Even as the Donald Trump Administration in the US tries to eliminate government programmes and policies to address climate change, a recent national survey by the George Mason University’s Centre for Climate Change Communication finds that the number of Americans “very worried” about global warming has reached a record high (22%) since first measured in 2008. A majority of Americans (63%) say they are “very” or “somewhat” worried about the issue.
Donald Trump, US president
Likewise, Americans increasingly view global warming as a threat. Since Spring 2015, more Americans think it will harm them personally (50%, +14 points), their own family (54%, +13 points), people in the U.S. (67%, +18 points), people in developing countries (71%, +18 points), and future generations (75%, +12 points).
Other key findings include:
Seven in 10 Americans (71%) think global warming is happening, an increase of 8 percentage points since March 2015. By contrast, only about one in eight Americans (13%) think global warming is not happening. Americans who think global warming is happening outnumber those who think it is not by more than five to one.
Nearly two in three Americans (64%) think global warming is affecting weather in the United States, and one in three think weather is being affected “a lot” (33%), an increase of 8 percentage points since May 2017.
A majority of Americans think global warming made several extreme events in 2017 worse, including the heat waves in California (55%) and Arizona (51%), hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria (54%), and wildfires in the western US (52%).
More than four in 10 Americans (44%) say they have personally experienced the effects of global warming, an increase of 13 percentage points since March 2015.
Four in 10 Americans (42%) think people in the United States are being harmed by global warming “right now”, an increase of 10 percentage points since March 2015.
The report also finds more Americans saying global warming is personally important to them and that they discuss the issue more often with their friends and families.
Rural and vulnerable populations in developing countries could miss out on multiple wide-ranging benefits if they are forced to wait years, or even decades, to get access to electricity through first-ever power from the grid instead of through quicker to deploy decentralised renewable energy solutions, according to a report announced by Sustainable Energy for All (SEforALL) and Power for All on Thursday, November 16, 2017.
Rachel Kyte, CEO and Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Sustainable Energy for All (SE4ALL)
The “Why Wait? Seizing the Energy Access Dividend” report presents a first-of-its-kind approach to developing a framework for understanding and quantifying the financial, educational and environmental dividends for households through accelerated access to decentralised electricity, such as solar home systems and clean energy mini-grids.
The report indicates that households in Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Kenya – which were used as report case studies – can save hundreds of dollars, equivalent to the average annual income of between 61,800 and 406,000 people depending on the country and timeframe to deliver universal access, by bringing electricity access forward through use of solar to power household services like lighting and mobile-phone charging instead of kerosene or costly external phone-charging services.
Another benefit from decentralised services is more time for studying – equivalent to the time spent in school each year of between 142,000 and two million students depending on the country and timeframe to deliver universal access.
Announced at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP23) in Bonn, the data also shows significant black carbon emission reductions across the three countries – as much as 330 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent emissions, or roughly the emissions from 60 million passenger vehicles driven for one year– due to reduced kerosene use.
Why Wait? uses a framework for estimating the dividends of electricity access that is designed to help government leaders and other decision-makers assess the comparative advantages of different electrification options and services – ranging from more limited Tier 1 electricity service (a few hours of power a day) to more robust and costly Tiers 4 and 5 – to achieve Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 7 of universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all by 2030.
In an apparent response to the report, the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA) in collaboration with the Big Shift Campaign, organised a protest against the financing of fossil fuels on the sidelines of the COP23 climate talks in Bonn, Germany.
Campaigners at the event offered delegates the chance to put chocolate coins into either a green piggy bank representing green energy, or a brown piggy bank representing fossil fuels. PACJA’s Augustine Njamshi decried the state of energy poverty in Africa but vowed that civil society groups will frustrate attempts at pushing dirty energy solutions in Africa.
“For us in Africa, there are only two solutions to energy deficit, reneweable energy and renewable energy, nothing more,” Njamshi added.
Speaking on the report, Rachel Kyte, Special Representative to the UN Secretary-General and CEO, Sustainable Energy for All, said: “Decision makers are faced with competing priorities against finite resources. ‘Why Wait?’ provides powerful evidence on the development gains that can be achieved by focusing on integrated energy strategies that advance energy access. Household savings and hours of study time that are won because of access to energy.
“Denying those gains by not prioritising solutions to energy access risks holding back whole generation decentralised renewable energy as an attractive option for closing the energy access gap quickly, especially for remote rural areas. This work shows it can bring prosperity and education outcomes as well as other services energy provides.”
