Millions set to join Global Climate March

People around the world will take to the streets on the eve of the two-week UN climate talk in Paris to urge world governments to clinch a global deal to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

People around the world will take to the streets on the eve of the two-week UN climate talk in Paris to urge world governments to clinch a global deal to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Published Nov 25, 2015

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Cape Town - People around the world will take to the streets on Sunday on the eve of the two-week UN climate talk in Paris to urge world governments to clinch a global deal to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Around 2 000 rallies have been planned under the banner of the Global Climate March, organised online by a range of organisations, but those scheduled for Paris have been cancelled as public gatherings were banned in the aftermath of the attacks which killed 129 people.

The global march website describes the marches as “our chance to help set an ambitious agenda for the conference: 2015 is on track to be the hottest year in recorded history. Our message: keep fossil fuels in the ground and finance a just transition to 100% renewable energy by 2050.”

In Cape Town the climate march will start outside the Cape Town University of Technology at noon and end at Parliament at 1pm. It is organised by the COP21Climate Action NGO Alliance, which has invited mayor Patricia de Lille, premier Helen Zille and Energy Minister Tina Joemat-Pettersson to receive a memorandum.

Key points in the memorandum are the need for South Africa to increase its inadequate commitments to cutting greenhouse gas emissions, and to move away “more determinedly” from fossil fuels.

It calls on the provincial government to put into practice its own report on climate change by re-evaluating policies related to land-use change, economic development and conservation of coastal, wetland and biodiversity-rich areas.

It calls on the city council to revise its policy on electricity generation from rooftop PV solar installations, which “inhibits” citizens from being able to contribute electricity to the grid.

“As Naomi Klein says: ‘Climate change isn’t an ‘issue’ to add to the list of things to worry about, next to health care and taxes. It is a civilisational wake-up call, telling us that we need to evolve’,” the alliance said.

The climate summit, which begins on Monday and ends on December 11, hopes to map out a global agreement to limit greenhouse gas emission beyond 2020, when the Kyoto Protocol commitment period ends.

So far the voluntary pledges made by countries to cut emissions are not sufficient to keep the average global temperature increase to below 2°C, and would put the world on a path to a 2.7° increase. Climate scientists have labelled anything above 2°C as “dangerous” climate change.

South Africa’s target is to reduce emissions by between 398 and 614 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (mtCO2e) between 2025 and 2030. This is consistent with the pledge South Africa made under the Copenhagen Accord to reduce emissions below “business as usual” by 34 percent in 2020 and 42 percent by 2030.

The online Climate Action Tracker has rated South Africa’s commitment as “inadequate”.

“If most other countries were to follow South Africa’s approach, global warming would exceed 3–4°C,” the tracker website said.

It said South Africa’s emissions under current policies were expected to increase on 1990 levels by 110% by 2020 and 141% by 2025.

Visit http://350.org/global-climate-march. More information on the Cape Town march is available

at [email protected] and the twitter account: @CTClimateMarch

Cape Times

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