spacer
spacer search

Search
spacer
header
The Story of Bottled Water

World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth
Cochabamba, Bolivia
April 19 to 22, 2010

Visit the website
Sign Up for Working Groups

FOCUS@COP15

Trade & Climate Caravan 2009
Advancing a Peoples’ ASEAN: Continuing Dialogue
cha-am
Call for Civil Society’s Participation
In the 2nd ASEAN Peoples’ Forum / 5th ASEAN Civil Society Conference
18-20 October 2009
Cha-am, Phetchaburi Province, Thailand
http://aseanpeoplesforum.net

Asian People's Solidarity for Climate Justice
The Gr8 Climate Sale

Video now available! To obtain a copy please contact This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

The issue of climate change has come to the forefront and people both in the North and the South have been feeling the devastating effects of global warming. However, the links between the neo-liberal system and the model of over consumption to the climate crisis are not clearly stated.


Read More
Watch the Full-Length Video

climatejusticelogo
Climate Justice Conference
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok Thailand

For more information and to download the proceedings, visit the official website

Alternative Regionalism and ASEAN Phil Workshops
tarp_asean_phil_2009_big
Click here to download conference proceedings

FOCUS STAFF INTERVIEWS
Walden Bello on WSFtv , Aljazeera
Nicola Bullard talks about climate justice on Realworld Radio
Shalmali Guttal on WSFtv
Walden Bello talks about Asian Economy
Watch Aljazeera's 101 East Discussions on the Asian Economy.
Part 2

Focus India Headlines
Focus Philippines headlines
Login





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Focus Staff Only
Webmail
Library
Syndicate
Template Chooser
JavaBean
 
Home

Poznan Declaration: World vs. Bank Print E-mail
wb-protestNations are gathering in Poznan, Poland under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). To meet their obligations towards developing countries and repay their climate debt, industrialized countries must agree to appropriately and adequately finance adaptation, mitigation, and technology development and transfer. The World Bank Group is positioning itself to control key financial mechanisms of the UNFCCC.

We, the undersigned organizations, oppose any World Bank role in aninternational climate change convention regime, for the following reasons:
  • The World Bank is a major climate polluter. Despite professed concern regarding climate change, the World Bank Group is actually increasing its support for fossil fuel projects. From 1997-2007, the World Bank financed 26 gigatons of carbon dioxide emissions – about 45 times the annual emissions of the UK. In the last year, the World Bank Group has increased lending for coal, oil, and gas by 94%, totaling over $3 billion. Coal lending alone increased 256% in the last year. The World Bank’s own 2004 Extractive Industries Review recommended an immediate end to coal financing and a phase out of investments in oil production by 2008 and found that "…oftentimes the environment and the poor have been further threatened by the expansion of a country's extractive industries sector." Yet in April 2008, the Bank approved a $450 million loan for a massive 4,000 megawatt coal project in India, expected to be one of the 50 largest greenhouse gas emitters in the world. Given the World Bank’s existing and increasing support for fossil fuels, it is an inappropriate institution to lead the fight against global climate change.

  • The World Bank is a major deforester. Deforestation accounts for some 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions, but the Bank continues to promote industrial logging and agrofuels. A 2007 World Bank Inspection Panel report strongly criticized the Bank’s support for industrial logging and violating the rights of indigenous Pygmy and other forest-dependent communities in the Democratic Republic of Congo, home to the second largest tract of rainforests in the world. Throughout tropical rainforest areas, the International Finance Corporation (IFC)– the private sector lending arm of the World Bank Group - finances soy and oil palm plantations and cattle ranching, as well as financing shrimp farming in mangrove forests. The IFC has a long record of support for livestock-based agribusiness, with US $732 million in investment over a 6-year period for livestock production projects. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that the livestock sector is responsible for 18% of global warming emissions.

  • The World Bank is a major rights violator. Numerous communities throughout the world – from those impacted by the Chad-Cameroon pipeline to the Nam Theun 2 Hydropower Project in Laos – have suffered human and environmental rights violations as a direct result of World Bank-backed projects.

  • The World Bank is an undemocratic institution. Its one dollar-one vote decision-making marginalizes Southern countries, and the United States simply chooses the Bank’s president.

