From: glevy@PRATT.EDU
Date: Thu Oct 05 2006 - 08:49:25 EDT
---------------------------- Original Message ---------------------------- Subject: PEN-L message, (Fwd) Carbon trading rejected From: "Jerry Levy" <Gerald_A_Levy@msn.com> Date: Thu, October 5, 2006 8:45 am To: "Jerry-P" <glevy@pratt.edu> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEN-L message, (Fwd) Carbon trading rejected PEN-L mailing list archive [ Other Periods | Other mailing lists | Search ] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: [ Previous | Next ] Thread: [ Previous | Next ] Index: [ Author | Date | Thread ] (Fwd) Carbon trading rejected -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- a.. To: PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx b.. Subject: (Fwd) Carbon trading rejected c.. From: Patrick Bond <pbond@xxxxxxxxxxx> d.. Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2006 19:05:16 +0200 e.. Comments: To: SA discussion list <debate@lists.kabissa.org>, ccs-l@lists.ukzn.ac.za f.. User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.5 (Windows/20060719) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (Download this free book arguing for the decommodification of... the air!: http://www.dhf.uu.se ) For immediate release On Eve of Nairobi Climate Conference, New Book Exposes Scandal of Carbon Trading "Bad for the South, bad for the North, and bad for the climate" International negotiators are trying to find ways to further the carbon market in Africa at the November 2006 climate summit in Nairobi. A new book published this week exposes the dangers and promotes eco-friendly alternatives. The book is published by Sweden's Dag Hammarskjold Foundation together with the international Durban Group for Climate Justice and the UK-based NGO The Corner House. Carbon Trading argues that the Kyoto Protocol and the EU Emissions Trading Scheme are ineffective and unjust, and that carbon trading is particularly detrimental to African interests. Carbon trading 'dispossesses ordinary people in the South of their lands and futures without resulting in appreciable progress toward alternative energy systems,' said Larry Lohmann of The Corner House, the book's editor. 'Tradable rights to pollute are handed out to Northern industry to allow them to continue profiting from business as usual. At the same time, Northern polluters are encouraged to invest in supposedly carbon-saving projects in the South, very few of which promote clean energy at all.'1 'This is the most absurd and impossible market human civilization has ever seen,' said Indian activist and researcher Soumitra Ghosh, a contributing author on carbon projects in the South. 'Carbon trading is bad for the South, bad for the North, and bad for the climate.' 'Claims that carbon credits mitigate climate change have not been verified', added Jutta Kill of Sinks Watch, another contributor to the book. Carbon trading impedes positive investment in the South while thwarting popular movements against subsidies for fossil fuel extraction, she said. In detailed case studies from nine Third World countries, the book shows how carbon offset projects such as those promoted under the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) have had a detrimental impact on local communities. At the same time, they prolong industrialized countries' excessive pollution of the atmosphere.2 Included are projects to 'offset' Northern emissions using tree plantings on contested lands in Uganda and Tanzania. So far, Africa has been largely left out of the CDM, as carbon project investment has gravitated to richer developing countries such as China, India, Brazil and Korea. Yet if more carbon investments are made, the book argues, the result is likely to be neither climatically effective nor people-friendly. 