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News: ‘COP Climate Congress’ Archive

UC Berkeley Professor Dan Kammen calls for a cost of carbon

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

Video of Professor Dan Kammen speaking before the Copenhagen Climate Congress (March 11, 2009), where he argues that it is more important that some mechanism of carbon cost is quickly implemented than for the world to loose more time debating over which cost mechanism is best (cap and trade, cap and dividend, or a carbon tax).

Copenhagen Climate Conference. Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's concluding remarks

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Copenhagen, Denmark. March 12, 2009


End section of a statement by Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the closing of the Copenhagen Climate Convention.

“A global agreement in Copenhegen, is not just about tackling climate change. It will constitute a new era in multilateral relations. It will be a unique occasion to construct a global solution based on mutual responsibility to act and to assist. People demand action.

Goverment must realize that it is in their interest to act. Government will fall if they fail. Politics must not be in the way of necessary solutions. The world needs better goverment.

So in conclusion, let me repeat the key messages:

  • Urgency. We must come to an agreement here in Copenhagen in December.
  • Direction. We must set a long term target.
  • Action. We must commit to short term efforts.
  • Fairness. The rich must assist the poor.
  • Opportunity. Green growth is the future.
  • Governance. If we fail to act, we fall.

Thank you.”

Copenhagen Climate Conference Begins, 'Climate Change, Global Risks, Challenges and Decisions'

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Copenhagen, Denmark. March 10, 2009

Today a three day conference on climate change begins here in a drizzly and cold, yet still ‘wonderful’ Copenhagen. This event is part of the build up to the pivotal November-December COP-15 meetings which will attempt to draft a new international agreement to replace the Kyoto protocol which is due to expires in 2012.

A major goal of this conference is to present the new scientific evidence and findings since the IPCC report of 2007. Since much of that report was based on work from 2006, there are essentially three years of work to review and then present to the policy makers attending the November-December meetings.

The program of speakers and scientists, including Dr. James E. Hansen of NASA, covers a dense collection of scientific and relevant social topics ranging from ‘cryosphere, instability, seal level rise’, ‘vulnerability in carbon sinks’, to ‘sustainable urban deveolopment’. Promises to be quite an education.

Image: Copenhagen harbor Nyhavn where Hans Christian Anderson once lived.
Copenhagen harbor Nyhavn where Hans Christian Anderson once lived.