Wednesday, November 30, 2011

UN Durban Climate Change Conference Conference, Nov. 28 to Dec. 8, 2011

The Durban Conference is beginning in South Africa. This is the last major meeting before the World Earth Summit Meeting on Climate Change in June also called Rio+20.  An important topic for the Durban meeting is keeping the Kyoto Protocol, negotiated in 1997 and activated in 2004. The United States did not sign this agreement to reduce green house gases.

Listen to Pablo Solon tell us why we must have hope.

Pablo Solon at the UN Climate Talks in Durban: Occupy Movement Is a Source of Hope

Monday, November 28, 2011

A YouTube Song To Enjoy


You have head about Climate Change, for this US holiday, listen to a potential theme song of Climate Change, The Denial Tango. (Turn on the sound.)

Monday, November 21, 2011

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Water Corporations

This is the last in this series on WATER, but I might bring some issues up again. Here is another look at the tensions between public and private control of WATER. 
(Note the other YouTube  films that share this page.You might be interested in "The Water Wars in Bolivia" and why after having a private water system, they took to the streets to get their water back.)

Click on this next link.

Thank you all for your interest in this blog.  Please let me know if you want information on other United Nations issues.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Water is a HUMAN RIGHT

Let me introduce THE UN-NGO, UNANIMA INTERNATIONAL, of which I am a member, and our efforts regarding water issues.

UNANIMA International collaborated with Food and Water Watch in mid September  to present a joint letter to bring fracking to the attention of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. This effort is focused on informing the work of Caterina De Albuquerque, the UN special rapporteur on human right to water and sanitation.

Now that the human right to water has been officially recognized by the UN General Assembly, and De Albuquerque has determined that fracking could further imperil the human right to water in the U.S., UNANIMA believes that all states should stand behind a commitment to safeguard this right to our precious water and ban fracking.  In an assessment of the situation in the U.S., De Albuquerque reported on water contamination found there from fracking and recommended “a holistic consideration of the right to water by factoring it into policies having an impact on water quality, ranging from agriculture to chemical use in products to energy production activities.”
The joint letter pointed out to the UN Human Rights Commission that fracking isn’t only a problem in the U.S. The oil and gas industry has its sights set on fracking in Europe, with the U.S. energy information administration forecasting 187 trillion cubic feet of gas resources available in Poland, followed closely by France at 180 trillion cubic feet. France, however, following strong civil society protests, currently has a moratorium against fracking.

Join UNANIMA International, Food and Water Watch and many other organizations to follow France’s example and stop Fracking.