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New York, 22 September 2009
Mr. President, excellencies, Heads of State, distinguished colleagues, ministers, ladies and gentlemen, leaders of our Planet:
Developing nations are facing a threat of catastrophic proportions today: climate change. The peoples of the south are today paying for the ever increasing additional costs of the necessary actions to adapt to the adverse conditions posed by climate change and for the mitigation of its consequences.
However, those States principally responsible of the direct causes of global warming, are not assuming their responsibility for the incremental social and environmental debt they are accumulating, owed to the most vulnerable peoples of the world, generating an unjust situation that need to be urgently reversed.
In Paraguay, the recurrent droughts we suffered during the last decade, required, over the last 3 years, spending of some additional US$70 million per year, which we are mostly absorbing on our own, communities and Government, though we appreciate the support received in solidarity from our friends, nations and organizations.
In the meantime, we are exposed more and more frequently to powerful storms which cause grave damages to our crops and livelihoods of those most vulnerable.
Food production and water supply are held at high risk.
In the whole of Paraguay, in fact, the succession of extreme events derived from severe alterations in the climatic patterns, generate a social and environmental emergency scenario, every time more frequent and prolonged.
We recognize that changes in the climate are the result of patterns of production, distribution and consumption, based on the exhaustive exploitation of nature's wealth.
This unsustainable model considers nature and the commons such as water, air, land, forests, seeds, as mere resources available for sheer exploitation and privatization.
The struggle against climate change is not only a struggle for the survival of our Planet, it is also a struggle for socio-environmental justice at the global level.
The financial, social and environmental costs of the climatic emergencies we face, increase exponentially in direct proportion to the unmet commitments of developed countries.
The latest scientific reports available do not only indicate that the expenses for adaptation will be much higher to what was earlier forecasted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) only two years ago. They also tell us that atmospheric warming has determined that on our Earth, high levels of insecurity are being reached.
By not accomplishing their reduction targets to avoid climate change, industrialized countries not only negate the mandate of the Convention, but also go counter basic principles of international law, such as the responsibility for not causing damages to the territories of other States.
In consequence, a great and ever-growing socio-environmental debt
has being created, owed by the developed to the developing countries.
Recognizing and honoring this debt, will permit the sustainability of
development and well-being of present and future generations of our
people.
This reality includes particularly Indigenous Peoples and traditional
communities, who live in areas of high ecological value, such as
forests. The defense, conservation and restoration of these areas is of
interest to all humanity, for they shelter great and diverse human
populations, culturally irreplaceable, and because those areas and
those cultures that steward them, play an essential role in strategies
to combat climate change globally. In this framework, the
acknowledgement of the need to provide sufficient financial resources
to enable the transfer of technologies, the fair exchange of knowledge
and know-how, to reach sustainable development, is in order.
The historical responsibility which generated this
environmental debt requires a great effort to decarbonize the energies
that sustain economic growth and the lifestyles in developed countries.
For this reason, there is no more time for timid attempts to transform
those countries' energy sources. In turn, what is needed is to
implement courageous measures that truly allow them to drastically
curve their carbon emissions.
The financial resources necessary to implement real solutions, such as
the restoration of native forests, the conversion towards clean
energies, the prevision and reduction of climate risks, food security,
among others, must come from a public fund, democratically and
transparently managed by the Parties to the Convention themselves.
Carbon markets alone will not be able to replace these resources, for
they are principally not stable nor equitable, nor safe.
The
recent financial crisis has very clearly shown us that we can not
exclusively trust markets to solve the greatest challenge facing
humanity today.
As long as the mitigation commitments of developed countries are left
unmet, the possibilities for well-being and, even survival, of billions
of human beings will remain unmet and threatened. It is a shame for the
international community that the number people suffering hunger has
surpassed the billion individuals. It is the first time in human
history that this happens.
We
know that climate change, as well as the false solutions to it, has
contributed to a great extent to this dramatic effect.
The countries of the south do not want to go to Copenhagen to exchange
words empty of value and empty of courage, for the Earth shouting
demands real solutions.
These real solutions must be built on principles. Not to damage other
States and other peoples is an inalienable principle of international
law.
Equity, solidarity and justice amongst peoples are also inalienable principles of the ethos we need to reinstate.
I thank you.
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