December 2, 2005
"Everything is
warming up"
Inuit and youth groups
join climate change scientists to put heat on politicians
JANE
GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
"Time
is running out" to deal with global warming is the message
of this polar bear - and a huge protest march in Montreal - tried to convey.
(PHOTOS BY JANE GEORGE)
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MONTREAL - By declarations,
petitions and demonstrations, scientists, indigenous people and youth tried
to lever public opinion during the United Nations conference on climate change,
which wraps up today.
On Wednesday at an event
called, The Right to be Cold, Sheila Watt-Cloutier, chair of the Inuit Circumpolar
Conference, announced ICC is petitioning the Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights to determine whether the United States' rejection of treaties and actions
to cut emissions linked to climate change, is "willfully threatening the
Inuit cultural right to exist."
At Arctic Day, held earlier
this week as part of Canada's World of Solutions activities, Arctic indigenous
leaders tabled a declaration of their rights.
The permanent participants
to the Arctic Council - Inuit, Saami, Aleuts, Gwitch'in, Athabaskan and the
"small peoples" of northern Russia - want to push for official UN
recognition of Arctic indigenous residents as "vulnerable," because,
as their declaration says, "climate change is threatening our ways of life
and the resources on which we depend."
"We have to ask every
country to do what they can do. We're asking for Arctic action," said Chief
Gary Harrison of Alaska.
Harrison is grand chief
of the Arctic Athabaskan Council and speaker for the indigenous permanent participants
to the Arctic Council. Harrison said it's important for indigenous peoples in
the Arctic to be eligible for adaptation funds from the UN and other developed
nations, to help them deal with the impacts of climate change.
Athabaskan
Chief Gary Harrison tabled an Arctic indigenous declaration that says climate
change threatens "our way of life and the resources we depend on."
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Meanwhile, youth marched
in a "Time is running out" protest parade last weekend. They also
played a slushy demonstration hockey game downtown to show the impacts of climate
change on Canada's favourite game, and they produced a more serious declaration.
This declaration, called
"Our climate, our challenge, our future," calls for a place for youth
in future international climate change negotiations, higher curbs on greenhouse
gas emissions, and many other practical measures to keep the world cooler.
"Human rights and
social justice must be included in the transition from fossil fuel dependence,"
reads the declaration.
The threat is real.
Scientists also voiced
their mounting concerns. Louis Fortier of the University Laval's Arctic Net
institute in Quebec City was one of more than 40 noted Arctic researchers from
the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Services who signed an open
letter to Prime Minister Paul Martin.
This letter asks for immediate
action on climate change and more money for climate research, but it arrived
in Ottawa just as Martin's government was set to fall in a non-confidence vote.
"We met with Martin.
He didn't say anything about it. I get the feeling that the letter was buried
under a pile of papers," Fortier said.
As calls for action grow,
evidence in support of a political response to climate change is also increasing.
"Everything is warming
up," Fortier said. "It's not a single thing, it's everything that's
changing."
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Rebecca
Sammurok, Corenna Nujalia, Megan Pizzo-Lyall and Ceporah Mearns were at "Arctic
Day" where the Arctic Youth Declaration was tabled. Pizzo-Lyall, vice-president
of the Inuit Youth Council, was a member of Canada's official delegation.
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Indigenous representatives
from around the circumpolar world told about a wide variety of changes to their
environment: from land slides, higher water levels, tornadoes, hummingbirds,
unfamiliar spiders and disappearing glaciers in Alaska, to new parasites in
the Saami area of northern Scandinavia, and warmer, fresh water in far eastern
Russian waterways.
In Greenland, warmer weather,
fewer ice packs and stronger winds have made life more difficult for hunters
and fishermen, said Lena Kielsen Holm of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference in
Greenland. She said that due to the lack of ice, hunting hooded seals is extremely
difficult and more wind means travel is risky.
And if that doesn't sound
bad enough, scientists had even worse news to share. At best, they now predict
global warming will bring the Arctic less extreme minimum temperatures in winter,
reduced sea ice, and more precipitation.
Six scientists who spoke
at an event organized at the World of Solutions, said if their worse-scenario
predictions come true, the world could see the melting of the Greenland ice
sheet and Antarctic ice shelves, water levels rising by seven metres or more,
and up to 30 per cent of the world's population displaced off the coasts.
"Tipping mechanisms,"
which operate like the flick of a switch, were the focus of the scientists'
presentations. These mechanisms are the points where changes to the climate
happen suddenly and irreversibly, such as when the world plunged from a sudden
temperature increase of 10°C over few decades about 8,000 years ago to a
decrease 1,000 years later.
A breakdown of the salty,
cold North Atlantic current, which rules weather in this part of the world,
could start a similar spiral of change in the next 100 years. This could lead
to much warmer temperatures in North America.
Research released last
week suggests the North Atlantic current is already much fresher, warmer and
weaker. The "clear potential" for a sudden flow reversal is raising
"considerable concern" among Canadian scientists.
To halt the build up of
greenhouse gases and avoid the complications of more global warming, scientists
are now suggesting a global reduction of 50 to 75 per cent of greenhouse gas
emissions before 2100. This is many, many times more than the U.N.'s Kyoto Protocol
asks participating countries to achieve by 2012.
These cuts would, at least
in southern Canada, mean a total lifestyle change. But these cuts might come
too late to prevent devastating temperature increases of up to five to 10°C
in Canada's Arctic and other regions in the high latitudes.
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