December 8, 2014 — WHILE loved ones braced for the full impact of Typhoon Ruby back home, Filipino activists in Lima, Peru, urged climate negotiators Saturday to act with more urgency in drafting a global plan to limit such potentially life-threatening events.
“To us in the Philippines, we are not any more debating on whether or not the impacts of climate change are here, we have experienced it,” Voltaire Alferez of the Aksyon Klima Pilipinas NGO group said on the sidelines of the talks.
“Year after year we are bombarded…from one typhoon to another,” Alferez told AFP as his wife and son of one year left their Manila home for the relative safety of higher ground.
He made his statement even as Senator Loren Legarda joined international experts, lawyers and scientists to bring to the United Nations General Assembly the issue of climate change and how nations are addressing it.
Legarda filed Senate Resolution 1030 calling on President Benigno Aquino III and Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario to formally inscribe the agenda for the 70th session of the General Assembly next year.
In a privileged speech she delivered earlier, Legarda said the climate change negotiations in the United Nations were at a standstill.
Meanwhile, Senator Bam Aquino cited the need for a national program that will protect the Filipino children displaced ruing disasters.
“Filipino children are most vulnerable and are worst affected during disasters such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and flash floods that regularly happen in the Philippines every year, Aquino said in his Senate Bill 2466.
Ruby—international name Hagupit—is the third typhoon in a row to hit the Philippines during the annual, ministerial-level climate negotiations towards a new global pact to limit climate harm by curbing Earth-warming greenhouse gas emissions.
Last year, Typhoon Haiyan hit while talks were under way in Warsaw, killing 7,350 people, and Typhoon Bopha claimed 600 lives during negotiations in Doha in 2012.
It is never possible to attribute any individual weather event to climate change, but the UN’s World Meteorological Organization has said extreme storms like Haiyan were “consistent” with human-induced climate change.
Countries are gathered in the Peruvian capital to negotiate the broad outlines of the new global pact, which is due to be signed in Paris next December and take effect in 2020.
But NGOs and activists acting as observers to the bartering said the pace was too slow and a sense of urgency lacking with one week to go in the December 1-12 session.
“One of the biggest concerns we have is that negotiators still don’t have a sense that what we are dealing with in these negotiations is a planetary emergency,” said Tasneem Essop of green group WWF.
Grouping 195 nations and the EU bloc, the talks under the umbrella of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change remain deeply divided on how to apportion responsibility for emissions curbs, which requires a costly shift from cheap and abundant fossil fuel to cleaner alternatives.
The goal is to limit average global warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels, but scientists say we are heading for double that—a recipe for ever-worse droughts, floods and sea-level rise.
Parties are divided on what must be in the agreement.
Developing countries want commitments that rich nations are loath to give: to helping with climate-change adaptation, finance, and compensation for the loss and damage suffered.
“This is what loss and damage looks like,” said Julie-Anne Richards of the Climate Justice Program, referring to the latest typhoon.
“These are real people facing real costs and some even the loss of their lives.”
Greenpeace’s Jasper Inventor, a Filipino, added: “In the hour of our peril, now is the time for politicians to back up their expressions of solidarity with real action at the UN climate talks. It has become an issue of our survival.”
Terrifying winds and intense rains pounded the eastern Philippines Saturday as millions sheltered from Ruby.
Ruby was forecast to take three days to rake across the Philippines, also bringing heavy rain to the densely populated capital Manila. - Manila Standard Today