Reactions to story from TreeHugger
To Cut or Not to Cut? That's the G8 Question..
http://www.treehugger.com/ files/ 2008/ 07/ toyako-g8-summit.php
It's that time of year again, and with the official G8 Hokkaido Toyako Summit finally getting under way here in Japan next week, the question on everybody's lips is, "will the G8 see a formal commitment to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions cuts?" The G8 Summit is the source of no end of speculation on this policy or that policy, but with news items like such as MSNBC's piece on the possibility of an ice-free arctic by the end of this summer, climate change is looming large on everyone's lips, and t...
Reactions / posts that link to this post
-
The G8 Summit: Cutting Through the Spin
http://green.vedvarende-energi.dk/treehugger/the-g8-summit-c...Image from gabemac Given the Bush administration's involvement -- or "non"-involvement, if you prefer -- it was no big surprise to see the latest G8 summit fail to make any real progress on the issue of GHG emission targets. Sure, Japanese Prime Minister Fukuda got the participants to "commit" to a 50% cut by 2050 (a target even President Bush agreed to seriously consider). And, yes, it may be that this pledge will help pave the way for a more significant breakthrough at the UN's climate summit in Copenhagen next year. In m...
-
A not so great G8
http://blog.greens.org.nz/2008/07/07/a-not-so-great-g8/The G8 is meeting again, this time in Japan, and deciding what it wants to see happening in the world over the next few months. As a concept the G8 always irritates me irrationally. It’s kind of like the school yard bullies getting together and deciding a school’s lunch distribution policy. Yes, they might have the power to enforce their decrees, being the 8 wealthiest countries, but that hardly means they are in the best position to come to an impartial solution. On the other hand, there’s nothing wrong with a group of democratic leaders of powerful governments coming together and devising a strategy on working together for common goals. It’s just a shame that the thing that they have on common and that is motivating them to work together is wealth and power, rather than shared ideals. Every big summit of this nature seems to have a big theme that drives momentum at the summit. Some years it is one of the leaders’ choosing and others it comes from grass roots movements of people (take for instance the Gleneagles aid pledge). Treehugger has a brief plea that the theme this time will include a formal commitment to cut greenhouse gas emissions, but it doesn’t seem very hopeful: While the official G8 Hokkaido Toyako Summit website has surprisingly little real information in English related to GHG emissions, there is a little presentation about the wonders of nuclear energy. Not suprisingly, the powers that be still seem to be a little out of touch with the opinions of the little people. However, they do have a “Carbon Offsetter’S-MART” page on the site which allows those visiting the Summit to offset their carbon emissions. The Guardian editorial describes this year’s theme as a string of ‘f’ words: food, fuel and finance. (It sounds a lot like New Zealand’s election issues!) At a time when the world economy could do with leadership, it is unlikely to get it. A similar drift is likely to beset those recent G8 priorities of aid and climate change. The all-important summit agreement currently in draft does not even mention the aid figures pledged at Gleneagles. That is a disgraceful backtracking on previously cast-iron promises and must be made good. Almost as little could happen on climate change; at most a fund for green technology in poor countries. This G8 shows every sign of being summed up by a fourth F-word: feeble. Meanwhile the Guardian’s economics editor gets some even stronger language out of the dictionary: If the G8 was doing its job properly, this week’s communique would be rather shorter than usual. It would say the world is about to be battered by a triple crunch of a credit-fuelled financial crisis, galloping climate change and - even in the absence of speculation - a long-term increase in energy prices caused by the imminence of peak oil. We’ll wait to see. I’ve only covered some of the pessimistic views but that’s probably because I think the G8 could achieve so much more than the limited goals it always sets itself.
More rising blog posts
More rising news stories
-
Entertainment »
Adorably Toothsome Twosomes -
Business »
Treasury Plans Rescue For Fannie and Freddie -
Lifestyle »
Beijing Welcomes The Disabled as China Never Has -
Politics »
Philip Morris Parent Stalking UST -
Sports »
Weis worried about unexpected vs. San Diego St. -
Technology »
McCain says he's tested, ready for nation's highest office - USATODAY.com
Recent posts from TreeHugger
-
Our Oceans Are Dying and We're At Fault
3 hours ago -
Seen in New York: MTA Touts Green Credentials
5 hours ago -
Sustainable Schoolyard Exhibit at US Botanic Garden
7 hours ago