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We Cubans are
dissatisfied with the documents presented
• Speech by Cuban Foreign Minister
Bruno Rodríguez, in the closing session of the 16th
UN Environmental Summit
• Thank you very much, dear
Patricia*:
I should like to acknowledge Mexico
and your effective presidency that has brought us to
this point.
I understand the fatigue of all of
us in this room and I also understand your
enthusiasm.
I believe that this conference
stands in sharp contrast with the failure of
Copenhagen in terms of the universal participation
in democratic and transparent procedures.
One year has passed since Copenhagen,
a year of undue pressure, political imposition,
financial pressure on the part of a group of
countries to try to legitimize that non-agreement,
that disagreement, which was translated into a sad
document in that long night, longer than this one,
in Copenhagen.
It has been made clear in secret
documents recently disclosed, that there has been a
degree of conspiracy among certain powers – in the
words of the document itself – to marginalize,
neutralize or co-opt some countries, among which
Cuba is mentioned, as are Venezuela and Bolivia.
In Latin America and the Caribbean,
the Plurinational State of Bolivia exercises a
fundamental leadership, and represents for us the
vindication of the original peoples, of the original
cultures of America.
President Evo Morales is an Aymara
leader, a leader of the social movements.
A democratically elected president,
who has been subjected to undemocratic attempts to
expel him from government, who is at times attacked
by the right with arrogance and racism.
We are learning from original
cultures what I think is a universal value today,
which is the need to attain a balance between humans
and nature. I also understand that the peoples have
to be heard in this hall and lament the fact that,
in these summits, there if often little popular
participation.
I consider that non-governmental
organizations, the social movements must have a part
in these processes.
And that in every major decision,
such as the one which concerns us today, there
should be consultation with the peoples, because we
are talking about the survival of the human species,
no more nor less, we are talking about the survival
of human beings.
The Bolivian delegation is speaking
here in the name of the peoples of Our America and
deserves consideration and recognition in Cuba’s
opinion.
We Cubans are dissatisfied with the
documents presented, I am going to argue on the
basis of three elements which I consider essential:
first, because it does not include any clear or
adequate greenhouse gas reduction targets, and we
know from the course of the discussion that has
taken place in this conference that they would lead
by 2020, in the worst of cases, to a 6% increase in
emissions by the developed countries based on 1990
levels, or in the best of cases to a reduction of
only 16%, which would imply an increase in
temperature of more than 2.5 degrees up to 5 degrees.
Speaking of average temperatures,
there are today more than 20 million hungry people
on this planet, island nations at risk.
What would happen on the planet if a
temperature increase should be produced such as the
one described and about which there is
unquestionable scientific evidence? I consider that
this is an issue of extreme urgency and of profound
concern, which the documents do not address and that
we should try to compile adequate and emergent
formulas in future sessions, before the next
conference in Durban.
Secondly, it seems to me that key to
this process is the agreement that there is going to
be a second period of commitments to the Kyoto
Protocol is key in this process, and it is my
delegation’s interpretation that what is reflected
in these documents is a clear commitment that we are
going to go to that second period of the Kyoto
Protocol.
I am a realist, I understand that
tonight we are not going to be able to establish
quantities or specific national commitments, but
that we are confirming in this meeting the principle
of common but differentiated responsibilities,
according to the capacities of states, and that here
there have been agreements that we are going to a
second period of Kyoto commitments.
And thirdly, I am concerned about the
way in which contributions and finances are being
approached; I recall the figures of that
unprecedented night in Copenhagen, the language of
the documents, I recall that ambiguity and note with
concern that when $100 billion is mentioned, one is
talking of mobilization efforts, that when $30
billion is mentioned, one is talking of an
approximation to that figure, and I have not seen
here any concrete commitment regarding the source of
those funds.
I understand, I interpret that what
the documents contributed by your presidency say, is
that there is a commitment on the part of the
governments of the developed countries to contribute
these amounts. On the basis of these considerations,
Madam Chair, I would first like to make a request to
respect the consensus, and to listen to the
proposals of the Bolivian delegation, and I would
also like to support the proposal of the Venezuelan
delegation, likewise supported by Saudi Arabia, that
the corresponding working groups make a decision on
these documents, before doing so, that is to say,
directly in this plenary.
Once again, Madam Chair, I reiterate
my acknowledgement of the contribution of Mexico and
your own, Patricia.
Thank you very much.
*He is addressing Mexican Foreign
Minister Patricia Espinosa, chair of the Summit.
Translated by Granma International
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Another year has been
lost since the deception of
Copenhagen
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