UN urges G20 leaders to back "Green New Deal"

Mon Feb 16, 2009 2:43pm GMT
 

By Daniel Wallis

NAIROBI (Reuters) - World leaders meeting in London in April should kick-start a "Green New Deal" to fight climate change and revive the crippled global economy on a sustainable basis, a major U.N. environment meeting was told on Monday.

High on the agenda for more than 100 environment ministers gathered in Kenya this week will be how to draw attention to "green" issues amid job losses and worldwide financial turmoil.

The U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP) says political efforts to curb pollution, protect forests and avert global warming have failed, and the world needs to learn from U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt's response to the Great Depression.

"We face the unprecedented reality that climate change may very well be the more important economic development than what happens on Wall Street or the financial markets, or in our industries," UNEP executive director Achim Steiner told the start of the February 16-20 meeting.

"The question truly is, can the environment afford to be put on the waiting line, or is it indeed part of the solution?"

A U.N. report presented on Monday at the conference in Nairobi called on G20 leaders to consider proposals for a "Green New Deal", and develop framework ideas towards securing a global climate change agreement at talks in Copenhagen in December.

U.N. climate scientists says rising greenhouse gas concentrations -- which are up by about a third since the Industrial Revolution -- are stoking warming likely to cause floods, droughts, heatwaves, rising seas and extinctions.

More than 190 nations have agreed to negotiate a new global deal by the end of 2009 to succeed the U.N.'s Kyoto Protocol, which sets carbon dioxide limits for 37 industrialised nations.  Continued...

Photo
Harvard Business School students cheer during their graduation ceremonies in Boston
The African brain drain

Africa is suffering from a massive brain drain and it’s questionable whether enough of those highly motivated students studying in America will return home in large enough numbers to really make a difference...  Blog 

 
SLA rebels attend training in Mestre area in Western Sudan.
Is Sudan’s Darfur crisis getting too much attention?

Activists often say that the world is not paying enough attention to Sudan’s Darfur crisis. But could the opposite be true?  Blog 

 
Pope Benedict XVI waves during the Angelus prayer at the end of a mass for the closing of African Synod in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican
Vatican synod urges corrupt African leaders to quit

Roman Catholic bishops called on corrupt Catholic leaders in Africa on Friday to repent or resign for giving the continent and the Church a bad name.   Blog 

 
South Africa's head coach Carlos Parreira looks on during the Nelson Mandela Challenge soccer match between South Africa and US at Ellispark stadium in Johannesburg
Should South Africa have gone local?

Carlos Alberto Parreira has returned as South Africa's senior national soccer team coach. He quit in April 2008 after his wife was found to have cancer...  Blog 

 
A woman carries a box of soyabean oil during a food distribution in Buge village, Wolayita region in southern Ethiopia
Why is the West still feeding Ethiopia?

It has now been 25 years since more than 1 million Ethiopians died as those of us lucky enough to live in the rich world sat transfixed in front of our television screens.   Blog 

 
Photo
Does the “billionth African” mean boon or burden?

One day this year, in all probability, the “billionth African” will have been born, a milestone that will only benefit the poorest continent if it can get its act together and unify its piecemeal markets.  Blog 

 
Powered by Reuters AlertNet. AlertNet provides news, images and insight from the world's disasters and conflicts and is brought to you by Reuters Foundation.