'Carbon trading slows down the social and technological change needed to cope with global warming by unnecessarily prolonging the world's dependence on oil, coal and gas,' Lohmann said. Moreover, evidence from South Africa is particularly disturbing, as the World Bank and large corporations like Sasol demonstrate the untenability of emissions trading projects, in Durban and Steel Valley. As major Clean Development Mechanism pilot schemes, a methane extraction project at Africa's largest landfill and a Mozambique-SA natural gas pipeline are flawed beyond repair. Sajida Khan, a cancer victim who has fought hard against the Durban project, warns: 'The poor countries are so poor they will accept crumbs. The World Bank know this and they are taking advantage of it.' Carbon Trading: A Critical Conversation on Climate Change, Privatisation and Power is available for download at http://www.dhf.uu.se. A paper edition will be published by the Dag Hammarskjold Foundation in November. For further information or interviews: Larry Lohmann (UK): +44 (0)1258 821218, +44 (0)1258 473795, larrylohmann@gn.apc.org. Patrick Bond (South Africa): +27 83 425 1401, pbond@mail.ngo.za. Timothy Byakola (Uganda): +256 41 342 685, acs@starcom.co.ug. Rehana Dada (South Africa): rehana@greenit.co.za Jutta Kill (Germany): +44 7931 576538, jutta@fern.org. Trusha Reddy (South Africa): trusha.reddy@gmail.com. Wally Menne (South Africa): plantnet@iafrica.com. Soumitra Ghosh (India): +91 353 266 1915, soumitrag@gmail.com. Daphne Wysham (US): +1 301 573 2468 or +1 202 234 9382, ext. 208, dwysham@seen.org. Graham Erion (Canada): +1 416 7958044, graham@erion.ca. Esperanza Martinez (Ecuador): tegantai@oilwatch.org. Anna Pinto (India): anarchive.anon@gmail.com. Dr. Michael K. Dorsey (US): +1 734 945 6424, Michael.K.Dorsey@Dartmouth.EDU. Roy Laifungbam (India): roy.laifungbam@gmail.com. Tom Goldtooth (US): +1 218 751 4967, ien@igc.org. Ricardo Carrere (Uruguay): +598 2 413 2989, rcarrere@wrm.org.uy. Anne Petermann or Orin Langelle (US): +1 802 482 2689, globalecology@gmavt.net. Tamra Gilbertson (Spain): +34 685 35 66 95, tamra@tni.org. Olle Nordberg or Niclas Hallstrom (Sweden): +46 18 10 27 72, olle.nordberg@dhf.uu.se, niclas.hallstrom@dhf.uu.se. Javier Baltodano (Costa Rica): licania@racsa.co.cr. Marcelo Calazans (Brazil): marcelo.fase@terra.com.br. Adam Ma'anit (UK): adam@carbontradewatch.org. NOTES FOR EDITORS 1. Carbon trading has two parts. First, governments hand out free tradable rights to emit carbon dioxide to big industrial polluters, as under the EU Emissions Trading Scheme. Second, companies buy additional pollution credits from projects in the South that claim to be emitting less greenhouse gas than they would have without the carbon market investment. 2. Carbon trading was made the centrepiece of the Kyoto Protocol at the insistence of the US, which claimed that its trading scheme to reduce sulphur dioxide emissions had been a great success, and remained in place after the US pulled out of the treaty. Carbon Trading demonstrates, however, that the US's sulphur dioxide scheme was radically different from the Kyoto Protocol's trading arrangements and dealt with a radically different problem. begin:vcard fn:Patrick Bond n:;Patrick Bond email;internet:http://www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs tel;work:(27) 31 260 2454 tel;fax:(27) 31 260 2502 tel;cell:(27) 83 425 1401 version:2.1 end:vcard -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- a.. Prev by Date: Re: kvetch about Frist Afghanistan coverage b.. Next by Date: How Would You Like To Live In A Town Where The Police Could Gun You Down For Any Reason? c.. Previous by thread: Background on Brazil's economic problems d.. Next by thread: How Would You Like To Live In A Town Where The Police Could Gun You Down For Any Reason? e.. Index(es): a.. Date b.. Thread a.. Thread context: a.. China's road to capitalism, Louis Proyect Wed 04 Oct 2006, 17:23 GMT b.. from Stan Goff, Jim Devine Wed 04 Oct 2006, 17:00 GMT c.. How Would You Like To Live In A Town Where The Police Could Gun You Down For Any Reason?, Leigh Meyers Wed 04 Oct 2006, 16:39 GMT a.. Re: How Would You Like To Live In A Town Where The Police Could Gun You Down For Any Reason?, Michael Perelman Wed 04 Oct 2006, 20:30 GMT d.. (Fwd) Carbon trading rejected, Patrick Bond Wed 04 Oct 2006, 16:31 GMT e.. Background on Brazil's economic problems, Louis Proyect Wed 04 Oct 2006, 15:04 GMT f.. kvetch about Frist Afghanistan coverage, Robert Naiman Wed 04 Oct 2006, 14:00 GMT a.. Re: kvetch about Frist Afghanistan coverage, Mark Lause Wed 04 Oct 2006, 14:24 GMT a.. Re: kvetch about Frist Afghanistan coverage, Jim Devine Wed 04 Oct 2006, 15:17 GMT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [ Other Periods | Other mailing lists | Search ] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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