Guest guest Posted April 20, 2007 Report Share Posted April 20, 2007 At 10:15 PM 4/19/07, you wrote: >Date:20/04/2007 URL: >http://www.thehindu.com/2007/04/20/stories/2007042004871100.htm > > > > >Opinion - News Analysis > >Now, global warming is a threat to all >Jonathan Freedland >The big powers are at last beginning to see sense. > >— PHOTO: AP > >U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and British Foreign Secretary Margaret >Beckett during the U.N. Security Council debate exploring the relationship >between energy, security, and climate, in New York on Tuesday. >IF BRITISH politics were a dinner party then Tony Blair would be that >guest who got up to say goodbye an hour ago, insisting he had to be off — >only to hang around by the front door, his coat on and car keys jangling, >chatting about this and that, and never actually leaving. The result is a >strange sense of limbo, where the old period has not quite ended and the >new one has not yet begun. A sense of drift has hovered over the British >Government since the attempt to push the Prime Minister from office last >September. It feels like nothing is happening. >So it's heartening to hear of one area, at least, where the British >Government has taken a lead. On Tuesday, the United Nations Security >Council discussed climate change for the very first time. Not some >environmental subcommittee, not a platitudinous exchange of slogans in the >General Assembly, nor even the intergovernmental panel on climate change, >but the Security Council. It was debating carbon emissions and the danger >they pose to the Earth. >The Security Council had never talked about global warming before — and it >was not keen to start on Tuesday. >Of the permanent members, the United States, Russia, and China had all >objected, Moscow's Ambassador to the U.N. admitting he was " lukewarm >because of where it is discussed. " Translation: the Security Council is >meant for grown-up stuff involving bombs and bullets, not airy-fairy talk >about trees and polar bears. Unluckily for Washington, Beijing and Moscow, >the presidency of the Security Council rotates, and this month it's >Britain's turn. Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett insisted this was what >she wanted the Council to discuss, and on Tuesday it did. >Despite the misgivings of those big three, it turned out to be quite an >event: a record turnout for a debate of this kind, not confined to the 15 >members of the Council but with speeches from 52 different countries. By >the end, a strong majority agreed that climate change posed a clear threat >to international security. >Pragmatic reasoning >That was the entire point of the exercise, to reframe the way people think >about this problem. There's good, pragmatic reasoning behind that. The >glum reality is that governments tend to take security threats more >seriously than any other kind. Just think of what Washington has spent on >the " war on terror. " If George W. Bush gets his latest budget through >Congress, he will have spent $750 billion of American taxpayers' money on >the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in a little over five years. >Environmentalists drool when they imagine what they could have done with a >fraction of that money. Even a quarter of the total, say a meagre $200 >billion, could have paid for enormous strides towards a low carbon >economy. It could, for instance, have paid to transform the way we >generate electricity, by capturing carbon and storing it in the ground, >rather than releasing it into the atmosphere. >That, when it happens, will be a massive, international infrastructure >project. But if governments approached it with the degree of urgency, >will, and wherewithal they apply to traditional national security threats >— with the seriousness and money-no-object commitment Mr. Bush and Mr. >Blair showed to the " war on terror " — then suddenly it would look >eminently possible. >In the most direct way, the overheating of the Earth promises danger — >including threats the Security Council would immediately recognise. If >land becomes uninhabitable through flooding as glaciers melt and sea >levels rise, or through drought as things get hotter, the people now >living on that land will move. Credible forecasts speak of 200 million >people displaced by the middle of the century. Some of that movement will >be within countries, but some will be across international borders — and >we all know the strains that can produce. There will be clashes over >limited resources as people compete over fertile land and drinkable water. >That is not entirely in the future. Already the issue is acquiring the >more familiar shape of an international relations problem. Note the >description by Uganda's President Museveni of rising emissions as " an act >of aggression " by the rich nations against the poor. We pollute for >decades; they pay the price in lost landscapes and lost lives. >As the consequences of global warming become more visible, and more felt, >that sentiment will grow — along with the conflict, or even international >terrorism, that it might bring. >Tuesday's debate is a sign that the penny is beginning to drop. Maybe not >in Russia, whose U.N. ambassador warned against overdramatising the >problem of global warming, nor in the White House, which offered the >Security Council an empty statement on Tuesday, in keeping with the Bush >administration's shaming record of denial. >Still, and in defiance of all that, two U.S. Senators, Republican Chuck >Hagel and Democrat Dick Durbin, have tabled a bill that would demand all >U.S. agencies come together to produce a national intelligence estimate of >the threat of climate change. Such exercises were once reserved for the >Soviet nuclear arsenal or the state of the Middle East. >These changes matter. The big powers know how to put out fires when they >want to. Now they just have to realise they are facing a blaze larger than >any of us have ever seen — and one that could engulf us all. >- Guardian Newspapers Limited 2007 >© Copyright 2000 - 2006 The Hindu ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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