After seemingly infinite hours of travel, we arrived at the Copenhagen Airport in a state of severe disorientation.
Pictured: Luke & Ashley
Pictured: Jessica, Luke, Tara, Deon, David, Katie, & Ashley
The School of Environmental Studies' delegation to the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen.
Goder morgon, Goder morgon
Både herre och fru
Vi önskar eder alla en fröjdefull jul.
(Good morning, good morning
Both ladies and gentlemen
We wish you all a peaceful Merry Christmas.)
Greetings, we are updating from the Copenhagen Hilton compliments of KLM. If you know someone who works for KLM please give them our thanks for working SO hard to get our group home before the holidays. Remember that the most up to date information can be obtained by calling the school 952-431-8750 as we may not have internet connections along the way.
Basics: We will be arriving in two groups with each group landing at MSP on Wednesday around 10:00 am. Both groups will arrive via London and Toronto (our next hotel stay) with one group routed through Ottawa.
Details: Tara, Ashley, David, Deon, Lucas, B. Johnson
Copenhagen -> London via Scandinavian Airlines SK 503 (departing tomorrow noon)
London -> Toronto via Air Canada AC859 (our overnight flight) arriving Toronto Tuesday 10:25 pm (and spending the night)
Toronto - > MSP via Air Canada AC7941 arriving MSP at 10:37 am and needing a ride home
Details: Jessica, Beth, Beth, Katie, Alex, C. Johnson
Copenhagen -> London via Scandinavian Airlines SK501 (depart tomorrow 7:45 am)
London -> Ottawa via Air Canada AC 889 arriving 2:55 pm (our long flight)
Ottawa -> Toronto via Air Canada AC 459 arriving 5:07 pm (and spending the night)
Toronto -> MSP via Delta DL2509 arriving 10:03 am and needing a ride home
Off we go again.
Just a quick post to let you know that our flight to Amsterdam and the flight from Amsterdam have been cancelled. We are working with KLM to reschedule around a crazy set of flights here in Europe because of a snowstorm the past two days. People are getting to the states from every possible airport.
We are currently stranded in Copenhagen but will know more within the hour. Most reschedules are getting home a day late but it is possible that we may be home later yet. Parents should call the school after noon for the latest update. We are working from both ends to get back in groups. Wish us luck.
Sweden, a primarily secular country, a capitalistic society, an Eden of culture and progress, is where I was honored to learn and live for the past two weeks. At my home stay in Landskrona, Sweden, I had the opportunity to talk to a local college student. Her name is Tanya, and she is a friend of my home stay family. We were able to talk about many issues and benefits in the country of Sweden.
After World War II, Sweden was very welcoming to immigration, but recently it has become more and more of a problem here. Most immigrants come from places such as Iraq, Iran, Albania, and other countries suffering from war. These people all flood to the same neighborhoods in cities, causing some problems with the locals. While most people in Sweden don’t mind the immigrants, others have grown to dislike these new residents. As Tanya put it, people see these ethnic neighborhoods as slums or so called bad areas in town. This causes most people to avoid areas or towns with immigrants and these ethnic neighborhoods. Strife with immigrants has prompted a new political party in Sweden, whose aim is to close the borders to immigrants.
As some parts of the Swedish government are trying to close borders, other parts are a great help to the lives of the Swedish people. I was amazed to hear from Tanya that every part of school is free This means that school lunches are free, school trips are free, and every course fee is free. Some even get paid money each month to go to school. This system is extends to colleges and universities. The government has made school a resource available to each and every citizen to produce a well-educated population. Beyond school, heath care is free and insurance is nonexistent. Women are always paid from the government when on maternity leave from work, and the husband is paid during this time. The negative side to all of these benefits is that residents must pay high taxes and the cost of living is also higher.
This country, like any other, has issues, but it is also a beautiful and progressive place. I believe I can speak for the whole delegation when I say we will all miss this country and culture.
The Germans are the world's leading carbon dioxide neutral country, and they have a thriving business market. If Germany can have carbon neutrality with a thriving business, then why can’t America? During their presentation the German Business for Climate Protection or BDI initiative was open in listing the many ways that they succeeded in accomplishing their carbon neutrality.
1) They created climate friendly coal plants using carbon capture and storage.
2) They created climate friendly transport such as electric trains.
3) They build new houses that reduce carbon dioxide emissions down to nearly zero. Something as common as insulation can reduce a home's carbon emissions.
The German Minister of the Environment expressed his views on how the COP 15 was coming along in short bursts. In one such burst he said, “If we were to try to achieve CO2 neutral business through renewables then we would rely heavily on contraction (a declining global cap which would be set on worldwide carbon emissions) and convergence (moving over time over towards equal per capita carbon emission rights). We need a short term goal or we won't see investment in CDMs or other business technologies. We also need a long term goal to keep the investments rising. I think that an effective protocol would use a ranking of countries that produce carbon products. If we were to do this then China would be the largest CO2 emitter because they export coal, computers, and other technologies. If we were to rely on CDMs then CDMs will have to change because they (CDMs) will not save us as they are now.” Through other remarks made by the German minister it was clear that Germany’s goal for COP 15 is for an agreement in which all countries would adhere to one standard, and to make the protocol larger than what is being proposed right now. He said that COP 15 is a big chance for the United Nations to press forward on carbon emission targets later saying, “We have a moral duty to be successful!”
