The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

The rains threaten to sweep away our homes. Will Cop26 stop that?

Delegates voice their disappoint­ment that not enough has been achieved at summit, as their hopes and expectatio­ns fail to materialis­e

- By Craig McDonald cmcdonald@sundaypost.com Amazon activist Helena Gualinga

Helena Gualinga’s journey to Glasgow began with a canoe trip. It is the only way to cross the River Bobonazo after flooding caused by torrential rain, linked to climate change, swept away building and bridges last year.

The obstacles did not deter her, however, and, after travelling from the Amazon, the teenager was in Scotland to speak for the Sarayaku indigenous people at Cop26.

However, she said, even with modest hopes, the global summit, billed as the world’s most important meeting, has been disappoint­ing.

Gualinga, 19, from Ecuador, said: “My expectatio­ns were already low because I know how it works. But even though I was expecting little, I was expecting more. I have attended conference­s before and have followed the politics of it all.

“Momentum has been created around climate change and the urgent need for action, and the issue has been pushed, for example by indigenous people and young people, to be at the centre of conversati­on and not just politics. Yet I was still surprised and disappoint­ed that all this wasn’t enough for world leaders to give better commitment­s.

“That’s really disappoint­ing to see and I fear this Cop is a failure. I was expecting little and got less.”

Gualinga told how her community, with a population of around 1,200 on the banks of the Amazon tributary, and four others nearby, had witnessed first-hand the effects of climate change now being felt across the world.

She said: “Floods have really been increasing the last five years and, where I come from, the rain is getting more intense, with more water coming down.

“My community was covered by water and many people, including my own relatives, lost their homes.

“The nearest city is Puyo and to get there it’s five hours by canoe then a two-hour car ride.

“Our crops were lost also in the floods, which leads to huge problems with food insecurity, especially as people could not go to the city because of Covid.

“Schools and bridges were washed away and there was little interest from the government to help rebuild so we had to do it on our own. To this day, there are still a couple of schools which haven’t been fully rebuilt and we have no bridges left in our community,

which means people, for example getting to school, have to cross the river by canoe every day.

“Meanwhile, in the Andes, the snow on top of the volcanoes is disappeari­ng and this changes the habitat for species there.”

Despite her disappoint­ment at

Cop26, Gualinga will not give up fighting for change.

She said: “The only way to solve the climate crisis is to phase out fossil fuels. Financial support from richer nations is going to be very important in the coming years as climate change hits harder on countries like mine. Climate change is going to cause a lot of displaceme­nt of people and adaptation will be needed.

“We need to support countries like Ecuador which should be trying to transition to renewable energy, although the government at the moment is still for the exploitati­on of fossil fuels.

“We need a global effort to support developing countries in their transition and it needs to be a just transition which does not just effect the poorest and most vulnerable in our societies. There needs to be a focus on how to support less developed countries.

“I was at the marches in Glasgow last week and the Amazonian indigenous youth were at the front line which I thought was symbolical­ly important, as they are at the front line against climate change and the fossil fuel industry. I think it’s important to give people that platform as they are the people who have been on the front line, and who are risking their lives as climate

change increasing­ly affects them.

“Despite the disappoint­ment at Cop26, everyone from my delegation were positively surprised by how welcoming people in Glasgow and Scotland were. People were helping us and smiling at us everywhere and that is a different experience from other events like this.

“I spent a few days inside the conference but I realised the beautiful things about Cop happened outside of the official spaces. I have realised that there is so much we can do from outside.

“I feel both positive and negative. There is no way of being positive when you read the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report this year and realise where we are at. But, at the same time, I am not one to give up on the fight. I think we need to make sure Cop isn’t what decides our future now and that we need to keep working outside of Cop for the changes which will help us all.”

I was expecting little at Cop and got less

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 ?? Picture Jane Barlow ?? Staff at Cop26 put away chairs and dismantle the stage as the conference comes to a close in Glasgow last night. Left: Activist Helena Gualinga
Picture Jane Barlow Staff at Cop26 put away chairs and dismantle the stage as the conference comes to a close in Glasgow last night. Left: Activist Helena Gualinga
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 ?? ?? Protesting outside Cop
Protesting outside Cop

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