“Default approaches to electrification that rely on slow, expensive, fossil-fuel-powered centralised generation are out of date and out of time,” said Kristina Skierka, CEO of Power for All. “The Energy Access Dividend challenges business-as-usual by valuing ‘time to access’ – for the first time specifying the opportunity cost of large-scale projects that may never reach the 1 billion people around the world who still have to live without the benefits of electricity. Properly supported, decentralised renewable energy can deliver socio-economic dividends faster and at a lower cost.”
The report, produced in partnership with the Overseas Development Institute, comes just 12 years ahead of global energy goal deadlines, as many countries remain behind schedule in getting there. Just over one billion people are still living without electricity, according to the latest Global Tracking Framework report issued in May.
Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Kenya were chosen as case studies in the report due to their wide-ranging differences in terms of income levels, demographics and electrification rates. The countries also have significant energy access gaps, accounting for more than 180 million of the one billion people still living without power.
High level officials from Pacific Islands have called for a reining in of fossil fuel production in order to stay within the climate limits agreed to in Paris. They were joined in their call by civil society, indigenous, and academic voices.
Anote Tong, President of Kiribati. Photo credit: UN / Jean-Marc Ferré
Potential carbon emissions from the oil, gas, and coal present in the world’s currently operating fields and mines would take us beyond 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius of warming. For the world to stay within the Paris climate limits, new fossil fuel production must be halted. This requires stopping exploration for, and expansion of, new reserves and a managed decline and just transition away from fossil fuel production starting with wealthy countries and states who have the means to act first and fastest.
These calls echo the asks of the Lofoten Declaration, which affirms that it is the urgent responsibility and moral obligation of wealthy fossil fuel producers to lead in these efforts. The Lofoten Declaration has been signed by 500 organisations globally and was signed in Bonn, Germany on Wednesday, November 15, 2017 by Francois Martel, Pacific Islands Development Forum.
Anote Tong, President of Kiribati and Francois Martel, Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Development Forum formally signed the Lofoten Declaration at the event.
President Anote Tong of Kiribati said: “Fossil fuels will destroy our home. Two Degrees will destroy our home.”
Francois Martel, Secretary General, The Pacific Islands Development Forum: “I have the mandate from the Pacific Leaders to continue to fight for this ambitious and urgent work to reduce emissions globally. I am very please to declare that the Pacific Islands Development Forum will be signing the Lofoten Declaration today and to join 500 like minded organisations who believe in the urgency of this effort.”
Patricia Gualinga, Leader of the Kichwa people of Sarayaku: “For nearly 20 years, our people have been resisting oil development and extraction in our rainforest home in the Ecuadorian Amazon. We have taken our fight all the way to international courts and won. We continue to resist new oil extraction and promote solutions to protect our living forests. We must stand together to keep oil in the ground from the Amazon to the Arctic to protect our climate and our future generations.”
Hannah McKinnon, Director, Energy Futures and Transitions, Oil Change International: “Achieving the Paris goals requires stopping exploration for, and expansion of, new reserves, and a managed decline and just transition away from fossil fuel production starting with those who have the means to act first and fastest.”
Peter Erickson, Senior Scientist, Stockholm Environment Institute: “The ambition of the Paris goals is often framed as an emissions gap. But there is also a production gap, in which countries are planning to produce way more fossil fuels than needed under a 2-degree limit. Our paper shows how they could close this gap.”
Berit Kristoffersen, Associate Professor, University of Tromso: “Norway is a good example of a country that has a historic responsibility and the economic capacity to be a leader on a managed decline. Norway and other wealthy countries should act according the to the Lofoten declaration and recognise that new exploration is inconsistent and no longer acceptable if we are to stay within the limits of the carbon budget.”
Ambassador Seyni Nafo, Chair of the African Group of climate change negotiators: “Achieving 1.5C will require a managed decline in fossil fuels and a rapid shift to renewable energy. Africa is leading the way through the Africa Renewable Energy Initiative and will work with all countries through the 2018 Talanoa Facilitative Dialogue on ways to scale up ambition and make the Paris goals a reality.
Ambassador Colin Beck, Solomon Islands: “There are some things best left under ground. Fossil fuels is one of them. There should be no new expansion of fossil fuels as this threatens our efforts to put the world onto a pathway to limit warming below 1.5C, through our endeavours at the UNFCCC to heal the health of the planet.”
