International Youth at UNFCCC Call out Emissions Loopholes in Forestry Text

Cross-posted from theClimateers.org.

UN negotiators from Annex I (developed) countries have been working to push through text on Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) by the end of the Bonn negotiations on Friday, June 11. The draft text, however, creates several loopholes that allow developed countries to effectively hide emissions from land use as if they do not exist. By forcing through the text without removing these loopholes, developed countries would be allowed to emit millions of tons of new carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions without accounting for them. This would lead to a major deviation from emissions reductions demanded by science and would have catastrophic consequences for developing countries and future generations. International youth observers at the UN conference responded to the threat of the text being finalized with these disastrous loopholes by launching a campaign to alert negotiators to the irresponsibility and unacceptability of such a decision for young and future generations.

Youth delegate acting as hidden emissions outside UNFCCC in Bonn

To begin the campaign on Tuesday morning, we greeted negotiators arriving for the day with a hide-and-seek game between youth dressed up as greenhouse gas emissions and inept emissions accountants unable to find them for lack of trying. The 12 of us dressed up as tonnes of greenhouse gases and hid behind trees and camoflauged themselves with twigs outside the conference center as negotiators arrived. Meanwhile, two fumbling accountants attempted half-heartedly to find and enter the hidden emissions into the books while engaging delegates to explain their inability to find the emissions, often in plain sight, given the problematic rules in the current text that make accounting voluntary.

Hannah (UKYCC), a LULUCF Accountant, not being a very good at finding hidden emissions

In the afternoon, we followed up with two more actions. First, we asked delegates to throw small balls, each labeled as a tonne of CO2, through a LULUCF loophole to “make them magically disappear”. Balls that made it through the loophole were met with boos. We, representing the youth and future generations, then had the burden of dealing with them, sometimes throwing them back with demands that every emission should be counted. Also in the afternoon, we hid small sheets of paper that said “Congratulations! You’ve just found one ton of hidden LULUCF emissions. Please bring it back to the 350.org/SustainUS booth so that it may be accounted for,” all around the conference center.

2nd LULUCF Loophole Action

On Wednesday, several youth carried a giant cardboard cut-out of a chainsaw through the Maritim Hotel, where the conference is taking place. With “LULUCF Logging Loopholes” written on it, the chainsaw represented a tool for deforestation without accountability for the emissions generated by it. These logging loopholes in the negotiating text would allow developed countries to hide emissions so that they can pretend they are not there. But at the end of the day, these emissions from land use and forestry are still real greenhouse gases entering the atmosphere, and they need to be counted and reduced to help ensure a safe climate for today’s youth and for our children and grandchildren.

1 Response to “International Youth at UNFCCC Call out Emissions Loopholes in Forestry Text”


  1. 1 Breaking: 400 barrel Oil Spill Hits Salt Lake City « Earth Environment Underground Trackback on Jun 13th, 2010 at 12:24 pm
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About Valida


Valida is currently a DAAD Scholar studying Environmental Management, with a focus on international climate policy, at the Free University Berlin. She is currently examining the international youth climate movement as a social movement as a possible masters thesis topic. She linked into the youth climate movement at Power Shift 2007, where she participated in the PS Video Intensive Program. Shortly after the first Power Shift, Valida began working for a community wind energy developer based in her hometown of Minneapolis, Minnesota. At Power Shift 2009, just as in 2007, she was inspired by Van Jones and the thousands of young leaders in the burgeoning US youth climate movement. As a member of the SustainUS Agents of Change delegation to COP-15 in Copenhagen in December 2009, she was once again blown away by the energy, passion and brilliance of the youth climate movement. In her free time, Valida enjoys writing rap songs about climate change, juggling, designing websites and making short documentary films.

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