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Meet the web team in Copenhagen

Another day has dawned cold and gray here in Copenhagen, but there are plenty of reasons for excitement and optimism. Now that President Obama' has agreed to attend the conference, all the elements are now in place for world leaders to move forward and agree a legally binding treaty to stop climate chaos.

Greenpeace has a sizeable delegation on the ground here, representing the millions of activists worldwide who are calling for a deal that will do what the science says we must do to avert an utter climate catastrophe. I’m lucky enough to be part of the web team that will be updating you on what's happening both inside and outside the UN climate summit.

I’ll be working alongside some other fabulous Greenpeace webbies. We shot this video to introduce ourselves:

We know that a fair, ambitious, and legally-binding climate deal is possible here in Copenhagen. All that's lacking is the political will to make it happen.

But, as our executive director, Kumi Naidoo, told a packed house at Copenhagen University on Saturday night, our leaders all seem to suffer from a "common medical condition - they’re hard of hearing when it comes to calls for bold action on climate change." The Greenpeace delegation is here to remind the people negotiating the future of the planet here in Copenhagen that millions of us are calling for them to live up to their moral obligation.

Today over 56 newspapers from all over the world are joining the call “because humanity faces a profound emergency.” These papers are all printing the same editorial – in 20 languages – which states, in part:

Unless we combine to take decisive action, climate change will ravage our planet, and with it our prosperity and security. The dangers have been becoming apparent for a generation. Now the facts have started to speak: 11 of the past 14 years have been the warmest on record, the Arctic ice-cap is melting and last year's inflamed oil and food prices provide a foretaste of future havoc. In scientific journals the question is no longer whether humans are to blame, but how little time we have got left to limit the damage. Yet so far the world's response has been feeble and half-hearted.

But there is more than enough reason to have hope that these negotiations could be the turning point. Just yesterday, for instance, South Africa became the latest country to announce the emissions reductions targets they were putting on the table: 34% below 'business as usual' over the next 10 years, peaking at 42% by 2025. This makes South Africa “one of the stars of the negotiations.” Let’s hope the other delegates at the conference are decent enough at astral navigation to follow their lead!

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Cannot be there to stick this up so hope you enjoy?

OUR EARTH

ALWAYS YOU’RE THERE TO SUPPORT US
FOREVER
STRONG BENEATH OUR FEET

YOU STAY TRUE TO US IN YOUR COUNTRYSIDE
IN YOUR OCEANS
AND ON EVERY CORNER OF EVERY STREET

YOU GIVE US AIR TO BREATHE
FLOWERS TO SMELL
AND A HOME IN WHICH TO DWELL

YOU HELPED US RAISE OUR CHILDREN
PROTECTED THEM
AND ALL OF HUMAN KIND, SO VERY VERY WELL

AND IN RETURN DO WE CHERISH YOU
PROTECT YOU
AND DO ALL THAT WE COULD

TO SHOW OUR CHILDREN’S, CHILDREN
YOUR BEAUTY
AS WE KNOW WE SHOULD

I FEAR AS POLITICIANS PONDER
HOW TO SAVE YOU
ON THIS VERY DAY

WHILST THERE BOMBS ARE STILL FALLING
AND GASES ARE RISING
MANKIND HAS LOST ITS WAY

SO THE MIGHTY WHO TALK, ABOUT JUST WHAT TO DO
NO FALSE PROMISES
FOR WE NO LONGER HAVE THE TIME

IF
YOUR LEGACY
IS NOT TO BE HUMANS GREATEST CRIME

WE ARE NOT RULERS OF OUR EARTH
BUT SIMPLY
WE ARE ITS GUESTS

AND AS SUCH IT DESERVES OUR RESPECT
SO YOU’RE CHILDREN
CAN SEE IT AT ITS NATURAL BEST

Latest revelation

I have sent a message to Ed Miliband which reads as follows:
Dear Mr Miliband,

I am astonished, after all you have said about your pledge, at the revelation of the secretly agreed text yesterday at Copenhagen. How is ti that you have put your name to this? Do the governments of the rich world still not get it? That they have put the vast bulk of the extra CO2 in the atmosphere, and it is primarily their responsibility to do something about it, and especially to ensure that by 2050 every person on the globe is restricted to the same amount of carbon (if any), with no special privileges for us in the rich world? Get weaving and negotiate, Ed!

Yours,

Walter Houston