Mohamed Adow, International Climate Lead, Christian Aid: “We need to make a swift global transition away from dirty energy and towards renewables. It is vital that governments should make sure they take appropriate steps to end fossil fuel production and decarbonise their economies in time to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. The Talanoa Dialogue needs to be the space to consider what’s needed to help countries take advantage of the energy opportunities of the future. This must lead them to ratchet up their Paris Agreement pledges – which is the only way the Paris Agreement’s goals will be met.”
The Kyoto Protocol, the first international treaty to cut greenhouse gas emissions and which celebrates its 20th anniversary next month, remains an essential vehicle for developed countries to make more rapid and urgent cuts in their emissions, UN Secretary General António Guterres said on Wednesday, November 15, 2017.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres. Photo credit: UN Photo/ Kim Haughton
His message to leaders and delegates at the high-level opening of the COP23 UN Climate Change Conference in Bonn, Germany was backed up in the most concrete way by Belgium, Sweden, Germany and Spain, who became the latest countries to ratify the Doha Amendment, which establishes the second commitment period of action under the Protocol.
“In this 20th anniversary year of the adoption of the Kyoto Protocol and the 25th anniversary of the adoption of the Climate Change Convention, I call on all relevant nations that have not yet done so to ratify the Doha Amendment,” said Mr Guterres.
The Protocol, since its adoption at COP3 on December 11, 1997, has become a beacon of climate action and an inspiring precursor to the 2015 Paris Climate Change Agreement, because it demonstrated that international climate change agreements not only work but can significantly exceed expectations in meeting their objectives.
The world is not yet on track to meet the central goal of the 2015 Paris Agreement – to limit the global average temperature rise to well below 2 degrees Celsius and as close as possible to 1.5 degrees.
“The latest UN Environment Programme Emissions Gap Report shows that current pledges will only deliver a third of what is needed … the window of opportunity to meet the 2 degree target may close in 20 years or less. And we may have only five years to bend the emissions curve towards 1.5 degrees. We need at least a further 25 per cent cut in global emissions by 2020,” said Mr Guterres.
The Doha Amendment covers this pre-2020 period, which is critical in the overall effort to get on track to the Paris goal. To date, 88 Parties have accepted the Amendment. To enter Doha into force requires 144 of the 192 parties to the Kyoto Protocol.
To celebrate the anniversary of the Kyoto Protocol and to encourage the ratification of Doha by more Parties, UN Climate Change is launching a social media campaign towards the December 11 anniversary asking people to send messages of support.
People can take selfies of themselves, friends or family holding up signs saying “I Love the Kyoto Protocol”, and post these images on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, with the hashtag #ILoveKyotoProtocol. We will select the best and share them on our own social media platforms.
“In 1997, we achieved a landmark agreement with the Kyoto Protocol, with its measurable reduction targets. It is the 20th anniversary of that agreement next month and is something worth recognising today,” added President of COP 23 and Prime Minister of Fiji Frank Bainimarama.
The Protocol, which set emission cut commitments by developed countries, was adopted on December 11, 1997 in Kyoto, Japan and came into force on February 16, 2005.
During its first commitment period, from 2008 to 2012, 37 industrialised countries and the European Community, which as an organisation is also a Party to the Climate Change Convention, agreed to take a leading role in climate action by reducing their emissions to an average of just over five percent against 1990 levels.
In the end, they reduced them by well over 20 per cent.
“I am certain that the Kyoto Protocol was central to this exceptional result. Kyoto was behind the inspiration, innovation and sheer economic sense of renewable energy, energy efficiency, new technology, pollution reduction and new carbon markets which emerged in developed countries in this period and then began to pick up pace,” said Patricia Espinosa, UN Climate Change Executive Secretary.
“Thanks to Kyoto, we are not starting from scratch and we know we have solutions to meet the Paris goal, but only if we act now further, faster and together, led by developed nation emission cuts,” she said.
Several African countries have experimented with GMOs with limited success, for example Bt cotton in Burkina Faso
The Parliament of Uganda recently passed the National Biosafety Act 2017
The Parliament of Uganda recently passed the National Biosafety Act 2017. The law is intended to provide a legal and regulatory framework for the safe development and application of “biotechnology”, not “Biosafety”, in the country.
The advancement of modern biotechnology has been popularised as a powerful tool in alleviating poverty and enhancing food security. Uganda is a signatory to the Cartagena Protocol which mandates parties to ensure an adequate level of protection in the field of safe transfer, handling and use of living modified organisms resulting from biotechnology.
