Maldives to miss climate summit

BBC News 7 Sep 09;

President Nasheed said climate change summits were at times "childish" because countries tended to blame each other over past misdeeds rather than think practically.

The president of the Maldives has said that, even though his country is under threat from climate change, he cannot afford to go to a summit on the issue.

President Mohamed Nasheed said his nation would only go to the December talks in Copenhagen if someone offered to pay for the trip.

He said the Maldives needed to be defended from the effects of global warming and rising sea levels.

But he added that the country would have to do much of the work itself.

"We can't go to Copenhagen because we don't have the money," President Nasheed told journalists.

World leaders at the summit are aiming to create a new agreement to replace the 1997 Kyoto Protocal, which expires in 2012.

Security issue

No part of the island state's territory lies more than 2.5m above sea level, and 50 of its islands are already severely eroding.

The president said this showed that climate change was not just an environment issue, but a security issue as well.

"I keep saying this: if the Europeans thought it was important to defend Poland in the '30s and '40s - in any threat you really have to look after your frontline states.

"Now, the Maldives is a frontline state."

The country is planning a major clean-up of its technology and the president said parliament will shortly consider a "green tax" of three dollars per tourist per day.

President Nasheed, a former human rights activist who came to power 10 months ago, said climate change summits were at times "childish" because countries tended to blame each other over past misdeeds rather than think practically.

He hoped the Copenhagen summit would come out with positive plans, like renewable energy promotion, rather than stressing what he called negative ones like capping carbon emissions.

Maldives too broke to attend climate summit: president
Amal Jayasinghe (AFP) Google News 7 Sep 09;

MALE — The Maldives, whose fight against rising sea levels has become a cause celebre for environmentalists, said Monday it would have to skip UN climate change talks in Copenhagen this year to save money.

"We can't go to Copenhagen because we don't have the money," President Mohamed Nasheed told reporters, adding that he was staying away to set an example of cost-saving to the rest of the government.

In 2007, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that a rise in sea levels of 18 to 59 centimetres (7.2 to 23.2 inches) by 2100 would be enough to make the Maldives virtually uninhabitable.

Over 80 percent of the country's land, composed of 1,192 coral islands scattered off southern India, is less than one metre above mean sea level.

Nasheed, the first democratically elected president of the archipelago, said the economy was in serious trouble because of a fall in tourism revenues that has sent the budget deficit to a record 34 percent of gross domestic product.

In the past, in a move that drew attention to the plight of the nation's 330,000-strong population, Nasheed has said the government would begin saving to buy a new homeland for its people to flee to in the future.

Sri Lanka, India or Australia have been mooted as destinations.

The Copenhagen meeting of world powers aims to set curbs on emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases beyond 2012, with intermediate targets for 2020 that would be ratcheted up all the way to 2050.

Some campaigners said the negotiations would be weakened if the Maldives were missing, given their vocal campaigning for greenhouse gas caps and their vital interest in a deal being reached.

"They are the most vulnerable and if they don't participate and get heard then obviously it's bad for the whole negotiation process," said Kushal Yadav from the Centre for Science and Environment think-tank in New Delhi.

"There should be a fund ... which will sponsor their visit," he added.

Nasheed said he was hoping that the world's leading countries would agree to take steps at the conference that would help low-lying nations escape submersion.

"My message to the Copenhagen summit is that there is hope. We can reverse the effects of warming," he said at his seafront office in highly congested Male, the densely populated one-square-mile (2.6 square kilometres) capital island.

He said he hoped that the summit would focus on renewable energy and transferring cleaner technology to developing nations.

Maldives is part of an alliance of 43 tropical island states that has set down proposals for capping global warming to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.4 degrees Fahrenheit) compared to pre-industrial times.

The conference is still a long way from endorsing an even more modest target of two degrees Celsius (3.6 F) championed by the European Union and most green groups.

Nasheed has also laid out a plan for the nation of Sunni Muslims to be the first to go carbon neutral by 2020 by moving away from fossil fuels and tapping wind and solar energy.

The island's economic woes stem from its dependency on revenues from tourism which have declined due to the global financial crisis.

The government wants to cut 15,000 jobs in the 39,000-strong civil service and increase revenues by levying a three-dollar tax per day on holiday makers in the exotic tourist destination.

The country's land area is only about 300 square kilometres (115 square miles), while its sea area is nearly 100,000 square kilometres (38,610 square miles).