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COP15
Countdown to Copenhagen : Climate Change







Climate change is one of the most important ecological imperatives facing the human population in our modern times. There is hardly any debate remaining among scientists these days regarding whether climate change exists or whether it is caused by human activities. Climate change threatens not just global average temperature, but it also can play a damaging role in all other aspects of ecosystem health, such as biological diversity and world food supply. We have identified the problem, now we must come up with a fair and sustainable solution.

This blog will focus around the United Nations climate change conference to be help in Copenhagen from December 7th to 18th 2009. During this conference, 192 countries including two of the largest polluters - the United States and China - will gather to discuss the problem and try to find solutions. These widely varied countries will be responsible for the onus task of hammering out an agreement that can satisfy all involved for the period following 2012.

The countdown to COP15 TIG blog aims to consolidate the many youth climate action blogs from around the world, while offering a forum for youth to get informed and get involved regarding this important issue.




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Liamjod   Liamjod Liam O'Doherty's TIGblog
Liam O'Doherty's profile

Canada’s chief climate negotiator promoted

Michael Martin, Canada’s chief climate negotiator and ambassador for climate change has been promoted in a wave of changes in the senior ranks of public offices by the Prime Minister last week.

Martin is now Deputy Secretary to the Cabinet (Operations), Privy Council Office, effective April 6 in an announcement made on the government’s website last Thursday.

No word has come through yet on who will replace Martin in the high-profile and often contentious role of chief climate negotiator. Martin and the Canadian team in Copenhagen and past UN conferences have received a lot of personal heat for Canada’s lacklustre position on climate change. 

It will be interesting who the PM chooses to replace Martin – it will certainly set the tone on the Conservative government’s approach to climate change and its view on the relevance and effectiveness of the UN negotiations and process.


March 28, 2010 | 11:03 AM Comments  {num} comments

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Liamjod   Liamjod Liam O'Doherty's TIGblog
Liam O'Doherty's profile

My interview with Annie Leonard: “The Story of Stuff”

This morning I had the chance to speak with Annie Leonard, the author of the new book "The Story of Stuff – How our obsession with stuff is trashing the planet, our communities and our health – and a vision for change"

Annie’s name might sound familiar to those in the environment circle, and even those not in it. Annie was the writer and star of the viral video "The Story of Stuff", focusing on on the effects of human consumption, and has reached over 10 million hits worldwide. In the 20-minute video Annie, an activist who spent the past 10 years traveling the globe fighting environmental threats, takes viewers on an eye-opening tour on the real costs of our consumer driven culture. Since the creation of the video, Annie has been named Time’s Hero of the Environment of 2008 and was the feature of a front page story in the New York Times.

The book is a follow up and takes the basic concepts of the video and greatly expands it with detailed information on every stage of the consumer process, from extraction, production, distribution, consumption and disposal, revealing the poor, unsustainable state that our lives have taken in the past couple of decades.

Here are the highlights of my phone conversation with Annie this morning talking about her new book, and her hopes for escaping this consumer culture:

The “Story of Stuff” was video was highly successful – why then the need to write a book?

(Since the video came out) we had gotten 80,000 emails asking for more information and we were thrilled and shocked that so many cared. Trying to answer all those questions, getting thousands of emails a week was exhausting. I also realized this was going to keep happening, it was not a short-term interest.

There is only so much that can go into a little cartoon. As well, a lot of people don’t have access to high-speed internet. In most of the world, and even in huge amounts in North America, people don’t have access to high speed internet to view the video. The kind of change we need is going to require being inclusive and reaching beyond those who can access the internet. A book was a broader, deeper platform that provided more information.

How can our generation, a group that has spent their lives growing up in artificially developed environments, eating artificially developed food, and are disconnected physically and emotionally from nature, develop an instinct love and respect for nature like you have?

It’s hard because my daughter loves the laptop and is constantly plugged in, and you really need to drag them outside. It is incredibly important to be with nature, to really go out into the woods and to do activities like camping. We can’t do as much now-a-days, but it’s important to give (young people) that experience. My time spent in the woods, camping in the summer, overnight trips, those times developed a deep sense of humility within myself.

