UNEP/266

UNEP GOVERNING COUNCIL/GLOBAL MINISTERIAL ENVIRONMENT FORUM TO MEET 21-25 FEBRUARY

18/02/2005
Press Release
UNEP/266

UNEP GOVERNING COUNCIL/GLOBAL MINISTERIAL ENVIRONMENT FORUM

 

TO MEET, 21 - 25 FEBRUARY


Climate-Friendly Civil Society Conference Gives Delegates Guilt-Free Travel

(Reissued as received.)


NAIROBI, 18 February (UNEP) -- An international gathering of civil society, organized by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), will have zero impact on the Earth’s atmosphere because the participants’ greenhouse gas emissions are being offset by climate-friendly schemes in eastern and southern Africa.


More than 100 delegates from Asia, Africa, Europe, North America and Latin America and the Caribbean are jetting in to attend the two-day Sixth Global Civil Society Forum being held at the headquarters of UNEP.


The pollution from the airliners would have added to the global emissions of carbon coming from cars, factories and homes which are responsible for climate change.


But this time, the Forum will be a carbon-neutral meeting.  The UNEP, working with a Swiss organization called “Myclimate”, is supporting a solar power project in Eritrea and a waste gas-into-electricity scheme in South Africa.


The amount of carbon dioxide saved by UNEP’s backing equals the carbon emissions of the delegates’ travel.


Klaus Toepfer, UNEP’s Executive Director, said:  “Climate change is the biggest threat facing the planet and its people.  Governments must act, businesses must act, and we all must act to reduce our personal contribution to this looming catastrophe.  Off-setting emissions from travel, by planting trees or investing in renewable and clean energy projects in developing countries, is a virtuous circle.  We play our part in fighting climate change, but also boost forest cover and the supply of clean energy.  Both of these are needed in developing countries for a healthy environment and for sustainable economic development.”


He said he was particularly delighted that the Forum was addressing its climate footprint in the same week as the Kyoto Protocol, the treaty that requires cuts in developed country emissions, comes into legal force.


“We now have the foundation upon which we can build towards the even bigger, 60 per cent cuts in emissions needed, to really stabilize the atmosphere.  I hope organizers of other gatherings, and participants to other meetings taking place around the world, look hard and long at making their events carbon neutral too”, said Mr. Toepfer.


Renat Heuberger, Managing Director of Zurich-based Myclimate, said:  “The UNEP funds are going towards a project aimed at installing 200 solar collectors for water heating in schools, hospitals and households in Eritrea.  The collectors are manufactured locally and local school teachers are being trained in solar heat production, thereby contributing to the success of the project.”


“In South Africa, the funds will go towards using methane from a wastewater treatment works in SebokengTownship, 30 kilometres south-west of Johannesburg, to generate electricity.  Methane is a potent global warming gas, but also an excellent fuel.  By harvesting the methane, currently lost to the atmosphere, we reduce its global warming impact and replace electricity generated from a nearby coal-fired power station”, he said.


The Civil Society Forum, bringing together such diverse bodies as wildlife societies, trades unions, youth councils, women’s groups, sustainable business experts and indigenous peoples’ networks, comes in the run up to UNEP’s Governing Council, which will meet from 21 to 25 February. 


The Forum’s discussions and recommendations will inform delegates to the Governing Council on the role civil society can and is playing in the wider quest for sustainable and environment-friendly development.


One key issue for the Forum is how non-governmental organizations can contribute and play their part in reconstruction and rehabilitation of areas affected by the Indian Ocean tsunami.


Other issues include draft decisions before the Governing Council and the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals.  The Goals are, in 2005, being subject to a five-year review by the UN General Assembly next September.


Notes to Editors


Details of the Eritrea and South African projects, Myclimate, as well as other carbon-neutral initiatives, are available at www.unep.org/dpdl/civil_society/GCSF/carbon-neutral.asp.


Information on UNEP’s work with civil society can be found at www.unep.org/dpdl/cso.


Details on the UNEP Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum are at www.unep.org/gc/gc23


For more information, please contact:  Eric Falt Spokesman/Director, UNEP Division of Communications and Public Information, tel: +254-20-623292, mobile: +254-733-682656, e-mail: eric.falt@unep.org; or Nick Nuttall, UNEP Head of Media, tel: +254-20-623084, mobile: +254-733-632755, e-mail: nick.nuttall@unep.org.


In New York, contact:  Jim Sniffen, Information Officer, UNEP, tel: +1-212-963-8094/8210, info@nyo.unep.org, www.nyo.unep.org.


* *** *

For information media. Not an official record.