Street protests demanding urgent
action on climate change have attracted hundreds of thousands of marchers in
more than 2,000 locations worldwide. The People's Climate March is campaigning for curbs on carbon emissions,
ahead of the UN climate summit in New York next week. In Manhattan, organizers said some 310,000 people joined a march that was
also attended by UN chief Ban Ki-moon. Earlier, huge demonstrations took place in Australia and Europe.
"This is the planet where our subsequent generations will live," Mr Ban told
reporters. "There is no 'Plan B' because we do not have 'Planet B'."The UN Secretary General was accompanied by primatologist Jane Goodall and the French Ecology Minister, Segolene Royal. New York hosted the largest of Sunday's protests, drawing more than half of the 600,000 marchers estimated by organizers to have taken part in rallies around the world. The protesters in New York used outsized floats to convey their message.
Business leaders, environmentalists and celebrities joined the demonstration. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio also took part, having been appointed as a UN representative on climate change last week.
Another protest, another climate conference - will this time be any different? Well, the marches brought more people to the streets than ever before, partly thanks to the organizational power of the e-campaign group Avaaz.
And the climate talks will also be influenced by technology, as it was reported this week that the sun and wind can often generate power as cheaply as gas in the home of fossil fuels, Texas. Certainly the UN's Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon, hopes that he can make a fresh start in the endless blame-your-neighbor round of climate talks.
Next year world leaders are due to show up in Paris to settle a global
climate deal based not on a bitterly-contested chiseling negotiation in the
middle of the night, but on open co-operative offers of action to tackle a
shared problem. Mr Ban has invited leaders to New York to make their offers public. Some
small nations will doubtless make new contributions to the carbon contraction
effort as they realize the vulnerability of their own economies to a hotter
world. But some big players may continue the game of climate poker, holding back
their offers until they see what else is on the table.
So there is no guarantee that Ban's idea will work - but at least for weary climate politics watchers it will be a change.
So there is no guarantee that Ban's idea will work - but at least for weary climate politics watchers it will be a change.
The New York rally was part of a global protest that included events in 156 countries - Afghanistan, the UK, Italy and Brazil among them.
- In London, the march attracted an estimated 40,000 people, including actress Emma Thompson who likened the threat from climate change to a Martian invasion
- Some 30,000 people marched in Melbourne, Australia. Demonstrators urged Prime Minister Tony Abbott to take action, citing fears that climate change could lead to more bushfires and droughts
- Organizers said more than 25,000 marched in Paris
- About 15,000 people marched in Berlin. Organizers urged world leaders to recognize climate change as a pressing problem
- In Rio de Janeiro, some 5,000 marchers turned out. Environmental slogans and a green heart were projected onto the famed statue of Christ the Redeemer, overlooking the city
- Smaller protests - attracting numbers in the hundreds or low thousands - were also seen in cities such as Bogota, Barcelona, Jakarta and Delhi
On Tuesday, the UN will host a climate summit at its headquarters in New York with 125 heads of state and government - the first such gathering since the unsuccessful climate conference in Copenhagen in 2009. Mr Ban hopes leaders can make progress on a universal agreement to be signed by all nations at the end of 2015.
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