“Help save the world!”

Published: 8 December 2009 y., Tuesday

Klimato kaita
The UN Climate Change Conference opened on 7 December with a film about climate change from the perspective of a child. The call from coming generations was clear: “Please, help save the world”.

The opening ceremony of the UN Climate Change Conference COP-15 in Copenhagen took place in a packed Bella Center. The opening took the form of a dramatic film about how climate change can come to affect Earth, seen from the perspective of a child, and set the tone of this opening day. After a performance by Danish Radio's all-girl choir, delegates were welcomed by Danish Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen and Mayor of Copenhagen Ritt Bjerregård.

“The world relies on you”

Lars Løkke Rasmussen pointed out that global warming knows no boundaries and discriminates against nobody - it affects all people and all parts of society. He said that it is time for a comprehensive agreement and that such an agreement is now within reach.

“The political will is there, we support you. Reach an effective, constructive and implementable agreement. Be visionary. The world relies on you.”

Rit Bjerregård also called on the assembled delegates.
“Help make Copenhagen into Hopenhagen for these two weeks. Please, seal the deal.”

The EU wants to go up to 30 per cent

The intention is that by the end of next week a climate agreement should be more or less negotiated, primarily by the countries' delegates and then by the environment ministers. Over 110 heads of state and government are then expected to attend the conference's very final stage. According to plan, the heads of state and government will then sign a new climate agreement.

Swedish Minister for Environment Andreas Carlgren will be representing the EU during the conference.
“I am here to ensure that an agreement is reached. The EU wants to raise its bid for emissions reductions from 20 per cent to 30 per cent, but that all depends on whether the USA and China are willing to make similar concessions. The final decision will not be made until the last part of the conference.”

Climate-smart conference

The climate conference is taking responsibility too. Two thirds of all food served is organically produced and bottled water has been banned in favour of tap water. Instead of giving expensive souvenirs or gifts to all the thousands of participants, organisers have granted scholarships to eleven young students. They will receive funds for two year's of MBA studies in Copenhagen and will in this way be able to transfer important knowledge to their respective home countries.

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Chastel: “to be pragmatic and determined in accession negotiations with Croatia”

State Secretary for European Affairs Olivier Chastel met with his Croatian counterpart Mr Andrej Plenkovic on 22nd July 2010. more »

World Bank Launches New Partnership Strategy with Albania

The World Bank Group’s Board of Directors today discussed a new Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) for Albania, which provides the framework for the World Bank Group’s assistance to Albania for 2011-2014. more »

EU road safety plan for next 10 years

The EU renews its target to cut annual death rate by half. more »

Happy birthday, Belgium!

180 candles light up the cake today: Belgium is celebrating its birthday. The Royal Family and its invitees will attend the national march-past that is to take place at 4 P.M. before the Royal Palace. more »

Commission allocates € 15 million to prevent hunger, malnutrition and epidemics in Ethiopia

Today, the European Commission has adopted a € 15 million aid package to address a critical food security situation in Ethiopia where an estimated 5.2 million people will be requiring food assistance this year. more »

Europe must push for a healthy Africa

The World Cup is over and life in Africa is returning to normal, but it is anything but “fair play” with life expectancy for some 30 to 40 years less than for Europeans. more »

Drought grips Bolivia

An early dry season in Bolivia is leaving an unprepared population at risk. more »

Kitchen, food waste: MEPs want new recycling rules

The EU produced more than 100 million tonnes of garden and kitchen waste last year and most of it went to landfill or was incinerated. more »

EU aid to Palestine - MEPs question Palestinian Prime Minister on results

The EU, as the biggest donor to the Palestinian Authority, has a more important role to play now than ever before, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad told Budgets Committee MEPs on Tuesday. more »

Middle East peace process: “EU must be a full player, not just a payer”, says Pittella

“The EU should play another role than just paying out” for the Middle East peace process, Parliament's first Vice-President Gianni Pittella told Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad at a bilateral meeting on Tuesday. more »