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David Miliband
(Archived), LondonBeyond Copenhagen
At the launch was President Jagdeo of Guyana - in London for yesterday's meeting of the UN Secretary General’s High Level Advisory Group on Climate Finance , co-chaired by the Prime Minister and Prime Minister Meles of Ethiopia. President Jagdeo spoke about the UK's continued leadership in the fight to combat global climate change and secure a legally binding deal. Our advocacy of such action makes a difference – and we will continue to work with partners in the international community, like President Jagdeo. to achieve the outcome we all want: the avoidance of dangerous climate change, and all the risks and threats that come with it.
David Miliband
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Climate Science
Climate scientists from the Met Office hit back at the sceptics last week with new research revealing the clear fingerprints of man-made global warming. Advances in observational data and the way it is analysed are giving scientists a better insight into the climate system than ever before. The study concluded there is an "increasingly remote possibility" of human influence not being the chief driver of climate change.
Peter Stott, Head of Climate Monitoring and Attribution at the Met Office discussed the new study. One quote stood out:
“The science reveals a consistent picture of global change that clearly bears the fingerprint of man-made greenhouse gas emissions. This shows the evidence of climate change has gone beyond temperature increases — it is now visible across our climate system and all regions of the planet. Our climate is changing now and it’s very likely human activity is to blame."
David Miliband
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11 March 2010
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Climate Security
Here is a new-ish angle on climate change. The UK's climate and energy security envoy Rear Admiral Morisetti has set out his role. It’s I think unique in the world, and a good thing.
The climate security message was also underlined by President Obama at Copenhagen in December. One particular point in his statement stands out:
“This is not fiction, this is science. Unchecked, climate change will pose unacceptable risks to our security, our economies, and our planet. That much we know. So the question before us is no longer the nature of the challenge – the question is our capacity to meet it. For while the reality of climate change is not in doubt, our ability to take collective action hangs in the balance.”
It is clear that we still have much work to do. But the UK remains completely committed to a global deal to avoid catastrophic climate change. And people like Rear Admiral Morisetti – and all our staff working on climate change right across the FCO’s network - are out there right now making the argument.
David Miliband
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25 February 2010
26 February 2010
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Climate Change: The 1% Doctrine
As the talks continue in Copenhagen, questions are still being posed in the background about the validity of the science of climate change. I firmly believe that climate change is happening, and in the need for an ambitious global agreement.
But if you believe that the science isn’t exact enough, or even if you are sceptical about climate change full stop, it is immensely dangerous to oppose a deal at Copenhagen. As this piece by Thomas Friedman explains, the consequences are so dire that even a 1% chance of catastrophic climate change is something we must try our hardest to avoid.
David Miliband
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16 December 2009
16 December 2009
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CHOGM
The presence of Ban Ki Moon has added global reach to the meeting. He kicks off the special session on climate in an hour.
David Miliband
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28 November 2009
28 November 2009
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Copenhagen – We still have a chance
Following the EU’s legally binding commitments, and alongside the recent Japanese and Korean announcements, this shows that momentum is still building. Countries, both developing and developed, are willing to make commitments to produce an ambitious global deal.
I met this week with South American journalists; the region will be crucial to any deal.
David Miliband
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19 November 2009
20 November 2009
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Climate Finance
So far, the EU has done its bit, showing commendable leadership in driving progress towards such a deal. The 20-20-20 deal, the conditional offer to shift to 30% emissions reduction targets, and diplomatic initiatives to encourage global action, have all contributed. And we have shown -reflecting the argument that I made in my speech on Europe at IISS on Monday - that by working through the EU, Britain can have a bigger impact than acting alone. The UK can act to address its own emissions, but as part of the EU, we can ensure others reduce theirs too. Britain’s percentage of global carbon emissions is 2%; the EU’s is 14%.
But the deal we need is by no means guaranteed. Today, the Prime Minister and I are meeting European leaders at the October European Council to iron out the EU’s position. Climate finance - the framework and funding to encourage developing countries to join a global deal - will be central to discussions.
An ambitious climate finance offer from the EU is what we need to reach a two degree deal, and the October European Council is the opportunity for the EU to demonstrate the role it can play as a global actor.
Now, more than ever, the EU needs to come together.
David Miliband
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03 November 2009
04 November 2009
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Climate Change – Believe the Science
This is alarming. We need to do more to make sure people – and governments – know the science behind climate change. Hence the map we commissioned from the Hadley Centre, launched at the Science Museum last week.
The article argues that some of this drop is explained by people’s preoccupation with economic issues. This could well be true. But it is a false dichotomy. If we don’t solve the problems of climate change today; the depression of tomorrow – once the full economic effects kick in – would eclipse the current recession.
Lord Stern has said that the economic effects of climate change could cost us more than two world wars and the great depression combined. We must heed such warnings, we must listen to the science, and we must ensure that the Copenhagen Summit heralds an ambitious global deal to limit temperature rises to two degrees.
David Miliband
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29 October 2009
29 October 2009
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Blog Action Day - Climate Change
Today is Blog Action Day and across the world bloggers are coming together to blog on one topic; climate change. There is no topic more pressing or more worthy, and both government and individuals need to be mobilised in support of an ambitious and equitable deal in Copenhagen. Bloggers who individually have quiet voices can collectively speak volumes.
