[ Environment ]
Greenhouse emissions increasing again
The UNFCCC and the OECD are sounding the alarm on global warming. In the meantime, Greenpeace is setting up offices in Africa and the government of the Maledives wants to save tourism revenues in order to be able to buy land elsewhere should the sea levels rise too high.
[ Environment ]
The OECD is sounding the alarm too. Its recent “Environmental outlook to 2030” points out that long-term effects of climate change are likely to become catastrophic unless emissions are reduced. According to the document, the world economy will double despite investments in emission reductions.
Twenty percent of global emissions stem from the destruction of rainforests. While Brazil’s agrofuel lobby is pushing a law to allow further deforestation, Greenpeace is calling for a financing mechanism to make forest conservation more attractive. Greenpeace recently opened its first African office in Johannesburg and plans to set up further offices in Senegal and the Democratic Republic of Congo, which harbours the world’s fourth biggest rainforest.
In the meantime, Mohamed Nasheed, the president of the Maledives, told the London-based newspaper The Guardian that his country would begin to save tourism revenues. The money would serve to buy new territory elsewhere should that small island country be submerged by rising sea levels.
D+C, 2008/12, Monitor, Page 446