How do you respond to the naysayers that defend their right to consume, to waste, as they perceive cutting back as essentially hindering their quality of life?

I decide whether they are in the “reachable camp” or “unreachable camp”, whether they are indoctrinated into consumer culture. I tell them to turn the TV a little off, to re-engage in their community. If we can get people to try that, I hope that they find it so delicious, so rewarding, that people want to switch over. For the unreachables, they clearly won’t. We can not get hung up trying to convince the minority. If you look at the data, the vast majority of people are sympathetic about the environment, and want to live in a sustainable, safe, clean planet.

What are your own personal hopes for the future? Can humanity really stop this incessant consumerism and wasteful lifestyle?

I think a growing number of people are fed-up with the Work-Watch-Spend treadmill, and told what to buy and increasingly realizing that its just not that fun. Increasingly people are waking up everywhere I go, all over the country and world, with businesses figuring out how to eliminate toxic chemicals, build their local community more. Everywhere you go, schools are doing more environmental education. But for a lot of people, it just might have to get worse before they realize and wake up.

Can the concepts of your book be introduced to children or is it too complex for them?

When I was making the video, I was not making it for kids. I was thinking, this film isn’t going to be shown in schools. But I literally have gotten feedback from elementary school kids to post-graduate students in economics. The breadth of reach is phenomenal. The book, like the film, contains serious scientific and technical information, fun stories, and tries to be as inclusive as possible. There are a lot of great environmental books out there, a lot of them technical and intellectual with serious language, and sometimes they can serve to intimidate or exclude a lot of people from the conversation. So I hope that with this book it makes a lot of this information more accessible and easier to share.

To learn more about the Story of Stuff Project and to view Annie’s other videos on "The Story of Cap and Trade", click here.

To watch the original video, here is the link on YouTube.


March 12, 2010 | 11:03 AM Comments  {num} comments

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Liamjod   Liamjod Liam O'Doherty's TIGblog
Liam O'Doherty's profile

Interview with Annie Leonard: “The Story of Stuff”

Friday morning I had the chance to speak with Annie Leonard, the author of the new book "The Story of Stuff – How our obsession with stuff is trashing the planet, our communities and our health – and a vision for change"

Annie’s name might sound familiar to those in the environment circle, and even those not in it. Annie was the writer and star of the viral video "The Story of Stuff", focusing on on the effects of human consumption – the video since its creation has reached over 10 million hits worldwide. In the 20-minute video Annie, an activist who spent the past 10 years traveling the globe fighting environmental threats, takes viewers on an eye-opening tour on the real costs of our consumer driven culture. Since the creation of the video, Annie has been named Time’s Hero of the Environment of 2008 and was the feature of a front page story in the New York Times.

The book is a follow up and takes the basic concepts of the video and greatly expands it with detailed information on every stage of the consumer process, from extraction, production, distribution, consumption and disposal, revealing the poor, unsustainable state that our lives have taken in the past couple of decades.

Here are the highlights of my phone conversation with Annie this morning talking about her new book, and her hopes for escaping this consumer culture:

The “Story of Stuff” was video was highly successful – why then the need to write a book?

(Since the video came out) we had gotten 80,000 emails asking for more information and we were thrilled and shocked that so many cared. Trying to answer all those questions, getting thousands of emails a week was exhausting. I also realized this was going to keep happening, it was not a short-term interest.

There is only so much that can go into a little cartoon. As well, a lot of people don’t have access to high-speed internet. In most of the world, and even in huge amounts in North America, people don’t have access to high speed internet to view the video. The kind of change we need is going to require being inclusive and reaching beyond those who can access the internet. A book was a broader, deeper platform that provided more information.

How can our generation, a group that has spent their lives growing up in artificially developed environments, eating artificially developed food, and are disconnected physically and emotionally from nature, develop an instinct love and respect for nature like you have?

