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For Immediate Release, November 21, 2011

Contact:  Patricia Brooks, ActionAid USA, patricia.brooks@actionaid.org, (202) 351-1757

Demands for Durban Climate Summit: Environmentalists, Human and Civil Rights Activists,
Religious Leaders Press Obama Administration for Bold Action

WASHINGTON— Leading up to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change summit in Durban, South Africa, members of the Stand With Africa campaign today urged U.S. policymakers to focus their attention on the people already suffering from the impacts of climate change rather than playing politics and making excuses for delaying action. The full name of the campaign is Stand With Africa: Act Now for Climate Justice.

The Durban summit takes place on a continent severely stressed by climate change. Africa is particularly prone to increased food and water stress due to global warming; according to the World Food Program, approximately 65 percent of the global total increase in climate-related hunger is projected to occur on the continent of Africa. And according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 75 million to 250 million people across Africa could face more severe water shortages by 2020 as a result of climate change.

The United States has a particular responsibility to act, both as the single largest historic climate polluter and because it is facing great climate risks and impacts here at home. The Stand With Africa campaign calls on the United States to:

• offer a clear plan for how it will meet and exceed its current emission reduction target;
• commit to at least one innovative approach to generate public finance to help countries confront climate change;
• support the operation of a transparent, accountable and environmentally sound Green Climate Fund.

Members of the Stand With Africa campaign can speak about the range of innovative tools available to generate public finance. For example, in order to reduce emissions and generate finance, it is possible to set up mechanisms in the shipping and aviation sectors — two polluting industries — that both reduce emissions and generate climate finance in a way that ensures no new costs or burdens on developing countries.

Another widely supported option includes a tiny fee on financial transactions. According to the Austrian Institute for Economic Research, a global financial transaction tax of 0.1 percent could generate between U.S. $410 billion and U.S. $1.06 trillion per year, a portion of which could go to help developing countries confront climate change.  

Members of the campaign will be available for comment on the progress of the negotiations and the role of the United States in the lead up to, during and after the Durban climate summit.

For more information, visit http://actionaidusa.org/StandwithAfrica/.
The current list of Stand With Africa partners includes: ActionAid USA, Africa Faith and Justice Network, Americans for Informed Democracy, Center for Biological Diversity, Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach, Environmental Justice and Climate Change Initiative, Foreign Policy in Focus, Friends of the Earth USA, Greenpeace USA, Maryknoll Office for Global Concern, NAACP, Oxfam America, the Sustainable Energy and Economy Network at the Institute for Policy Studies and WWF.

Commentary and Quotes
Ilana Solomon, senior policy analyst at ActionAid USA:
“The Durban climate summit is taking place against a backdrop of climate-driven disasters. Recent floods across Asia have killed hundreds, displaced millions, and have led to severe food shortages across the region. Droughts across East Africa have threatened the lives and livelihoods of more than 13 million people. The U.S. and other developed countries must go to the climate summit and uphold the interests of the poor — not of corporations and polluting industries. The U.S. must stop delaying progress and work with others to agree to new sources of public finance to help poor countries confront the climate crisis.”
Ilana Solomon is available in Durban and can be reached at ilana.solomon@actionaid.org. To schedule an interview, contact Patricia Brooks in the U.S. at patricia.brooks@actionaid.org  or (202) 351-1757.

