Posted by Dr Sitanon on 7 May 2010

The high level climate talk that just ended in Koenigswinter, West Germany yesterday was hailed as an ice-breaking event. I wonder what was the carbon footprints this event generated to just "break the ice", supposed to pave a way to Cancun talk in November.

This, however, is a necessary step to ensure that UN climate talk remains on track, and continued to be supported. To recapture the failures in Copenhagen, again, among the complexity of emerging item agendas and "the building block approach" devised in Copenhagen, I see at least four major stumbling blocks that would have to be overcome for a successful negotiation:

Posted by Maarwan IPS on 23 Jan 2010

Marwaan Macan-Markar interviews NICOLA BULLARD, member of the World Social Forum's international council

BANGKOK, Jan 13, 2010 (IPS) - Ten years after its founding, the World Social Forum (WSF) has come to represent a rallying point for activists and grassroots groups committed to shaping an alternative world view.

"It is very important that we have this space for all of us to come together and shape a vision that reflects our concerns," says Nicola Bullard, a senior associate of Focus on the Global South, a Bangkok-based think tank championing issues that matter to people in the developing world. "We have been able to build our own discourse, our own thinking, our own legitimacy."

 

Posted by Nantiya on 7 Dec 2009

Here we go again. Thursday it was India that joined the ranks of developing economies to announce significant cuts in greenhouse gas emissions in advance of the United Nations climate change discussions that begin in Copenhagen today.

So where is Thailand? When are we going to demonstrate any seriousness about our role in reducing emissions? After all, scientists warn that we're poised to receive a disproportionate share of the impact of global climate change. Our shores and coastal communities will be significantly impacted if the world as a whole does not start embarking on a major CO2 diet. Bangkok in particular will face major problems from flooding and sea level rise but, so far, hardly a word from our nation's leaders who reside here.

Posted by Nantiya on 6 Dec 2009

A new film, The Story of Cap and Trade, released last week on the internet illustrates the profit motives and flawed logic that are behind carbon trading schemes. In ten minutes viewers are given a simple tour of the flawed insight behind this approach, and why we must all work to oppose it.

It's amazing that as we struggle to get our hands around the current financial crisis, the recipes and schemes that precipitated the global economic downturn are being championed in Copenhagen this week as a core strategy to tackle climate change.

 

Posted by Nantiya Tangwisutijit on 12 Oct 2009

A.T. Biopower is just one of many small power plants to come on line in the past decade as Thailand follows the global trend to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels. The country's current goal is to generate 20% of the nation's electricity from renewable sources by 2022, a target similar to those set by the EU, UK and Australia.

Bhorn says she's unfamiliar with new energy polices but has become increasingly familiar with environmental changes occurring in her neighborhood since the A.T. Biopower plant came on line in 2005. Her Hor Krai community is not alone. Problems and concerns over social and environmental impacts from biomass power plants have become commonplace over the past few years. Supakij Nantaworakarn, a renewable energy researcher with the Healthy Public Policy Foundation, estimates that protests against biomass projects have been widespread, occurring in at least 20 Thai provinces, many of which are on going.

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