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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
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What Earth Day means to me

This Thursday, April 22 marks the 30th year that Earth Day has been celebrated around the world.

Admittedly, Earth Day seemed to have more of a presence when I was in high school. Organizing ‘earth week’s with environment clubs, celebrating with tree plantings and raffles, Earth Day soon began to fall into a time in university when exams and end of year essays were due, and my attention span to the day was decreased.

However, this year more than ever, Earth Day has a special place in my heart. Having witnessed first-hand the dramatic events of the Copenhagen conference unfold last December, and the visceral feeling of failure of watching out governments not rise up to the dangerous challenge of climate change, I will be appreciating what this Thursday means more than ever.

As I write this, I’m wearing a bright-orange t-shirt that says, “How old will you be in 2050?” In 2050, I will be 62. I’ll possibly have kids, and even grand kids at that point. I have no idea what the future holds for my 60-year-old self and my kids if we continue to treat the earth with the disrespect and the negligence that we do today. Many of the decision-makers who are putting our earth on this perilous path will certainly not be in power anymore, and many of them might not be alive. But the effects of their decisions will have lasting impacts on people of my generation and the future residents of our planet. It’s easy to think that the earth we live on will last forever in its current condition. But as we’ve seen, one simple volcano can cause a world of chaos, and the heating of our planet in the next couple of decades will bring a much worse impact, not to the economically fortunate, but to the most vulnerable and poor peoples of the world.

So on this Earth Day, I’ll be thinking about what my world will be like in 2050. And whether the decision-makers of this generation will allow us to live in a healthy that can support the lives and dreams of humanity for generations to come.

Unfortunately, I will be unable to blog for the next month, and I will be taking part into a research-trip with my peers in the Peace and Conflict Studies program at the University of Toronto. But when I get back, I’ll be excited to blog about the issues and exciting events surrounding the G8 and G20 summits this upcoming summer.


April 20, 2010 | 11:04 AM Comments  0 comments

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

UN: “A Shocking Disaster”

I’m sorry I’ve been a bit haphazard in the regularity of my blog posting – indeed, I’m entering the last exams of my university career, so I’ve been a bit distracted.

However, I did want to post this bit of news up, or more accurately, photos of the drying of the Aral sea in Central Asia.

The Huffington Post posted the photos up late last week, showing  how the lake has shrunk by about 90% in recent years. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Sunday that the drying of the sea is one of the planet’s ’shocking disasters’

"It is clearly one of the worst disasters, environmental disasters of
the world. I was so shocked," he said.

A pretty sad sight indeed.


April 6, 2010 | 12:04 PM Comments  0 comments

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