CLIMATE change is already causing considerable
damage and hundreds of millions of poor people are
suffering the consequences.
The most advanced research centers assure that
very little time is left for avoiding an
irreversible catastrophe. James Hansen, of NASA’s
Goddard Institute, says that a level of 350 parts
carbon dioxide per million is still tolerable; today,
however, the figure is in excess of 390 and it is
increasing at a rate of 2 parts per million every
year, exceeding the levels of 600,000 years ago.
Each one of the last two decades has been the
hottest ever recorded. The abovementioned gas
increased 80 parts per million in the last 150 years.
The ice of the Artic Sea, the vast, two-kilometer-thick
layer that covers Greenland, the glaciers of South
America which feed its principle sources of
freshwater, the colossal volume that covers
Antarctica, the layer that covers Kilimanjaro, the
ice that covers the Himalayas and the enormous
frozen mass of Siberia are visibly melting. Notable
scientists fear qualitative jumps in these natural
phenomena that give rise to changes.
Humanity placed great hope in the Copenhagen
Summit, after the Kyoto Protocol signed in 1997,
which entered into effect in 2005. The summit’s
resounding failure gave way to shameful episodes
that require due clarification.
The United States, with less than 5% of the world’s
population, issues 25% of its carbon dioxide. The
new president of the United States had promised to
cooperate with international efforts to confront a
problem that is affecting that country as much as
the rest of the world. During meetings prior to the
summit, it became evident that the leaders of that
nation and of the richest nations maneuvered to make
the weight of the sacrifice fall onto emerging and
poor countries.
A large number of leaders and thousands of
representatives of social movements and scientific
institutions, determined to fight to preserve
humanity from the greatest threat in its history
went to Copenhagen, invited by the summit’s
organizers. In order to focus on the political
aspects of the summit, I will not go into details
concerning the brutality of the Danish public forces,
which attacked thousands of demonstrators and guests
of the social movements and scientists who went to
Denmark’s capital.
In Copenhagen, real chaos prevailed, and
unbelievable things happened. Social movements and
scientific institutions were not allowed to attend
the debates. There were heads of state and
government who were not even able to issue their
opinions on vital problems. Obama and the leaders of
the richest countries took over the conference with
the complicity of the Danish government. The
agencies of the United Nations were relegated.
Barack Obama, who arrived on the last day of the
summit to remain there for only 12 hours, met with
two groups of guests "hand-picked" by him and his
collaborators. Together with one of them, he met
with the rest of the highest delegations in the
plenary hall. He spoke and immediately left via the
back door. In that plenary session, except for the
small group selected by him, the representatives of
other countries were not allowed to speak. During
that meeting, the presidents of Bolivia and the
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela were allowed to
speak, because the president of the summit had no
alternative than to concede that in the face of the
strenuous demands of those present.
In an adjoining room, Obama met with the leaders
of the richest countries, several of the most
important emerging states, and two very poor ones.
He presented a document, negotiated with two or
three of the most important countries, ignored the
United Nations General Assembly, gave press
conferences, and marched away like Julius Caesar
during one of his victorious campaigns in Asia Minor,
which prompted him to exclaim, "I came, I saw, I
conquered."
Even Gordon Brown, prime minister of the United
Kingdom, had affirmed on October 19, "If we do not
reach a deal at this time, let us be in no doubt:
once the damage from unchecked emissions growth is
done, no retrospective global agreement in some
future period can undo that choice. By then it will
be irretrievably too late."
Brown concluded his speech with dramatic words: "We
cannot afford to fail. If we act now; if we act
together; if we act with vision and resolve, success
at Copenhagen is still within our reach. But if we
falter, the earth itself will be at risk… For the
planet there is no plan B."
Now he arrogantly stated that the United Nations
cannot be taken hostage by a small group of
countries like Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua
and Tuvalu, while accusing China, India, Brazil,
South Africa and other emerging states of giving in
to the seduction of the United States and signing a
document that dumps the Kyoto Protocol into the
garbage bin and contains no binding commitment
whatsoever on the part of the United States and its
rich allies.
I feel obliged to remember that the United
Nations was born just six decades ago, after the
last World War. There were no more than 50
independent countries at the time. Today, it is made
up of more than 190 independent states, after the
odious colonial system ceased to exist because of
the determined struggles of the peoples. Even the
People’s Republic of China was denied UN membership
for many years, and a puppet government held its
representation in that institution and on its
privileged Security Council.
The tenacious support of a growing number of
Third World countries was indispensable to the
international recognition of China, and an extremely
important factor for the United States and its
allies in NATO recognizing its (China’s) rights in
the United Nations.
In the historic struggle against fascism, the
Soviet Union made the largest contribution. More
than 25 million of its sons and daughters died, and
enormous destruction ravaged the country. Out of
that struggle, it emerged as a superpower, capable
of countering, in part, the absolute dominion of the
imperial system of the United States and the former
colonial powers in their unlimited plunder of the
peoples of the Third World. When the USSR
disintegrated, the United States extended its
political and military power toward the East, toward
the heart of Russia, and its influence over the rest
of Europe grew. There is nothing strange about what
happened in Copenhagen.
