Copenhagen Update

i-a38820751c136ebdbb57a877dddcad5d-cope2buzz.jpg

Tensions are mounting in Copenhagen over the so-called "Danish text," a draft agreement that would allow developed countries such as the United States and China to emit nearly twice as much carbon per capita as "third world" or developing countries. Meanwhile, scrappy island nation Tuvalu stood up for a stricter resolution, only to be scolded by the economies-that-be. Eric Michael Johnson on The Primate Diaries writes that the Danish text would "effectively stifle the growth of poor nations while allowing wealthy nations to continue their disproportionate levels of carbon pollution." In a separate post, Johnson criticizes those who "dismiss out of hand any concerns that the developing nations might have. The next fifty years could very well be extraordinarily harsh ones for the Global South." On Casaubon's Book, Sharon Astyk wonders why regulation of this agreement would fall to the World Bank, "an institution that [poor nations] have profound and deeply relevant reasons to distrust?" If you need to cool off, head over to A Few Things Ill Considered, where Coby points us to "a fabulous boil down approach to the climate debate."

Links below the fold.

More like this

Kyoto would be replaced with a protocol run by the World Bank, says Guardian.Photograph: Attila Kisbenedek/AFP/Getty Images [updated below - Update II - Update III (Thurs.)] The Guardian newspaper last night published a leaked draft of a climate agreement entitled only Draft 271109 but known as…
The so-called "Danish Text" agreement that was leaked to the Guardian newspaper has resulted in a firestorm of controversy. By far the most hostile reporting about the outrage that poor nations have expressed has been from the Financial Times. FT Commentator Fiona Harvey wrote yesterday that: The…
Sharon Astyk is a writer, teacher and small farmer living in rural upstate New York and now writes at Casaubon's Book, after the character in the George Eliot novel Middlemarch who attempts to put everything in history within a single narrative. She writes and speaks frequently about peak oil,…
There's an old Far Side cartoon, with a split panel, one side showing St. Peter greeting people passing the pearly gates, saying "Welcome to Heaven, here's your harp." On the other panel, the Devil greets folks at the gates of Hell, saying "Welcome to Hell, here's your accordion." My guess is…