Disappearing polar bear: climate change art work, Copenhagen. Photo ©Alan Miller/ IFC |
Having attended all but two of the 15 climate change conferences, I am pretty familiar with the atmosphere, processes, and even many of the attendees. Nevertheless, much about the Copenhagen Conference has been surprising -- the sheer number and diversity of participants, the large street protests, the media attention, the impressive engagement from the people and city of Copenhagen. The best comparison I can make is to imagine taking the United Nations, Times Square, and Greenwich Village and put them all together under one roof.
At the core, at most a few hundred negotiators, often sitting behind closed doors, undertake the difficult task of attempting to reach an agreement. It is no exaggeration to say that what they do -- or fail to do -- may determine the fate of us all. Swirling all around them are thousands of people from every imaginable (and unimaginable) perspective, traditional environmental groups, indigenous peoples, business organizations, religious and spiritual believers, the media (press interviews pop up randomly in the halls) and of course the international organizations.
Hopenhagen: central square filled with climate change activities, Copenhagen. Photo ©Alan Miller/IFC |
Those of us from IFC (three or four this week) are a small part of the World Bank Group delegation, which numbers more than fifty; the World Bank is in turn only one of many international organizations. World Bank President Zoellick arrives today -- it will be interesting to see his role and impact.
As the senior political level officials enter this week, the process seems to be reaching a breaking point with four days still to go. The registration lines are slowing to a crawl and observer organizations have been told to reduce their numbers by half or more due to the capacity limits of the building (actually, multiple buildings several of which are temporary). Every day the few members of our delegation actually observing the negotiations report little or no progress. Yesterday they were told to leave when the meetings entered the sensitive "informal" stage.
President Robert Zoellick (World Bank) with President Mohamed Nasheed (Maldives). Photo ©Alan Miller/IFC |
The ultimate hope for a positive outcome remains pending the arrival of an expected 110 plus heads of state. As the Convention Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer told us in a briefing last week, "they come to celebrate, not to commiserate." As of today it's difficult to believe that heads of state can do in two days what their ministers and staff have been unable to do in months of meetings.
We'll all know soon.
More pictures from Copenhagen
Another solution to global warming (from a Korean spiritual organization). Photo ©Alan Miller/IFC | More attendees, Copenhagen. Photo ©Alan Miller/IFC |
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