Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Climate apartheid

- By Tom Miles

GENEVA (Reuters) - The world is on course for “climate apartheid”, where the rich buy their way out of the worst effects of global warming while the poor bear the brunt, a U. N. human rights report said on Tuesday.

The report, submitted to the U.N. Human Rights Council by its special rapporteur on extreme poverty, Philip Alston, said business was supposed to play a vital role in coping with climate change, but could not be relied on to look after the poor.

“An over- reliance on the private sector could lead to a climate apartheid scenario in which the wealthy pay to escape overheatin­g, hunger, and conflict, while the rest of the world is left to suffer,” he wrote.

He cited vulnerable New Yorkers being stranded without power or healthcare when Hurricane Sandy hit in 2012, while “the Goldman Sachs headquarte­rs was protected by tens of thousands of its own sandbags and power from its generator”.

Relying exclusivel­y on the private sector to protect against extreme weather and rising seas “would almost guarantee massive human rights violations, with the wealthy catered to and the poorest left behind”, he wrote.

“Even under the best- case scenario, hundreds of millions will face food insecurity, forced migration, disease, and death.”

His report criticized government­s for doing little more than sending of f i c i a l s to conference­s to make “sombre speeches”, even though scientists and climate activists have been ringing alarm bells since the 1970s.

“Thirty years of convention­s appear to have done very little. From Toronto to Noordwijk to Rio to Kyoto to Paris, the language has been remarkably similar as States continue to kick the can down the road,” Alston wrote.

“States have marched past every scientific warning and threshold, and what was once considered catastroph­ic warming now seems like a best-case scenario.”

Since 1980, the United States alone had suffered 241 weather and climate disasters costing $1 billion or more, at a cumulative cost of $1.6 trillion.

There had been some positive developmen­ts, with renewable energy prices falling, coal becoming uncompetit­ive, emissions declining in 49 countries, and 7,000 cities, 245 regions, and 6,000 companies committing to climate mitigation.

However, despite ending its reliance on coal, China was still exporting coal- fired power plants and failing to crack down on its own methane emissions; and Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro planned to open up the Amazon rainforest for mining, end demarcatio­n of indigenous lands, and weaken environmen­tal protection.

“In the United States, until recently the world’s biggest producer of global emissions, President

( Donald) Trump has placed former lobbyists in oversight roles, adopted industry talking points, presided over an aggressive rollback of environmen­tal regulation­s, and is actively silencing and obfuscatin­g climate science,” Alston wrote.

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 ??  ?? People carry placards as they attend a climate change demonstrat­ion in London, Britain, June 26, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
People carry placards as they attend a climate change demonstrat­ion in London, Britain, June 26, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
 ??  ?? Philip Alston, the UN's special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
Philip Alston, the UN's special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
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