It’s hard because my daughter loves the laptop and is constantly plugged in, and you really need to drag them outside. It is incredibly important to be with nature, to really go out into the woods and to do activities like camping. We can’t do as much now-a-days, but it’s important to give (young people) that experience. My time spent in the woods, camping in the summer, overnight trips, those times developed a deep sense of humility within myself.

How do you respond to the naysayers that defend their right to consume, to waste, as they perceive cutting back as essentially hindering their quality of life?

I decide whether they are in the “reachable camp” or “unreachable camp”, whether they are indoctrinated into consumer culture. I tell them to turn the TV a little off, to re-engage in their community. If we can get people to try that, I hope that they find it so delicious, so rewarding, that people want to switch over. For the unreachables, they clearly won’t. We can not get hung up trying to convince the minority. If you look at the data, the vast majority of people are sympathetic about the environment, and want to live in a sustainable, safe, clean planet.

What are your own personal hopes for the future? Can humanity really stop this incessant consumerism and wasteful lifestyle?

I think a growing number of people are fed-up with the Work-Watch-Spend treadmill, and told what to buy and increasingly realizing that its just not that fun. Increasingly people are waking up everywhere I go, all over the country and world, with businesses figuring out how to eliminate toxic chemicals, build their local community more. Everywhere you go, schools are doing more environmental education. But for a lot of people, it just might have to get worse before they realize and wake up.

Can the concepts of your book be introduced to children or is it too complex for them?

When I was making the video, I was not making it for kids. I was thinking, this film isn’t going to be shown in schools. But I literally have gotten feedback from elementary school kids to post-graduate students in economics. The breadth of reach is phenomenal. The book, like the film, contains serious scientific and technical information, fun stories, and tries to be as inclusive as possible. There are a lot of great environmental books out there, a lot of them technical and intellectual with serious language, and sometimes they can serve to intimidate or exclude a lot of people from the conversation. So I hope that with this book it makes a lot of this information more accessible and easier to share.

To learn more about the Story of Stuff Project and to view Annie’s other videos on "The Story of Cap and Trade", click here.

To watch the original video, here is the link on YouTube.


March 12, 2010 | 11:03 AM Comments  {num} comments

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Liamjod   Liamjod Liam O'Doherty's TIGblog
Liam O'Doherty's profile

Celebrating Sikh Environment Day

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I wrote a post a couple of months ago about the new environment movement that seems to be developing among religious circles, connecting the need to protect the planet with religious and spiritual beliefs (Indeed, the United Church of Canada was a strong force at the Copenhagen negotiations).

It looks like the movement is still going strong with groups like the Sikh Council on Religion and Education (SCORE) declaring March 14 as "Sikh Environment Day".

In July 2009, in collaboration with the United Nations, SCORE organized an EcoSikh conclave in New Delhi in which Sikh organizations and leaders declared a five-year plan as a Sikh response and commitment to save the earth against the threat of climate change. The plan was presented to UN’s secretary-general Ban Ki Moon at Windsor Castle which hosted an international conference of all religions and climate change.

Part of the plan was the creation of Sikh Environment Day, scheduled for the first time this year on March 14, to coincide with the celebration the 7th Guru, Guru Har Rai Ji who had preached that Sikhs must come to the defense of all that is vulnerable and protect the well-being of plants and animals.

The main organizers are hoping that all major Sikh Gurudwaras will sing hymns with an environmental theme on this day, along with the planting of trees with the community.


March 8, 2010 | 2:03 AM Comments  {num} comments

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Liamjod   Liamjod Liam O'Doherty's TIGblog
Liam O'Doherty's profile

We Can’t Wish Away Climate Change

Former U.S. Vice-President Al Gore has published an excellent op-ed today in the New York Times. In it, he addressed some recent controversies in the scientific community, and the Copenhagen summit, which he declared global leaders "failed to muster anything more than a decision to ‘take note’ of an intention to act."

Read the article here.

And because there’s only one thing on Canada’s mind this morning: GO CANADA GO!


March 1, 2010 | 10:03 AM Comments  {num} comments

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