Over the years, Uganda has been progressively promoting the adoption of genetically modified (GM) varieties. A number of confined field trials have been conducted: for example, genetically modified (GM) bananas are being tested for resistance to banana bacterial wilt, black sigatoka as well as biofortifying banana with micronutrients with iron and vitamin A.
Other crops include genetically modified (GM) cassava against cassava brown streak, genetically modified (GM) maize for tolerance in drought conditions and cotton against bollworm among, others. Proponents of biotechnology in agriculture argue that genetically modified (GM) crops can potentially improve yields and livelihoods, and transform the agriculture sector hence alleviating food shortages and facilitating economic development.
Uganda’s population is estimated to approach 40 million by 2020, with an estimated 70% below the age of 30. It is argued, therefore, that applying science, technology and innovation will solve problems of food shortages, unemployment and wealth for the growing population. Biotechnology has been presented as genetic quick fix that can solve Uganda’s food insecurity problems.
This poses a number of questions: 1) Can Biotechnology overcome problems of food access, food shortages to farmers in Uganda? 2) Can the National “Biosafety” Act regulate GMOs effectively? Answering these questions requires a focused debate on the potential benefits and risks of applying genetic engineering and genetic modification in Uganda’s agriculture sector.
For one, why was it not named National GMOs Act in line with its content? The potential benefits of genetic modification should not divert our attention from the real concerns about the risks of adopting this component of biotechnology. The introduction of GMOs in agriculture hinders farmers from saving seeds from harvest for replanting the following season.
This is because the seeds are patented. Patenting ensures that the developers of the seed recoup their time and investment in developing these varieties. Traditionally, Ugandan farmers have shared and saved seed over generations. What will happen with the commercialisation of genetically modified seeds? It will be disaster for them, for indigenous seed varieties will be contaminated, eventually lost to GM/Seed companies. GMO seeds are sufficiently expensive compared to indigenous seeds and this will affect livelihood of small scale farmers: the result will be food insecurity.
Investing in GMO seed presents a significant financial risk for many small scale farmers especially with climate change, volatility of markets, access to markets among others. Farmers will be forced to sell all or part of their harvests to cover input costs related to buying seeds – perpetually.
Secondly, the National Biosafety Act that was passed recently is still lacking with regard to biosafety. It is not about “Biosafety” as is known in scientific structures and processes, but mainly GMOs in agriculture. The bill does not take cognisance of the Precautionary Principle as enshrined in the Cartagena Protocol.
This principle basically means there should be an adequate level of protection in the use of living modified organisms resulting from biotechnology/genetic engineering taking into account risks to human health.
Our law does not mention this principle anywhere. Abandoning this principle is intended to reduce the liability of multinational companies with regard to the incalculable harm caused to small scale farmers, the environment, and public health.
With regard to liability and redress mechanisms for the farmers the Act is inadequate: while the law provides for the issuance of a restoration order to a person responsible for an activity that causes damage by unintentional release of GMOs, it does not specifically address by whom liability will be borne whether jointly or severally and does not attach liability to developers of GMO or product.
The Bill is also silent on compensation mechanisms for harm caused to the environment or costs of reinstatement, rehabilitation measures that have been incurred. The liability and redress section has been vaguely defined, possibly intended to protect multinational companies that will be promoting their technologies here.
I implore the President to insist that the strict liability principle should be inserted in our law so that whoever introduces GMOs shall be strictly liable for damage caused. Incorporating this principle operationalizes the precautionary principle, which is a key tenet of the Cartagena Protocol.
In regulating GMOs, elaborate risk assessment management provisions should be in place for the approval of genetically modified crops. Risk Assessment is done to determine the impacts and risks posed by GMO to the environment, health and biological diversity. Our law does not contain a specific provision on the requirement for socioeconomic assessment.
The socioeconomic assessment would include the ethical and social impact of the process to local populations concerned, traditional market and export earnings, health, ethical and moral considerations, actual and economic value of traditional species likely to be affected by the introduction of genetically modified crops, among others.
While it has been promised that regulations will be developed to incorporate issues on socioeconomic risks: this is a critical issue that should be incorporated in the law and should not be relegated to the regulations!
The promotion of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) has been touted as a solution to the food security challenge in Uganda. However, as pointed out it presents significant challenges to small scale farmers. It should be emphasised that genetically modified seeds are not a magic wand that will restore poverty, hunger with a regime of abundance.
Several African countries have experimented with GMOs with limited success for example Bt cotton in Burkina Faso where production results from farmers cultivating GM cotton were of a lower quality compared to conventional varieties. Cotton companies decided not to supply Bt cotton seeds which ended GM cotton production in the country.
