Home > Climate breakdown, Earthgauge radio, Energy, Environmental justice, Global warming, Podcasts, Politics, Sustainability > December 1 Earthgauge radio podcast: the Durban climate summit special

December 1 Earthgauge radio podcast: the Durban climate summit special

Click the audio player to listen to the latest edition of Earthgauge radio, which is a bi-weekly broadcast every other Thursday morning from 7-8 AM on CKCU 93.1 FM in Ottawa. You can also right click here to download the show.

On today’s show, a special program on the climate change summit that started this week in Durban, South Africa. Interviews with Andrew Weaver, Canada Research Chair in Climate Modeling and Analysis at UVic and one of the key authors of several of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports and with Felix Von Geyer who is a sustainable development journalist based in Montreal specializing in climate change politics. We’ll also hear a very interesting perspective from South Africa courtesy of our friend Alex Smith who runs the syndicated radio show EcoShock. He had a discussion recently with Patrick Bond of the University of KwaZulu Natal, director of the Centre for Civil Society in South Africa.

What is this Durban Summit on climate change all about? It is formally known as the 17th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, quite a mouthful so people just call it COP 17 for short.  As you may have heard already, expectations for Cop 17 are low. The summit is widely expected not to result in any new international climate change agreement, so I’m not sure if the organizers of COP 17 were trying to be ironic or wildly optimistic when they chose the slogan ‘Saving Tomorrow Today’ for this year’s summit. In any case, on today’s show, we look at the reasons why many people think COP 17 and indeed the entire international climate change negotiation process is on life support and is doing anything but saving tomorrow today.

If the international climate change negotiation process is fundamentally broken, where do we go from here? And what role has Canada played in undermining global action on climate change? Well, it’s more than you might think as we’ll hear. As we all know well, the Cdn government has a considerable vested interest in seeing that tar sands developments continue unabated so, since the arrival of Stephen Harper in 2006, the government has shown very little enthusiasm for the climate change issue. This is no different this time round in Durban.

  1. Tony Copple
    December 2, 2011 at 9:18 am
    Reply

    I was mightily impacted by this program. Got me thinking: What can I do about it? Well, I’ll be making a start on my show, Window of Opportunity, CKCU this Friday afternoon 2Dec, when I will encourage the folk songwriting community to get a lot more vocal on the subject. Thye environment was important to Woody Guthrie, the Beach Boys, Midnight Oil and many others. Lets get songwriting!

    • December 2, 2011 at 1:02 pm
      Reply

      Thanks Tony. I’ll be looking forward to hearing your show on Friday.

  2. Jérôme-Antoine
    December 7, 2011 at 8:00 pm
    Reply

    Hey! Glad the “I’m a climate scientist” song came in handy 🙂
    Felix Von Geyer was talking about a paper arguing that Canada is in a “Dutch Disease” situation because of the way we manage our natural resources. Can you retrace that paper and post a link to it on-line? Thanks. Love the show, I was feeling for you…technical difficulties suck! Cheers!

    • December 7, 2011 at 10:02 pm
      Reply

      Sure J-A. I’ll contact Felix and try to find it. Thanks for listening!

    • December 8, 2011 at 12:13 pm
      Reply

      As promised, here is the link to the article that Felix mentioned in his interview:
      http://www.irpp.org/po/hot_topics.php?topic=Economics%20and%20business

      Scroll down to the article ‘Curing the Dutch disease in Canada’ by Célestin Bimenyimana and Luc Vallée (November 2011).

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