Recently, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) confirmed the potentially catastrophic impacts of climate change caused by human activity and detailed the possible consequences if we fail to act immediately. While the picture they paint is a dire one, there are concrete steps we can take now to avoid the more nightmarish scenarios.
Building the message
The 10m x 4m x 4m (32ft x 13ft x 13ft) wooden ship, being constructed by Greenpeace
volunteers, will send a strong message to leaders of all nations that we must act now to tackle global warming and the impending
climate change crisis.
A caravan of 40 horses have hauled the prefabricated wooden sections up Mount Ararat, where work has now begun
on constructing supports as well as the keel and ribs of the boat. Over the next 2 weeks, a team of 20 German and Turkish carpenters will
complete the construction of the boat, which will be turned over to the
public in an official ceremony on May 31, 2007. A day before the ceremony, activists will climb the 5,137 meter
summit of Mount Ararat and call on the leaders of all nations to make
climate protection a reality.
Building towards a solution
Greenpeace recently launched the
Energy [R]evolution, a blueprint
for avoiding dangerous climate change and keeping global warming to
under two degrees.
The Energy [R]evolution sets out a detailed plan up to
2050 showing how to make reductions in greenhouse gases - which IPCC
prescribes can be achieved using current renewable energy technology
and energy efficiency measures - without harming economic growth and
taking into account population increases.
"At the upcoming G8 summit, many announcements will be made
on climate protection, but they must be followed by real action,"
said Andree Böhling, a Greenpeace energy campaigner, "Otherwise, the
G8 summit will pay only lip service to climate change and a
historic opportunity will be lost."
Climate change could mean a future with huge coastal flooding, drought,
extreme destructive weather events and massive increases in disease and
displacement of hundreds of million of people. That's why millions of people around the world are already mobilizing. They're
lobbying politicians, changing what they buy and making smart energy
choices.