Our Act is lacking in several respects and does not safeguard farmers who, at the end of the day, are the end-users of these technologies. The government should concentrate on supporting farmers’ revival of seed saving practices. Community gene banks should be established at local levels to safeguard our indigenous seeds. We need to deal with structural issues facing the agriculture sector before commercialisation of GMOs: for example, farmers should be equipped with irrigation equipment, tractors, access to markets, access to good quality indigenous seeds and fertilisers.
It is my considered opinion that Uganda should tread carefully on GMOs: we need a strong legal and institutional framework to protect Ugandans from the myriad sociopolitical, environmental, public health, biosecurity, and socioeconomic hazards associated with GMOs.
By By Barbara Ntambirweki (Research Fellow at the Advocates Coalition for Development and Environment)
As the sensitisation on biotechnology as another option for enhancing agricultural productivity gains ground among Ghanaian farmers, scientists are faced with one problem – how to immediately meet the growing demand for seeds.
U.S. Embassy’s Deputy Chief of Mission (DCM), Melinda Tabler-Stone, addressing the opening session of the Forum for Women in Science. She is flanked to her immediate left by Dr. Rose Gidado, Assistant Director of Nigeria’s National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA) and to her right is Dr. Walter Alhassan, a Senior Advisor to the Ghana Programme for Biosafety Systems (PBS)
In various sensitisation workshops on biotechnology-related issues that have been held recently with mixed stakeholders in many parts of the country, farmers have asked where they could get the seeds to buy. The recent farmer enquiry was at the Women in Science forum organised by the United States (U.S.) Embassy and held on Thursday, November 2, 2017, at the Centre for African Wetlands, University of Ghana, Legon, Accra.
Biotechnology is defined as the scientific process through which scientists change the genes of plants and animals by introducing into them desirable genes from other related species. The produce or products of this process are known as genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
In agriculture, biotechnologically produced seeds are said to have the ability to resist drought, diseases and pests. They also yield produce that are much more nutritionally fortified. But the process and produce of biotechnology is dismissed by opponents to the technology, as unethical and unsafe for human consumption due to perceived health risks.
Scientists and researchers involved in agricultural biotechnology say its produce are some of the safest and best food crops. This is because GMO seed production involves rigorous long term scientific processes that ascertain the authenticity of seeds produced.
Currently, the process for GMO seeds in Ghana is still at the field trial stage in nitrogen-use efficient, water use efficient and salt tolerant (NEWEST) rice; cowpea; and sweet potatoes. Once the final stages are completed, the seeds will be released to farmers.
Over 80 scientists, researchers, government representatives and farmers participated in the Accra forum, which was facilitated by African women involved in agricultural research, policy making and communication. They discussed innovations in agriculture and biotechnology in Ghana and in Sub-Saharan Africa, and agreed that biotechnology was crucial to addressing problems plaguing the agricultural sector and ensuring food security.
The U.S. Embassy’s Deputy Chief of Mission (DCM), Melinda Tabler-Stone, addressed the opening session. She expressed concern about the state of agriculture in Ghana, noting that though “agriculture remains the main driver for poverty reduction, particularly in Ghana’s three northern regions … farmers remain challenged by low productivity, poor soils, and changing rain patterns.”
Madam Tabler-Stone said over one million Ghanaians suffer food insecurity and the pressures were worsening as a result of rapid population growth. She observed that the situation, “calls for the implementation of effective and innovative solutions in Ghana’s agricultural sector.”
“Real transformation will require new approaches and efficiencies. The use of science and technology, including biotechnology, can be an invaluable tool,” Madam Tabler-Stone said. Attesting to the potential of biotechnology to enhance agricultural productivity, she stated, “We know this because agricultural biotechnology has greatly improved crop efficiency and production in the United States, Brazil, and Argentina among other nations.”
She further attested that “since the first biotechnology-derived crops were commercialized in the 1990s, they have been widely adopted in the U.S. Today, most of our corn, cotton, soybeans, canola, and sugar beets are produced using genetically engineered varieties. These innovations have saved farmers time, reduced insecticide use, protected crops from disease, and enabled the use of less toxic herbicides. New advances in science continue to expand options for farmers, while at the same time promoting the health of consumers.”
Madam Tabler-Stone stressed that “these innovations have tremendous potential in Africa as well, and can play a role in helping to transform the agricultural sector from low productivity to a real driver of economic development and improved food security.”
