
Newspapers Worldwide Call for Climate
Change Action
Dec 7, 2009 - Steve Mirsky - Scientificamerican.com
On the first day of the Copenhagen climate
conference, 56 newspapers publishing in 20 languages
in 45 countries publish an unprecedented joint editorial
calling for meaningful action to face the threat posed
by climate change. Steve Mirsky reports. The editorial:
http://bit.ly/71ut8f
It's like the publishing version of
one of those scenes from a sci-fi movie where an alien
invasion impels traditional adversaries to join together
to face their larger, common threat. Today 56 newspapers,
in Pakistan and India, in Israel and Lebanon, in Tawian
and China, in Greece and Turkey, in Africa and in
North, South and Central America are publishing an
unprecedented joint editorial calling for meaningful
action to face the threat posed by climate change.
The editorial, published in 45 countries in 20 different
languages, appears on this first day of the Copenhagen
climate conference. The British paper the Guardian
led the effort, which involved weeks of negotiations
to reach a final version.
The editorial notes that "the science
is complex but the facts are clear. The world needs
to take steps to limit temperature rises to 2 degrees
C...a bigger rise of 3 to 4 degrees C would parch
continents, turning farmland into desert. Half of
all species could become extinct, untold millions
of people would be displaced, whole nations drowned
by the sea. The controversy over emails by British
researchers that suggest they tried to suppress inconvenient
data has muddied the waters but failed to dent the
mass of evidence on which these predictions are based."
The editorial recognized that "the
shift to a low-carbon society holds out the prospect
of more opportunity than sacrifice. Already some countries
have recognized that embracing the transformation
can bring growth, jobs and better quality lives. The
flow of capital tells its own story: last year for
the first time more was invested in renewable forms
of energy than producing electricity from fossil fuels."
So while gleeful anarchists like Oklahoma
Senator James Inhofe go to Copenhagen to try to sabotage
the proceedings, the worldwide array of newspapers
attempts to remind the conference participants and
the people they represent to keep their eye on the
ball - the ball in this case being an oblate spheroid
with almost seven billion human inhabitants and a
fever that desperately needs to be treated. As the
Guardian's editor in chief, Alan Rusbridger, said,
"Newspapers have never done anything like this
before but they have never had to cover a story like
this before."
-Steve Mirsky
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