One of the business speakers made clear that it is in the interest of all nations to be at the forefront of eco-friendly business, because, along with industry, these are the markets that will generate employment in the future.
While attending a plenary meeting (before having to leave because NGOs were not allowed to attend) I was able to hear the multiple comments made by representatives of developing countries. Some striking comments that were made, including those from a majority of the AOSIS (Alliance of Small Island States) that said there is no time like the present to come to an agreement. The most powerful comment came from the representative of Gambia. “Time is not on our side, we have to act now…Gambia is a very vulnerable country and wishes us to act now to save what we can while we still can”. Some of the developing countries wish to stay under the Kyoto protocol because apparently they would still be considered a developed country, thus allowing them to release more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere along with gaining financing and technologies from developed countries. Some statements were also made by Nigeria and Niger concerning the countries in the Saharan region of Africa affected by global climate change, stating their vulnerability along with adaptation or mitigation problems.
Another comment that was met with many curious eyes all pointing to one direction was made by the Syrian Arab representative who proposed that the most effective action would be to implement provisions from the Kyoto protocol, along with a recommendation that resources be mobilized for use around the world. The same representative made clear that he hadn’t heard anyone speak of land degradation, or desertification.
A speaker representing the Climate Action Network (over 500 NGO’s) decided to make a short speech. She said, “The survival of our race as people is non- negotiable we need to accept the mark as the industrialized age by saving our species not by killing it… now will you emerge as heroes, as people who will do something or no?” No statement made as much of a ruckus as a statement made by Amira Karim, a woman from Singapore representing the YOUNGO (Youth Non-governmental Organizations) constituency. “This is not the time to say ‘yes we can’ it is the time to say ‘yes we can, yes we must, yes we will’!”
Today, myself and the other SESEF delegates joined the Swedish students in a "climate smart" (low carbon) potluck lunch hosted by our host high school in Landskrona Sweden, which is the city where we are living for the duration of the confrence. The participants were divided into groups composed of students from both schools, and each group was asked to prepare a traditional Swedish Christmas dish for the fifty or so people who attended the event. The goal of the potluck was to create the most carbon efficient and environmentally friendly meal. Many groups focused on foods packaged in recyclable material as well as foods that were produced near the place where they were put on the market, so as to support the local economy and reduce the amount of carbon that entered the atmosphere during the transportation process. My own group and serval others chose to walk to the store where they purchased the food and carried our food in reusable cloth bags to avoid the use of paper and plastic bags. One group was especially creative and cooked their food on a stove that had already been preheated during the preparation of an entirely different meal, in order to avoid wasting energy to preheat another stove. The most Carbon efficient meal was served cold and emitted no carbon in the preparation process. This idea of climate smart, small carbon footprint eating fits right in with the Swedish lifestyle. Things such as energy efficient, and in some cases energy free heating and cool methods, as well as the use of public transportation and healthy low carbon footprint transportation such as walking and biking have all been adopted by the average Swedish household. Climate smart living methods are also seen everywhere here in Copenhagen as well, particularly at the Bella Center, the official site of the climate conference. Everywhere I go in this massive center a recycling system is in sight, the cafes here serve minimally packaged food that appeals to every ethnicity and lifestyle in order to encourage the people to eat at the conference center to avoid using energy for transportation off site for meals. While the energy use here is still great, everyone is still doing their part to offset the carbon footprint of the conference.
1. For only being at the Conference for 5 hours today, and having to wait outside for the first hour, today was a pretty amazing day. Our day began, like I said, outside in 0° C weather, and of course this was the day I decided to wear a skirt. The line stretched on for a mile, and seemed to consist of all of the lines that we had waited in on this trip combined. But throughout the hour-long wait, we spoke to an extremely interesting woman, Lisa Beal, the director of Environment and Construction Policy at Interstate Natural Gas Association of America. This was her twelfth COP; she had been attending since Kyoto. (Interview Inventory coming soon)
2. When we finally made it through security, Tara and I scurried off to a side event about “renewing the face of the earth,” in which faith-based approaches to climate justice were discussed by a panel representing the World Council of Churches and Caritas Internationalis.
3. The third and final happening of my day at the Conference was the most thrilling, but since a picture is worth a thousand words…
Three conclusions:
1. The Greenland Ice Sheet is losing ice mass and the glaciers are discharging more ice. The Jakobshavn Isbræ has retreated 15 kilometres in the past 8 years.
2. Recent projections of global sea level rise, including contributions from the Greenland Ice Sheet and other land‐based ice and thermal expansion of the oceans, indicate that a global sea level rise of around 1 m may occur within this century. Scientists suggest that beyond a certain point the Ice Sheet may enter an ‘irreversible’ destabilization leading to complete melting.
3. Climate change could bring new business opportunities to Greenland, but also hamper traditional subsistence activities.
Stay tuned for more Gore (he`s speaking at the Conference again tomorrow, so maybe we can reschedule our lunch date?)