She highlighted the gains that Ghana could make by adopting agricultural biotechnology. “Ghana will have an opportunity to transform itself from an importer of food into an exporter to feed itself and the region through wise cultivation of its fertile soils. Millions can be lifted out of poverty, should we persevere in advancing this vision.”
Madam Tabler-Stone commended President Akufo-Addo’s vision of agriculture as a key component of his national economic strategy for job creation through the “Planting for Food and Jobs” programme.
The DCM also bemoaned the situation in which African women scientists were woefully under-represented in positions of leadership, even though they have a critical role to play in Africa’s development.
She said the promotion of women and girls empowerment was a key foreign policy priority for the U.S. To this end, the areas of focus included, “advancing their education in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics,” she added.
Madam Tabler-Stone described the forum as a gathering that underscored the U.S. Embassy’s “commitment to address gender imbalances and empower young women with the knowledge to be competitive for success against their male counterparts.”
In her presentation, the Assistant Director of the National Biotechnology Development Agency (NBDA) in Nigeria, Dr. Rose Gidado, underscored the need for Africa and the West African sub-regions to adopt agricultural biotechnology. She said an increasing population that must be fed; high use of chemicals to enhance yields; decreasing water for agriculture; food security risk; prevalence of micronutrient deficiencies in developing countries were challenges requiring urgent attention.
Dr. Gidado, who is also the Country Coordinator for the Nigerian Chapter of the Open Forum on Agriculture Biotechnology (OFAB) in Africa, explained that these challenges have placed high demand on Africa’s agriculture and food system. She stated, “Now more than ever, there is need to grow more food with less land and less water per person, need for more nutritious and safe food, need to reduce the amount of waste and losses, and need to move up the value chain production.”
She urged Africa and the West African sub-regions to adopt agriculture biotechnology because “they are easy to cultivate, don’t require harsh chemicals, are environmentally friendly, and use less energy. Modern biotechnology provides us with tools for trait improvements in crop germplasm for increased grain yields in ways compatible to human and environment welfare.”
Dr. Gidado emphasised that it was important for African farmers and consumers of crop products, “to be given an opportunity to benefit from increased opportunities, productivity, and efficiency and perhaps costs of food by having GMO crops commercialised in African countries.”
Expressing similar views, an Associate Professor of the College of Science and Technology of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Dr. Marian Quain, said, “Sub-Saharan Africa needs substantial investment in cutting edge technologies and human resource development.”
She made a case for the continent to embrace agricultural biotechnology and said in such a situation, “farmers are using less pesticides or using less toxic ones, reducing harm to water supplies and workers’ health, and allowing the return of beneficial insects to the fields … and the ultimate aim to alleviate poverty, hunger and malnutrition in the Sub-Saharan region.”
Dr. Ouain literary walked participants through the science of biotechnology, saying that genetic engineering “allows for the transfer of a greater variety of genetic information in a more precise manner. These genes are very specific and allow the plant to precisely express the desired trait.”
On the issue of some of the concerns raised in relation to gene flow and pest resistance, she explained that these have been addressed by new techniques of genetic engineering. Dr. Quain said measures have been put in place to ensure the safety of GMO products. “Scientists call for a cautious case-by-case assessment of each product or process prior to its release in order to address legitimate safety concerns.”
She concluded on the note that biotechnology was certainly the way for Africa and the West African sub-regions to go. Dr. Ouain also admitted that “genetic engineering is an expensive process, requiring specialized expertise, and is not a panacea for all our agriculture problems,” adding, “it should be utlised when all other options have failed.”
African groups participating in the 23rd Session of the Conference of the Parties (COP23) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) have expressed their frustrations over the seemingly endless trail of negotiations.
Roger Nkodo Dang (MP), President of the Pan African Parliament (PAP)
Speaking at a press conference on the side-lines of the ongoing climate talks, leaders of the Pan African Parliament (PAP) and the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA) expressed dismay over the slow progress of negotiations and inertia on the part of developed country parties.
“Time is up for negotiations,” Roger Nkodo Dang (MP), President of the Pan African Parliament (PAP) said.
“For 21 years we have negotiated, and now we have the Paris Agreement. There is nothing more to negotiate, its time to implement the Paris Agreement,” Nkodo Dang added. According to the Chair of the Pan African Parliament committee on Rural Economy and Agriculture, Jacqueline Amogine, “climate change in Africa has a gender imperative as women are the most affected when there is no food on the table and no water to drink.”
“If the COP must remain relevant, it has to move from talk to action especially on the implementation of the key aspects of the Paris Agreement,” Amogine said.
