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December 2, 2005

Arctic delegates emphasize threat to polar regions

"Our needs are unlikely to get addressed unless we continue to push"

JANE GEORGE

CLICK PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Ever wonder what a tonne of greenhouse gas emissions looks like? One tonne of emissions is enough to inflate this model of the world that is suspended over Canada's display area at Complex Guy-Favreau near the United Nations climate change conference venue, called A World of Solutions. The exhibit suggests every Canadian reduce their emissions by this amount. (PHOTOS BY JANE GEORGE)

Take 10,000 people from 189 nations, add lots of security, endless meetings, opposing views and then try to have everyone strike an agreement that will save the world: this is the recipe for the United Nations climate conference which began earlier this week in Montreal and continues on until Dec. 9.

Federal environment minister Stéphane Dion, the president of the conference, charged its participants with finding a way to curb climate change, saying "climate change is the single most important environmental issue facing the world today."

Dion said the longer the world waits to deal with the problem of climate change "the larger will be the challenge."

"Let us set our sights on a more effective, more inclusive long-term approach to climate change," Dion told the opening of the meeting on Monday. "Let us seek consensus for outcomes that move us all towards substantial solutions."

But while finding politically-acceptable solutions to climate change preoccupies most of the conference, the impacts which global warming is having today in the polar regions are the focus of Arctic participants at the conference.

They handed out muktuk and other country foods in an effort to generate interest in their message that global warming is having an immediate impact on people in the Arctic.

CLICK PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The "human face" of climate change in the Arctic is presented through a display at the United Nations climate change conference site of several nearly life-size photos taken by Karim Rholem in Nunavut: on the right, Noah Kadlak from Coral Harbour.

This "human face" of climate change is what Inuit Circumpolar Conference president Sheila Watt-Cloutier is stressing through the two-week conference.

"Our needs are unlikely to get addressed unless we continue to push the issue," Watt-Cloutier said.

In Canada's World of Solutions display near the conference venue, the Government of Nunavut and the Kativik Regional Government are trying to push home the impact of global warming.

At its kiosk, the GN is handing out samples of country food and a variety of publications. The kiosk features flags, posters and a continuous show of the National Film Board video, Arctic Mission, on a major scientific exploration of the Arctic.

CLICK PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Long lines of delegates, media and employees wait up to an hour to pass through security into the United Nations climate change conference venue at Montreal's Palais des Congrès.

The KRG's kiosk focuses on an ice-monitoring project, which looks at climate change in the communities of Kangiqsualujjuaq, Kangiqsujuaq, Umiujaq, and Kawawachikamach based on local fieldwork and interviews. In conjunction with this display, the KRG has launched a new web site at http://climatechange.krg.ca, which will feature weekly ice trail information in these communities as well as Akulivik and Ivujivik.

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