I would like to emphasize the unjust and
offensive nature of the statements of the prime
minister of the United Kingdom, and the yanki
attempt to impose, as a summit agreement, a document
that was never discussed at any time with the
participating countries.
At a December 21 press conference, Cuban Foreign
Minister Bruno Rodríguez stated a truth that is
impossible to deny; I will use some of his exact
paragraphs: "I would like to emphasized that in
Copenhagen, there was no agreement whatsoever of the
Conference of the Parties; no decision whatsoever
was made with respect to binding or non-binding
commitments or international law; there was simply
no agreement in Copenhagen.
"The summit was a failure and a deception of
world public opinion…. The lack of political will
was laid bare….
"It was a step backward in the actions of the
international community to prevent or mitigate the
effects of climate change….
"The average world temperature could rise by 5
degrees…."
Immediately, our foreign minister added other
interesting facts about possible consequences
according to the latest scientific investigations.
"From the Kyoto Protocol to date, the emissions
of the developed countries have risen by 12.8%...
and 55% of that volume comes from the United States.
"One person in the United States consumes, on
average, 25 barrels of oil annually; one European,
11; one Chinese citizen, less than two, and one
Latin American or Caribbean, less than one.
"Thirty countries, including those of the
European Union, consume 80% of the fuel produced."
The very real fact is that the developed
countries which signed the Kyoto Protocol
drastically increased their emissions. They now wish
to replace the base of emissions adopted starting
1990 with that of 2005, with which the United States,
the maximum issuer, would reduce its emissions of 25
years earlier by only 3%. It is a shameless mockery
of world opinion.
The Cuban foreign minister, speaking on behalf of
a group of ALBA countries, defended China, India,
Brazil, South Africa and other important states with
emerging economies, affirming the concept reached in
Kyoto of "common, but differentiated
responsibilities; meaning that the historic
accumulators and the developed countries, those
responsible for this catastrophe, have different
responsibilities from those of the small island
states, or those of the countries of the South,
above all the least-developed countries….
"Responsibilities means financing;
responsibilities means the transfer of technology
under acceptable conditions, and then Obama makes a
play on words, and instead of talking about common
but differentiated responsibilities, talks about
‘common, but differentiated responses.’
"He leaves the plenary without deigning to listen
to anybody, nor had he listened to anybody before
his speech."
At a subsequent press conference, before leaving
the Danish capital, Obama affirmed, "We've made
meaningful and unprecedented breakthrough in
Copenhagen. For the first time in history the major
economies have come together to accept their
responsibility…"
In his clear and irrefutable statement, our
foreign minister affirmed, "What is meant by ‘the
major economies have come together to accept their
responsibility?’ It means that they are shrugging
off an important part of the burden signified by the
financing for the mitigation and adaptation of
countries — above all the entire South — to climate
change, onto China, Brazil, India and South Africa;
because it must be said that in Copenhagen, there
was an assault on, a mugging of China, Brazil,
India, and South Africa, and of all of the countries
euphemistically referred to as developing."
These were the resounding and irrefutable words
with which our foreign minister recounted what
happened in Copenhagen.
I should add that, at 10 a.m. on December 19th,
after our Vice President Esteban Lazo and the Cuban
foreign minister had left, there was a belated
attempt to resuscitate the corpse of Copenhagen as a
summit agreement. At that point, virtually no heads
of state or even ministers were left. Once again,
the exposé of the remaining members of the Cuban,
Venezuela, Bolivian, Nicaraguan and other countries’
delegations defeated the maneuver. That was how the
inglorious summit ended.
Another fact that cannot be forgotten was that,
during the most critical moments of that day, in the
early morning, the Cuban foreign minister, together
with the delegations that were waging their
dignified battle, offered UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon their cooperation in the increasingly
difficult battle that is being waged, and in the
efforts that must be undertaken in the future to
preserve the life of our species.
The environmental group WWF warned that climate
change will become uncontrollable in the next 5 to
10 years if emissions are not drastically cut.
But it is not necessary to demonstrate the
essence of what is being said here about what Obama
did.
The U.S. president stated on Wednesday, December
23 that people were right to be disappointed by the
outcome of the Summit on Climate Change. In an
interview with the CBS television network, the
president noted, "Rather than see a complete
collapse in Copenhagen, in which nothing at all got
done and would have been a huge backward step, at
least we kind of held ground and there wasn't too
much backsliding from where we were…"
Obama, according to the news dispatch, was the
one most criticized by those countries which,
virtually unanimously, believe that the outcome of
the summit was disastrous.
The UN is now in a predicament. Asking other
countries to adhere to the arrogant and
antidemocratic agreement would be humiliating for
many states.
Continuing the battle and demanding at all
meetings, particularly those of Bonn and Mexico, the
right of humanity to exist, with the moral authority
and strength the truth affords us, is, in our
opinion, the only way forward.

Fidel Castro Ruz
December 26, 2009
8:15 p.m.