Weekly Mulch: At Cancun, Incentives Point Toward Incremental Progress on Climate Change

by Sarah Laskow, Media Consortium Blogger

This year’s round of the United Nations-led climate change negotiations, ongoing in Cancun, Mexico, for the past two weeks, end today. No matter what the official outcome, the progress made on dealing with global climate change and carbon emissions will be incremental.

The problem, at base, lies with the incentives, or lack thereof, for the most powerful negotiators at the table. Morally, there are plenty of reasons for every country in the world to commit to drawing down carbon pollution. But economically? Politically? It’s easier to take small steps, make half-hearted commitments.

Going all-in

What would a brave policy stance look like? Something like the position the Maldives—an island archipelago—has taken: “We do not have to wait for everyone else to do this,” as the country’s environment minister, Mohamed Aslam said at the conference this week. As Mother Jones’ Kate Sheppard reports:

Right now the country relies heavily on diesel fuel for much of its energy needs. The government has already conducted an audit of their emissions, much of which comes from the shipping sector, a fact of life in island nations. But Aslam envisions solar, wind, tidal power, and renewable transportation fuels driving the nation in the near future—even if islanders don’t have all the solutions now.

Aslam notes, Sheppard writes, that it’s in the country’s economic favor to take up these policies. So for the Maldives, at least, it’s not a tough sell.

Bribery?

The real dilemma for island countries like the Maldives, though, is how much wiggle room they should give larger countries, who are bigger emitters, in international agreements. Larger countries have more to lose, economically, so they’re less willing to commit to, say, legally binding goals for reduced carbon emissions.

But these larger countries also tend to have more money. And that’s where the problem for countries like the Maldives comes in: they’re going to need financial support to deal with creeping sea level rise and other consequences of climate change. Some of the WikiLeaks diplomatic cables, as The Guardian reported, revealed how countries like the United States use those needs to their diplomatic advantage. Democracy Now!’s Amy Goodman asked U.S. Climate Envoy Todd Stern to respond to these revelations, but didn’t get much of a response.

I’ve got the power

Ultimately, though, a country like the Maldives is always going to have a weaker negotiating position than bigger countries. Take, for instance, this account from Inter Press Service’s Darryl D’Monte on how to identify an important player at Cancun:

A rough yardstick for identifying which Asian countries make the biggest ripples in Cancun is the number of journalists who crowd around the spokesperson immediately after a press conference. … Indian Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh has certainly come into his own on this score. As the spokesperson for the BASIC group of countries, which includes Brazil, South Africa and China, he is articulate, well-informed and witty. Journalists swarm around him after a press conference, eager to get him make a scathing remark about another country or group of countries.

This profile of Ramesh is a fascinating window into how one negotiator manages to navigate these complicated talks. But, as D’Monte points out, even for India, financing is a key question: one of the “non-negotiables” for India, Brazil, South Africa and China is speedier delivery of promised mitigation monies.

Moral Highground

There’s one group at Cancun whose incentives line up impeccably with a faultless moral position: young people. They’re the ones most likely to suffer the consequences of a warming world, and they’re advocating for a draw-down of carbon-heavy industries. At Change.org, Jess Leber reports that about 1,000 young people are participating in some way in the conference this year. (Official attendance tallies, for participants inside and outside the building, estimate 22,000 people in total.)

Leber reports that young people did make some progress this year: “The negotiators agreed to ramp up support for climate education and training programs worldwide, but especially in developing countries, and agreed to give the youth delegation are larger official voice in the negotiating process,” she writes.

That’s good news for adults, as well. As the UN’s chief negotiator, Christiana Figueres, demonstrates in this video at Care2, it’s tough to face down the people who are actually going to suffer from your generation’s waffling. “Figueres tears up when speaking of why the talks are important; she also describes the inspiration that keeps her working toward a global agreement,” writes Nancy Roberts.

Figueres’ inspiration? “It’s you,” she tells young activists. “It’s not our planet. It’s yours…You will all take it over very soon…Nothing is going to be perfect…Everything here is going to be one step. But it is the best that this group of people under these circumstances…can do for the time being.”

This post features links to the best independent, progressive reporting about the environment by members of The Media Consortium. It is free to reprint. Visit the Mulch for a complete list of articles on environmental issues, or follow us on Twitter. And for the best progressive reporting on critical economy, health care and immigration issues, check out The Audit, The Pulse, and The Diaspora. This is a project of The Media Consortium, a network of leading independent media outlets.

Why I am stepping away from Politics (not a rant about people.)

I know that I am not one of the more well known posters here, although I was pretty active during the campaign season and like to think that I made some friends here. I have enjoyed sharing my views with all of you, arguing, sharing humor, snark, and a more serious tone when it is warranted. Some of you may know that I have worked for the last four years as a campaign manager, and in other positions, on various races in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Virginia. I started while I was in college volunteering for local races and planning events for candidates when I could. Being involved in both winning and losing campaings over the last four years has led me to making many friends, some great contacts and has given me some amazing experiences. All things considered I wouldn't trade it for the world. That being said, I don't really see any choice but to say that I am done.

