And then there were three
The Copenhagen Climate talks were supposed to be the place where the global community finally achieved broad consensus, providing at the very least a political way forward that everyone could rally behind. Conservationists hoped that this new consensus would include strong and unambiguous recognition of the role of nature and wilderness in climate change. I attended the Copenhagen Climate meeting with this message – in the form of the Message from Merida launched at WILD9, the World Wilderness Congress in Mexico one month earlier. The Message from Merida was signed by over 70 NGOs representing many of the largest conservation ... Read MoreAfter Copenhagen – Suspended Animation
Fortunately, none of the 120 or so heads of state in Copenhagen pretended that the climate talks in Copenhagen (the 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change or “COP 15”) were a big success. Any attempt to greenwash these talks would have been a) insulting and b) a clear signal that the political will for a comprehensive, legally binding climate agreement had truly and completely evaporated. Read MoreThe Politicians Take the Stage in Copenhagen
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Report from Copenhagen: Tuvalu & Wilderness
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When it comes to the Convention on Biological Diversity, the U.S. stands with…Somalia and Andorra? Maybe it’s time we join the 192 other countries.
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Offsets, Climate Change & Wilderness
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100 Days over 100 Degrees
The White House recently released an interagency report detailing potential climate impacts in the United States. The "plain language" report entitled "Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States" includes data up to December 2008 and is therefore more up to date than the Fourth Assessment Report compiled by the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The key conclusion of the report is that human induced climate change is already impacting the United States, and that our early actions today are critical to reduce the severity of the changes we will experience in the future. The longer we wait, the ... Read MoreTrail Training at Nalychevo Nature Park
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The Heart of Wild Europe
Climate Change – We Can’t Solve the Problem without Forests
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