FEEDS |

Food security warning over climate change

Nov 17, 2009 10:28 AM | By AFP

Global warming is "inextricably linked" to food security, Seychelles President James Michel said, lamenting reports that no binding agreement is expected at the UN climate change talks in Copenhagen next month.


Current Font Size:
Some small low-lying islands are already facing the forced displacement of their inhabitants violates our dignity, Seychelles President James Michel told UN delegates
"Some small low-lying islands are already facing the forced displacement of their inhabitants violates our dignity," Seychelles President James Michel told UN delegates
quote We don't want a global suicide pact. We want a global survival pact quote

Related Articles

Speaking to AFP on the sidelines of the UN Hunger Summit in Rome on Monday, Michel said: "Coming up with ideas at the FAO summit without tackling climate change makes no sense."

Without "solutions to address the real cause of climate change and food insecurity, we will be increasing the number of people who are hungry," Michel added at the headquarters of the Food and Agriculture Organisation.

He said the prospect of no binding agreement being reached in Copenhagen was "a bit shocking and in a way very irresponsible."

"It is unfortunate, because for us especially, the small island developing states... we hope that at Copenhagen we'll have a legal framework in which countries will have responsibilities and set targets to fight climate change and be able to save the earth."

While world powers that bear the most responsibility "for polluting our atmosphere keep haggling about (carbon) emissions levels... the earth continues to warm up, pollution continues to increase and the sea level continues to rise," he said.

More than 190 nations are to meet for the UN talks in Copenhagen from December 7-18, aiming for a post-2012 accord to slash emissions from fossil fuels that trap solar heat and drive global warming.

But after nearly two years of haggling, deep rifts remain over apportioning emissions curbs between rich economies and fast-growing developing nations and on the accord's architecture and legal status.

Michel told the Hunger Summit earlier Monday: "We cannot at this late hour accept that a few countries which are primarily responsible for polluting our atmosphere hold hostage the survival of our planet."

He added: "Some small low-lying islands are already facing the forced displacement of their inhabitants (which) violates our dignity."

The Seychelles is a member of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), set up in 1990 to represent low-lying coastal and small island countries, notably in climate change negotiations.

Last week the president of the Maldives, the lowest country on earth, warned that the world was set to sign a "global suicide pact" unless it reached a deal in Copenhagen.

"At the moment every country arrives at climate negotiations seeking to keep their own emissions as high as possible," said President Mohamed Nasheed, who staged an underwater cabinet meeting last month in a stunt aimed at highlighting the Maldives' vulnerability to rising sea levels.

"This is the logic of the madhouse, a recipe for collective suicide. We don't want a global suicide pact. We want a global survival pact," he said.

Michel's archipelago of 115 islands off the east African coast with a population of some 85,000, "we have witnessed the negative effects of climate change over the last few years," the Seychelles president said.

Describing the "vicious circle" affecting the Seychelles, he said rising sea levels kill off coral, robbing fish of their habitat and causing tuna to migrate.

Tuna fisheries account for some 40 percent of the Seychelles' economy, Michel said.

 Loading...

 or  to comment

Comments

Nov 17 2009 12:02:16 PM
Spitfire
user name
James Michel makes no sense al all.
He claims that: "Some small low-lying islands are already facing the forced displacement of their inhabitants (which) violates our dignity."
Which ones exactly???
And as far as food is concerned, a visit to the Seychelles will show little in the way of agricultural initiative.
And the locals have to be the laziest people on earth - the local fish packing industry has to import workers from Mauritius as they cannot find staff!!
Instead of rabbiting on about Co2, and confusing this with pollution - he would be better off encouraging people to control their populations.
Ethiopia had a population on 34 million people in 1970 - after nearly forty years of continuing drought and famine the population is not 74 MILLION!!!!
Go figure.
Nov 17 2009 04:30:25 PM
Billy Hill
user name
What is the relevance of Ethiopia to what the President of Seychelles views on the effects of climate change are, Spitfire?

The only thing Ethiopia and Seychelles have in common is centuries of colonialism and US military intervention.

For more info see: http://original.antiwar.com/justin/2007/10/19/mass-murderin-the-horn-of-africa/

and

http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/Chagos_Islands.html



Nov 17 2009 09:18:06 PM
julien
user name
President Michel was addressing not just for Seychelles but other small island nations with No Voice. Seychelles is a sovereign nation can have a say unlike other small islands still under colonialism. Foreign labour is seen in every country, why should Seychelles be an exception with a population of about 87,000 people, a vast territory of about 1.3 million sq km.


Today's Topics