Last year 12,000 bloggers took part. This year I hope there will be even more. Including our Foreign Office climate change bloggers, now gathered in one place on our new blog platform 'Climate Conversations' . But climate change has an impact far beyond those traditionally thought of as environmental. So bloggers right across our network are are also writing on this topic - John Duncan, Ambassador for Multilateral Arms Control & Disarmament, on nuclear issues and climate change; David Concar, Climate Change Counsellor Beijing, on China’s climate change concerns. The Prime Minister too has produced a one off blog for the cause, available to read on Number 10’s website
But it’s not just bloggers. Everyone can do their bit by backing the bid for an ambitious, effective and fair deal in Copenhagen. Go to the 'Act on Copenhagen' website to find out more.
The UK is doing its bit– the first country to set legally binding targets to cut its carbon footprint and the first to set carbon budgets to limit emissions. But we, and the rest of the world, have a massive challenge in front of us. The window of action to avoid catastrophic climate change is closing and agreement at Copenhagen is by no means certain.
All countries must come together to face the shared threat. There will have to be compromise, but there cannot be compromise on the ambition – to keep global temperature rises below 2 degrees, we need nothing less than a 50% reduction in global emissions by 2050. I hope the voices raised today will help us near our goal.
David Miliband
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15 October 2009
15 October 2009
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Blog Action Day
15 October is Blog Action Day related to climate change and Copenhagen in particular. There isn’t really a better topic for blogging - a deal needs civilian power not just government power.
I've just done an interview for a Brazilian paper El Globo arguing that we keep the faith in the drive for an ambitious, fair and effective global deal. That remains my position.
David Miliband
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10 October 2009
12 October 2009
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4 Countries, One Day
Yesterday I was in Poland where 94 per cent of electricity is coal generated, symbolising some of the challenges even for relatively rich countries in engineering a shift to low carbon. But the Poles have the legacy of old Soviet era infrastructure, and so there are some rich pickings for companies serious about energy efficicency.
I now think Europe can forge a common and strong position on climate financing. The Prime Minister's speech from June still sets the bar for detail on sources, quantum and destination for funding. Today in Copenhagen we will see how to take European common ground and drive towards a global consensus.
David Miliband
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11 September 2009
11 September 2009
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Useful summits?
At Paris' Sciences Po University yesterday I said that if Europe successfully led the way to global climate deal, the EU would come to be recognised as an "Environmental Union". It is an uphill struggle towards a deal because of the competing pressures on time, money and political capital around the world.
Less than 100 days before the Copenhagen meeting the detailed negotiations need a political lift. One opportunity is the SIX EU summits with third countries between now and December - South Africa, Brazil, USA, India, Russia, China.
The Swedish presidency, which will lead the EU delegation, say climate change will be the centrepiece of the summits. At each there needs to be hard talking about the components of a deal - targets, financing, technology.
David Miliband
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10 September 2009
10 September 2009
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Copenhagen in the balance
Despite the Japanese announcement the drive for a global climate deal is in danger. I have argued this morning with Britain's lead negotiator, my brother Ed Miliband, the pressure of other issues, notably the economic crisis, risks crowding out the space for a global deal.
The response needs to be an augmented drive by those of us committed to a deal. In the first instance that means Europeans pulling their weight - so French Foreign Minister Kouchner, and Swedish Foreign Minister Bildt will today launch a 3 day drive around Europe, culminating in Copenhagen on Thursday, to mobilise European diplomatic resources around a deal.
David Miliband
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10 September 2009
10 September 2009
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Japan moves on climate; let's build on it
The decision/announcement by the new Japanese government to increase its emissions reduction commitment threefold (from minus 8 to minus 25 by 2020) is a shot in the arm to the drive for a deal in Copenhagen.
Japan is a massive economy - the world's second largest - and technological driver. As the host of Kyoto it has a special role; the new government is determined to fulfil it
David Miliband
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08 September 2009
08 September 2009
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China-European Commission agreement on CCS
I blogged recently about the need to finance environmental measures in developing countries ('A Greener World'). I was pleased to see the European Commission's announcement on Thursday of its intention to help fund carbon capture and storage demonstration with China - particularly since the original EU-China Partnership on Climate Change was launched through a joint declaration during the UK's last EU Presidency in 2005.
We have long argued that providing global certainty on the demonstration of CCS (by 2015) and its deployment (by 2020) is central to any credible climate change agreement which deals effectively with fossil fuel, and coal in particular.
A credible global CCS demonstration effort will require substantive international collaboration between major coal dependent economies. The Commission's announcement is a welcome step in the right direction. Funding CCS demonstration in China would complement the G8's commitment to launch 20 demonstrations in 2010.
More broadly this Commission-Chinese initiative can provide a model for more proposals for collaborative projects between developed countries and emerging economies. Nevertheless we need to act much faster and more ambitiously on CCS and other mitigation technologies as we approach Copenhagen.
David Miliband
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30 June 2009
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11 March 2010