Evaluating the progress after one week of negotiations, the coalition of African civil society groups, under the aegis of Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA), expressed their concern over the little progress which brackets many issues regarding the means of implementation of the Paris Agreement.
“We are worried that the aspect of differentiation relating to climate finance is vanishing in the negotiations so far,” PACJA’s Mithika Mwenda said.
“We are concerned about the fulfilment of the pre-2020 finance commitment on the provision of $100 billion per year up to 2020 and we urge the COP Presidency to initiate talks of the new finance goal here in Bonn to show urgency of the matter,” the PACJA Secretary General added.
African groups also expressed their strong support for adaptation to serve the Paris Agreement and they warned that the current discussions on the agenda should not be dragged to next year.
“The agreement should be concluded here at the COP23 and parties should maintain the current governance structure as well as ensure sustainability of funding sources,” the groups added.
Meanwhile, frustrated NGOs are again thinking of suing the governments of rich nations over their inaction in combatting climate change-induced loss and damage.
An abiding nightmare of many developed country governments, the thirdpole.net says, is a slew of lawsuits seeking compensation in the International Court of Justice, as these countries have been responsible for most of the build up of greenhouses gases in the atmosphere.
This is why developed country delegations pushed for legal liability to be removed from the Paris Agreement at the UN climate talks two years ago. The trade-off was that rich nations would “enable action and provide support to developing countries” to deal with the loss and damage.
Harjeet Singh, the global lead on climate change at ActionAid, said: “There has been hardly any work on this”. An international mechanism to work on the issue of loss and damage – called the Warsaw International Mechanism – was set up at the 2013 climate summit in Poland.
Minister of State for Environment, Ibrahim Usman Jibril, meets the Executive Secretary of the UNCCD, Monique Barbut, on addressing desertification in Nigeria though collaborative partnershipMinister of State for Environment, Ibrahim Usman Jibril, with H.E Mary Robinson, former Presient of IrelandDirector, Department of Climate Change, Dr Peter Tarfa, representing Nigeria at the High Level Assembly of Climate and Clean Air CoalitionDeputy Director, Department of Climate Change, Mrs Halima Bawa-Bwari, speaking at the IUCN side-event on Bonn Challenge on Restoration of Degraded Forests and LandMinister of State for Environment, Ibrahim Usman Jibril, receives representatives of Conservation International and HURIDAC at the country Delegation Office, where ongoing Projects in Nigeria were discussedR-L: Director, Department of Climate Change, Dr Peter Tarfa; Director General, National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA), Dr Lawrence Chidi Anukam; Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman Adamu; and Deputy Director/Head of Climate Change Unit, Ministry of Water Resources, Segun BabarindeL-R: Deputy Director, National Population Commission, Aisha Abdul-Azeez Adamu; Director, Department of Climate Change, Dr Peter Tarfa; Federal Commissioner/Chairperson, Climate Change Unit, National Population Commission, Patricia Iyanya Kupchi; and Focal Person, Climate Change, National Population Commission, Dr Jennifer SpiffDirector, Environmental Quality Control, National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA), Simon B. Joshua; with Federal Commissioner/Chairperson, Climate Change Unit, National Population Commission, Patricia Iyanya KupchiNational Project Coordinator, Nigeria Erosion and Watershed Management Project (NEWMAP), Salisu Dahiru
Evicted residents of Otodo Gbame community on Wednesday, November 15, 2017 stormed the Lagos State Government House at Alausa, Ikeja, demanding resettlement and compensation from the authorities.
The protesters at Government House
Some of the protesters, including a pregnant woman, who marched from MKO Abiola Park at Ojota, slumped at the Government House.
It was alleged that policemen at the Government House used tear gas on the peaceful protesters, causing some of them to slump.
A girl slumped during the protest
The protesters, who blocked the road to Government House, some lying on the road, vowed not to leave until Governor Akinwunmi Ambode comes out to address them.
The evictees were demanding resettlement and compensation from government, since the land out of which they were sacked would not be used for public infrastructure but to be sold to individuals for private development.
Thousands of evictees, including the aged, women with babies, children, youths as well as able-bodied men and women, took part in the protest march from the Ojota part to Government House.
The protest was used to mark one year since the first phase of forced eviction of over 30,000 people from Otodo Gbame community in Lagos. It was organised with the support of Justice and Empowerment Initiatives – Nigeria (JEI), Nigerian Slum/Informal Settlement Federation and Amnesty International Nigeria.