Karen Showalter, executive director at Americans for Informed Democracy:
“Young people in the U.S. are keenly aware of the impacts of climate change both here at home and around the world. It is time for the United States to lead the way in addressing what is truly a global challenge!”
Karen Showalter can be reached at karen@aidemocracy.org

Rose Braz, climate campaign director at the Center for Biological Diversity:
“2011 should make clear that climate change is not an abstract problem for the future. Climate change is happening now, it’s caused by human activity, and Africa is particularly vulnerable and hard hit. The longer we wait to act, the harder the problem will be to solve. It’s long past time for the United States and other developed countries to act urgently and ambitiously to curb global warming pollution.”
Rose Braz can be reached at rbraz@biologicaldiversity.org

Michelle Knight, advocacy associate at the Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach:
“Columban missionaries in countries such as Peru and the Philippines are already seeing the effects of climate change harming the communities with whom we live and serve. The U.S. must work with all countries at the summit towards reducing emissions and generating finance for affected countries.”
Michelle Knight can be reached at mmknight@columban.org

Kari Fulton, interim director, Environmental Justice and Climate Change Initiative:
“The Environmental Justice Climate Change Initiative is heading to Durban with a delegation of youth and community leaders to ensure that our government, and the world knows that within the United States there are people who are feeling the impacts of climate change and environmental injustice. We stand in solidarity with those impacted across the global south and are pushing our government to join the rest of the world in addressing the worst impacts of climate change with humanity, humility and as a true comrade of the world. We stand with Africa because Africa's story is not too far from our own. We are all facing the battle to adapt but if we push together we all have a chance to thrive.”
Kari Fulton is available in Durban and can be reached at Kari@theejcc.org, (202) 340-0976 (cell) or on Skype at Karifulton.

Karen Orenstein, international policy campaigner at Friends of the Earth:
“The Green Climate Fund is critically needed to support developing countries in confronting the climate crisis, and it must be operationalized in Durban. However, the GCF must not serve to subsidize developed country corporations. GCF resources must not be used to directly finance the private sector, particularly through the establishment of a private sector facility, and the U.S. must stop pushing this. The role of the private sector in the Green Climate Fund must be decided and regulated at the national and sub-national level in line with countries’ preferences and people’s needs, not corporate bottom lines.”
Karen Orenstein is available in Durban and can be reached at korenstein@foe.org or (202) 640-8679.

Jacqueline Patterson, NAACP director of Economic and Climate Justice Programs:
“U.S. communities of color and low-income communities share a common cause with our African brothers and sisters as all of us are on the frontlines of climate change impact driven by the excesses of a wealthy few nations and corporations.
Policymakers in the United States must uphold their ethical obligations to significantly reduce emissions and ensure financial support to communities and countries most affected by climate change.”
Jacqueline Patterson will be in Durban and can be reached at jpatterson@naacpnet.org  or (443) 465-9809 (cell). To schedule an interview, please contact Ben Wrobel, bwrobel@naacpnet.org or (917) 846-0658.

Janet Redman, co-director of the Sustainable Energy & Economy Network at the Institute for Policy Studies:
“People living in poverty in the U.S. and throughout the African continent are already feeling the impacts of climate change. How many more lives must be imperiled before the U.S. acts? The U.S. and other developed country governments should learn from the Occupy movements that people are not willing to sacrifice the security of vulnerable communities for corporate profits.”
Janet Redman is available in Durban and can be reached at janet@ips-dc.org. To schedule an interview, contact Lacy Macauley in the U.S. at lacy@ips-dc.org or (202) 445-4692.

Lou Leonard, managing director of Climate Change at WWF:
“The impacts of climate change are no longer just a threat to our future; they are with us today. As the Horn of Africa experiences its worst drought in more than 60 years, threatening millions with starvation, the United States is being battered by severe floods, droughts, and wildfires. The climate crisis disproportionately affects the people least capable of adapting, and threatens the survival of the wildlife, biodiversity and ecosystems upon which we all rely. Meanwhile, Washington is absent at home and abroad on addressing risks posed by climate change, leaving cities and towns across America dangerously unprepared for these severe and growing impacts. The Obama administration needs to rise above the Washington gridlock and show leadership by developing and executing a U.S. strategy to meet our international climate commitments.”

Lou Leonard is available in Durban and can be reached at lou.leonard@wwfus.org. To schedule an interview, contact Ian Morrison at Ian.Morrison@wwfus.org or (202) 372-6373.


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