This is not the first time someone has broached this type of conversation here at MYDD and sadly it probably will not be the last. The Democratic Party has been notoriously bad at keeping young volunteers and operatives involved over the years. When I started down this path I knew that it would not lead me to riches, I only hoped to do my part for a cause I believed in and pay my bills along the way. I thought I would eventually go back to school for a graduate level degree, which I still may do, but I really fell in love with the campaign environment and wanted it to last for as long as it could.

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A Young Person's Voice [Updated]

My 22-year-old niece, who will be graduating from college and heading to Columbia University this year for a PhD in psychology, asked me to post this "guest blog."

I support Hillary because, simply stated, she is the right woman for this job and for this country.

I am a graduating senior from college and my intelligent, determined, and qualified friends can't find jobs. Why?  Because they are Finance, Advertising, Public Relations, and other business related majors. Our economy is in such a situation that has created hiring freezes in otherwise booming industries.

On my campus, all of the sorority and fraternity houses have just put large, yellow ribbons outside their houses in support of our troops because a member of one of our fraternities was kidnapped in Iraq and all of those kidnapped with him were recently found dead. His whereabouts are unknown. Then, the soldiers lucky enough to make it back from Iraq are coming back with PTSD and other health concerns and they aren't necessarily receiving the treatment they need and so rightly deserve.

I've heard Hillary speak on all of these matters and she doesn't just feed lines. She doesn't just tell Americans what we want to hear without suggesting how she is going to make such ideas happen. She has the experience, the knowledge, and the intelligence to bring back our troops and to get this country back to where it was when Bush entered office. She has consistently proposed the same policy initiatives for our country and has offered decisive action-plans to rectify these, and other, problems facing the American people.

Aside from her obvious political qualifications, Hillary is a person I, as a young woman, respect and admire. She has handled this fight for the candidacy with fervor but grace. She has come under fire multiple times and usually because of her sex. No one is calling any of the male candidates an "ice queen." Then, she warms up and she becomes "emotional" on a "trail of tears." Despite incredible personal attacks and naysayers, she hasn't given up. She has shown immeasurable strength and resolve in a very uncertain time. She is making great strides for the sake of women and Americans. Everything she has done throughout this campaign, she has done with a smile, wit, and perseverance.

In today's society, it can be difficult to find empowering, positive female role models in the public eye. But, having Hillary as the Democratic Presidential candidate would make me, more so than ever before, proud to be both a woman and an American.

Updated 4/6/08 12:46 PM PST: I also ran across this e-mail that my niece sent me a while back. She sure does make me proud:

I added myself as a supporter of Hillary Clinton on Facebook and I got a message from a young guy asking me why I chose to support Hillary and if I was considering any other candidates. I thought you'd be very proud of what I responded with:

”I decided to support Hillary Clinton because I DO believe America is in need of change but I believe Hillary, unlike Obama, has the qualifications and know-how to make such changes. I am not considering supporting any of the other democratic candidates. I think, when she speaks, she not only discusses what changes she plans to make but how and why. As for Republican candidates, it's not even a question in my mind. I am too socially liberal to back any of the Republican candidates and I think we've seen what a Republican president can do to this country. We are a changing, modern government in need of someone with equally progressive viewpoints.

”I think that, aside from her own political experiences, the fact that she was first lady is invaluable. No one, aside from her, can fully understand the knowledge and insight she got while living in the White House and being married to one of the best Presidents in recent history. Sadly, the media paints her as "cold" or a "bitch." As a woman, I can safely say it is very hard to act appropriately in professional settings. If you are too friendly and gregarious, you are a "flirt" and "frivolous." If you are as stern and serious as your male counterparts, you're a "bitch" and an "ice queen." I think Hillary does what she needs to do be a serious contender and unfortunately, some people may see that as cold and icy.

”I hope my opinions help you. Were you asking to clarify your own thoughts or you were just curious?

Thanks, ML”

Hope you like it. I ordered my “hillary is my home girl” shirt today. I'm very excited for it's arrival ... Hopefully in time for the Florida primary so I can "rock" it on campus. I'm also getting a Hillary bumper sticker sent to me!

(re-printed with permission)

cross-posted at texasdarlin.wordpress.com

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HillaryLove!!

Run do not walk to this new website for Hillary.

If you support her, you will have a smile on your face when you leave :)

It is just the best. The young people speak. And guess what??

A lot of them don't like kool-aid. hahaha

http://hillaryspeaksforme.com/

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"Generations" Author Bill Strauss Dead at 60

I was shoicked to read this morning that one of my political gurus, Bill Strauss, passed away yesterday from pancreatic cancer.  He was 60.

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