 10 year FutureGen clean coal demonstration
project has not been fully funded. The United States is
participating with five other governments in the nuclear fusion ITER
multi-billion dollar project, which has yet to establish a location.
Meanwhile, 2004 is set to go down in the history books as the
most expensive year for the insurance industry worldwide as a result
of hurricanes, typhoons and other climate related natural disasters.
The United States, at over $26 billion, suffered the highest
insured losses of any nation, according to preliminary figures
compiled by Munich Re, one of the world's biggest re-insurance
companies. Munich Re, a member of the UNEP Finance Initiative,
released the figures Wednesday at the climate change conference.

A destroyed mobile home in Mindendorf, South Carolina is one
result of tornado damage from Hurricane Frances. September 6, 2004.
(Photo by Marvin Nauman courtesy FEMA)
For the first 10 months
of this year natural disasters cost the insurance industry just over
$35 billion, up from $16 billion in 2003, the Munich Re figures
show.
Economic losses, the majority of which were not insured, also
have cost the planet and its people dearly. Preliminary figures for
the months January to October estimate that these losses were also
among the highest on record, totalling about $90 billion - up from
over $65 billion in 2003.
Hardest hit have been many small, developing countries such as
the islands of Grenada and Grand Cayman in the Caribbean. Hurricane
Ivan, which struck Grenada in September, killed 28 people and is
estimated to cost $1 billion in damaged homes, buildings and
agricultural losses.
The insurance industry is worried that new, climate related risks
may be emerging. Hurricane Catarina, which hit Brazil earlier this
year, developed in the southern Atlantic where sea surface
temperatures are normally too low to trigger tropical cyclones.

Klaus Toepfer is executive director of the UN Environment
Programme. (Photo courtesy ENB)
"Climate change
is already happening, with rapid melting of the Arctic and glaciers
worldwide," said Toepfer at the launch of the Munich Re report.
"Climate scientists anticipate an increase and intensity of extreme
weather events and this is what the insurance industry is
experiencing, resulting in year-on-year losses."
Thomas Loster, a senior executive and climate expert with Munich
Re, said, "As in 2002 and 2003, the overall balance of natural
catastrophes is again clearly dominated by weather-related disasters
- many of them exceptional and extreme. Indeed 98 percent of all
losses for 2004 and about 100 percent of insured losses were weather
driven. We need to stop this dangerous experiment human-kind is
conducting on the Earth's atmosphere."
"I would urge delegates and governments here in Buenos Aires to
make a strong commitment to a post-Kyoto agenda, otherwise the
industry's appetite to finance and insure projects under the
instruments of the Kyoto Protocol, such as the Clean Development
Mechanism, will be blunted," said Loster.
The Clean Development Mechanism allows industrialized countries
that must meet legally binding greenhouse gas emissions targets to
meet them by establishing climate friendly projects in developing
countries without targets.
The full report by Munich Re will be published in early 2005;
see: www.munichre.com
Today and tomorrow, the discussions among ministers from around
the world and the heads of regional groups will focus on how to
actually reduce the emission of the six greenhouse gases governed by
the Kyoto Protocol.
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Joke Waller-Hunter highlighted the
achievements of the Convention since its entry into force in 1994,
but she observed that despite the efforts of many countries,
concentrations of the main greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, are
rising at an increasing rate and climate change impacts are already
evident.
In his opening formal statement Wednesday, Jiang Liu,
vice-minister of the State Development and Reform Commission, China,
said the Conference of Parties provides the opportunity for a shift
from negotiations and rulemaking to implementation and concrete
action.

Destitute nomads from Mali came to Christine Wells in northern
Burkina Faso in search of pasture but found a wasteland.
(Photo courtesy FAO)
He
said sustainable development requires progress on both mitigation
and adaptation, and innovative strategies for technology transfer.
He stressed that negotiations should be guided by the principle of
common but differentiated responsibilities.
A. Raja, Minister of Environment and Forests of India, expressed
concern over growth in developed countries’ emissions and said
greenhouse gas emissions in developing countries will increase if
they are to achieve sustainable development and poverty eradication.
Japanese Environment Minister Yuriko Koike said Japan is
reviewing its climate change program. Japan is a Kyoto Protocol
participant, and Koike stressed that additional policies and
measures in the energy sector are required to meet Japan’s reduction
targets, while maintaining economic growth.
Emphasizing that climate change is the world’s most serious
threat, The Netherlands Environment Minister Pieter van Geel,
speaking on behalf of the European Union, called for limiting global
temperature rise to two degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels.
This would mean a much deeper cut in greenhouse gas emissions than
required under the Kyoto Protocol, which the EU has ratified.
Noting that postponing action will make adaptation more
difficult, van Geel called on countries to start considering future
commitments.

Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky is
facing criticism of the Bush administration's climate policies.
(Photo courtesy ENB)
Chief U.S. climate
negotiator Paula Dobriansky, under secretary of state for global
affairs, underscored her country’s commitment to the UNFCCC.
Her job is to hold the line against the pressure for the United
States to commit to greenhouse gas reductions, and she did so. At
the same time, she again recounted the Bush administration's efforts
to combat climate change, through multilateral scientific and
technological initiatives. She stressed that economic growth and
environmental protection should go hand-in-hand.
Meanwhile, Italian Environment Minister Altero Matteoli told
reporters here that if the United States and the largest developing
countries cannot be brought into the Kyoto process by the end of the
first commitment period in 2012, Italy would prefer to proceed with
voluntary agreements.
Matteoli said that instead of binding emissions targets, "we must
proceed with voluntary accords, bilateral pacts and commercial
partnerships."