  • The World Bank’s recent climate initiatives are severely flawed.
    •    The World Bank’s recently launched Climate Investment Funds (CIFs) undermine UN climate negotiations, compete for funding with already established UN adaptation and technology funds, promote dirty industries like coal as clean energy, and force developing countries to pay for the industrialized world’s pollution by providing loans for them to adapt to the climate crisis they did not create. Rather than treating the provision of climate financing as binding obligations by industrialized countries to developing countries under the UNFCCC, the CIFs are designed within a fundamentally unequal aid framework of donor and recipient. This is particularly odious given the large historical ecological debt owed by industrialized countries to developing countries. Though the CIFs have been described as new sources of funding by the World Bank, G8 governments have made clear that they are considered as part of Official Development Assistance, and thus are not new and additional.
    •    The World Bank’s Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF), enabled by the Forest Investment Program, will include forests in dubious carbon offsetting schemes that allow industrialized countries to buy their way out of meaningful emissions reductions. In violation of the Bank’s own policies, the FCPF has failed to ensure meaningful participation of Indigenous Peoples and local communities in its design.
    •    In 2007, less than 10% of the Bank’s carbon finance was allocated to solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, and mini hydropower. Energy efficiency captured 80% of the money allocated to purchase emissions reductions credits, the majority of which went to a single project in China to reduce emissions by burning off HFC-23, a potent greenhouse gas byproduct. The generation of carbon credits from HFC-23 destruction has been sharply criticized.

    We call on the World Bank and its donors to immediately stop financing fossil fuels.
    We further call on governments to:


    •    Reject the role of the World Bank in an international climate regime.
    •    Establish a financing mechanism fully accountable to the UNFCCC – based on equity and in accordance with the historical and current responsibilities of industrialized countries – with predictable, new and additional funding directly accessible to recipient countries.
    •    Invest massively in clean, safe and decentralized renewable energy, demand side energy efficiency and sustainable transport.
    •    Ensure forests are not included in carbon markets.
    •    Recognize and enforce customary and territorial land rights of Indigenous Peoples and forest-dependent communities as the basis of any forest policy.
    •    Support forest conservation by promoting national programs and infrastructure that provide direct support to rights-based, community-driven forms of forest conservation, sustainable management and ecosystem restoration.
    •    Ensure that monoculture tree plantations are excluded from the definition of "forests," and from any mechanisms, policies and incentives that might be established to conserve forests or halt deforestation and forest degradation.
    •    Address the drivers of deforestation, including agrofuels; the excessive consumption of products such as meat, pulp and paper; and the destructive practices of logging and fossil fuel extraction.

    Signed:
    ActionAid International Africa Jubilee South Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ) CEE Bankwatch Network Development Alternatives with Women for A New Era (DAWN) European Marches against Unemployment, Precarity and Exclusion Fahamu - Networks for Social Justice Friends of the Earth International Focus on the Global South Greenpeace Indigenous Environmental Network International Alliance of Inhabitants


 
< Prev   Next >
spacer
Water justice, like water, travels in networks: notes on reclaiming public water

An international seminar of the Reclaiming Public Water Network brought together participants from more than 30 countries, who shared knowledge and experiences about how to improve water provision through the democratization of water management.





wallstreet
Wall Street: The Causes of Collapse
by Walden Bello
Updated: 18 October 2008
Download the Presentation

Links
robinhoodtax2

PAAR
paar
The initiative People’s Agenda for Alternative Regionalisms, involves regional alliances such as Hemispheric Social Alliance (Latin America), Southern African People’s Solidarity Network- SAPSN (Southern Africa), Solidarity for Asian People’s Advocacy – SAPA (South East Asia), People’s SAARC (South Asia) as well as organisations and networks in Europe, including Transnational Institute (TNI), that struggle for “Another Europe”. These networks and the organisations part of them, share a strong commitment on the need to RECLAIM the regions, RECREATE the processes of regional integration and ADVANCE people-centered regional alternatives.

For more information, visit the website
INTERNSHIP OPENING AT FOCUS, INDIA
Focus on the Global South - India is accepting applications for internships.
Click here for more details>>
Latest Publications from Focus
occ6small

Occasional Papers 6

CLIMATE CHANGE AND CHINA: Technology, Market and Beyond
frontocc5

Occasional Papers 5

BACKGROUND PAPER: Investment Liberalization in the EU-ASEAN FTA

 frontocc4

Occasional Papers 4
BUSINESS AS USUAL: Responses within ASEAN to the Food Crisis

 unfaircompetition3
Fierce, Fair and Unfair Competition: The EU-China Trade Race and its Gender Implications. - Chinese Translation
 
New Power Politics in Asia:Briefing Note on the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
 
 China’s New Role in Africa and the South: A search for a new perspective
 water-report
 WATER DEMOCRACY:RECLAIMING PUBLIC WATER IN ASIA
thumb_annual-report-2006-cover
 Annual Report 2006
 thumb_at_the_door_cover_image
 At the Door of all the East': The Philippines in United States Military Strategy
thumb_landstrugglesg-2
 Land Strugggles:LRAN Briefing Paper Series
 thumb_cover-front1

Occasional Papers 2

Contract Farming in Thailand:A view from the farm

 thumb_unconventionalwarfare 1
 Unconventional Warfare: Are US Special Forces Engaged in an ‘Offensive War’ in the Philippines?
 thumb_cover-front
ALBA Venezuela’s answer to “free trade”: the Bolivarian alternative for the Americas

More publications>> 


Who's Online
We have 10 guests online

 
© 2010 Focus on the Global South
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
JoomSEF SEO by Artio.
spacer