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Bali: People Power Confronts Climate Change
Over 300,000 Avaaz Members Mobilize in 72 Hours
"I've realized that I can't do it by myself, but the world can't do it without me" - Anna, Avaaz member, Australia
Scroll down to see what we have done together
Scroll down to see what we have done together
THE STAKES - A Year of Campaigns Lead to Bali |
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The stakes in the climate change fight could not be higher. It's an unprecedented challenge to humanity to overcome our greed and our division to stop catastrophic global warming. Avaaz members the world over have taken up this challenge with gusto.
Everything we did this year on climate led up to the Bali summit, here are the highlights of 2007: January - 'wake up call'- we run an ad campaign targeting world leaders in countries including India, France, Germany, and the US, covered in major world media, that calls on the G8 countries to make climate their top priority. February - Environment Ministers's summit - we deliver a 100,000 signature petition to a G8 environment ministers meeting -- the German minister chairing the meeting waves our petition at the others, exhorting them to act, and they do, making climate their top summit priority. June - The G8 summit is held in Germany, and Avaaz organizes lobbying and marches, and delivers a 400,000 petition calling for action to the chair of the G8 negotiators. The summit makes unprecedented progress on climate change. July - Live Earth - Avaaz is chosen as the official global campaign partners of Al Gore and the Live Earth concerts. Avaaz members organize thousands of house parties in over 100 countries on the evening of the concert, and tens of thousands sign a pledge to take personal action. September - APEC Summit - President Bush organizes a new coalition to oppose climate action at the APEC summit in Sydney, Australia. Avaaz lobbies the summit and engages the media in a press conference which features a massive 1000 sq ft banner floated out over the barrier reef. The media declare the summit a failure. All these efforts led up to the UN Summit on Climate Change in Bali. Why was this moment so critical? This summit happens only once per year - if we wasted this chance, we would lose a year that scientists tell us we do not have. Bali had to decisively start work on a new global treaty to stop catastrophic climate change. |
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THE PRESSURE - Bringing the Global Voice to Bali | |||
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Our mission was simple: Bring the voice of the world's people directly into the summit. This was no easy task, as high level summits like this one are almost designed to be insulated from public opinion. But by the end, few governments if any had not heard our voice.
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THE RESPONSE - A Global People Power Moment | |||
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This crisis was what the Avaaz network was made for – and Avaaz members immediately sprang into action in the countries where rapid pressure was needed the most.
This campaign was made possible by small contributions from Avaaz members all over the world. Please give what you can to keep the climate change efforts going strong in 2008:
DONATEHelp support our work |
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THE RESULT - The Climate Wreckers Back Down | |||
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Canadian opposition leader with a message for Avaaz from Bali. |
In the final hours of the conference, all the pressure showed its impact.
Heated negotiations had ended in repeated deadlock. The deadline for the conference was extended another 24 hours, and diplomats worked through the night. Japan gave in quickly to the consensus, but the US and Canada held out.
The biggest and clearest victory achieved was on the Canadian government's position. Under pressure from all sides and massive domestic anger, the Canadian government finally did a complete U-turn, and allowed the smaller group of Kyoto countries to agree to reduce carbon emissions by 25-40% by 2020. This significant step means that the richest countries - all except the US - have now set ambitious new targets for emissions reductions.
The US - now completely isolated - still held out. In the final general session, a compromise proposal was suggested that was accepted by every delegation. The United States took the floor -- and rejected it. The world is used to letting the US have its way, but not this time. The assembled delegations let loose a chorus of boos. Nation after nation took the floor and sounded the chords of outrage. Just like hundreds of thousands of Avaaz members told them to do, our leaders stood firm. Faced with this united front, the American representative asked to take the floor once more, and said simply, "The United States will join the consensus." Victory. It was not at all a complete victory - we are still far from the treaty with binding global targets that will stop catastrophic climate change. But the massive grass roots response to save the Bali Summit shows that a great people-powered movement to save our environment is stirring - and this is just the beginning. |
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