A pregnant woman also slumped during the protest
The grouse of the evictees was that “the Lagos State government was yet to implement any relief or resettlement in line with its own promises and the judgment of Hon. Justice S.A. Onigbanjo of the Lagos High Court.”
Counsel to the evictees, Chioma Ngoka, said the 30,000 evictees occupied a massive land at the now highbrow Lekki Phase 2.
It appears babies were also actively involved in the protest
Even as it is suspected that the area would be developed into a luxury estate, the people were just asking for resettlement and compensation.
Asked how much compensation the people were looking at, Ngoka said the government should engage the people first.
Olutimehin Adegbeye of JEI corroborated Ngoka that the land would be used to develop private property.
Nigerian Slum/Informal Settlement Federation alleged that the now homeless evictees were facing extreme poverty, sickness and untimely death.
“Our children are no longer in school. Meanwhile, our stolen land is being turned into a luxury estate,” they stated in a flyer endorsed by JEI.
She is optimistic that, despite Nigerian governments’ penchant for not honouring court injunctions, with persistent pressure, Lagos government will yield to their demands.
The evictees’ demand, aside compensation and resettlement, include “no more forced eviction and justice for the murder of Daniel Aya and Elijah Avonda.”
Addressing the protesters at the Gate of Government House, Saheed Ayodeji, security officer in Government House, urged the people to calm down as a committee had been set up by government to address the issue of Otodo Gbame.
The protesters wore T-shirts with different inscriptions as “Informal is not illegal”, “We demand Justice for Otodo Gbame”, “End forced evictions”, “Housing is a human right”, “#SaveTheWaterfronts: Forced eviction, never again”, and “#OurLagos” (written in Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo and another local language).
The political phase of COP23 began on Wednesday, November 15, 2017, as ministers and some heads of state arrived for the high-level talks. Negotiations at the technical level have reportedly been reasonably successful, but observers wondered if political leaders of wealthy nations will recognise the urgency of moving beyond the cautious limits their negotiators were working within.
Emmanuel Macron, President of France, is one of the leaders making an early appearance
“During the past 10 days, they have wasted too much time being unwilling to advance on key and legitimate issues,” said Lucille Dufour, International Policy Adviser, Reseau Action Climate France. “Now is the time to send a strong wake-up call to developed countries so that they come to terms with the urgent need to deliver more action before 2020 and provide sufficient support to the most vulnerable populations, especially for loss and damage.
“Developed countries should remind themselves that these questions are not only about negotiating text or negotiating spaces. This is a matter of people’s lives being affected on a daily basis by the growing impacts of climate change.”
French president, Emmanuel Macron, is one of the leaders making an early appearance.
Dufour set out clear expectations for the French government: that France pushes for greater ambition with the European Union, that at the summit Macron will host in Paris next month, France delivers on the $5 billion it has promised for adaptation and loss & damage, and that Macron’s government aligns its positive statements at the international level with bold domestic climate policy, including swifter action on a transition to renewable energy.
The German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, addressed the UN climate conference on Wednesday, and Jennifer Morgan, Executive Director, Greenpeace International, said Germany risks failing to meet its commitments under the Paris Agreement.
“The key issue on the table is that ten years ago her government committed to a 40% reduction by 2020 and Germany is now missing that target. And the only way that we think that can be changed is if the coalition supports a coal phase-out by 2030. Our expectation is that she’s heard the voices of the vulnerable, she’s seen the candlelight vigils around the world at embassies that have been occurring and that she will signal that she supports a coal phase-out by 2030,” said Morgan.
Mere Nailatikau, Regional Communications Advsior, Oxfam Pacific Region, said, “Our Pacific civil society family is concerned that emissions still rise globally. Many countries are still investing in fossil fuels, while wealthy nations try to block discussions to address loss & damage incurred by their emissions.”
“Support for our affected communities has been at the forefront of our hopes at this Pacific COP. We are concerned that proposals on the table now are weak. Communities hit by climate-related disasters may have to wait longer for help since negotiations here are failing to make meaningful progress on loss & damage finance. We welcome commitments to show real progress towards $100 billion.”
Sven Hamerling, Climate Change Advocacy Coordinator, CARE International said, “There has also been a lot of resistance from developed countries, unfortunately, to even start looking into a process which is about generating additional finance. I think in the overall political setting of this debate, there was a conclusion that we can only get to a certain point and leave further conversations and further fights for more finance to the future.”
The Bonn climate talks are being presided over by Fiji, the first for a small island developing state and are expected to close on Friday.