The South sues the European Union
(02-12-2009)Climate Justice instead of idle talk!
With a visual protest Broederlijk Delen (BD) and CIDSE - the international alliance of Catholic development agencies BD is member of – have put climate change impacts on poor people in the South in the spotlight. They sued the European Union for failing to acknowledge its responsibilities in creating climate change and for doing too little to support developing countries in their battle against climate change. Bolivian climate expert Elizabeth Peredo, Director of Fundación Solón and member of the Bolivian Platform against Climate Change, testified as climate witness in the simulation of a Climate Justice hearing.

Peredo explained she sees the impacts of climate change on people in Bolivia with her own eyes every day. “We need to reconsider our lifestyles and the way we fuel our economies,” she said. “There’s an urgent need to drastically change our relationship with nature.” Peredo said that the city of La Paz, where she was born, had been blessed with glaciers that were now melting. Even though Bolivia contributes less than 0.1 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, it suffers severe climate change impacts.
CIDSE Secretary General Bernd Nilles said: “The poor communities we work with have contributed least to climate change, but bear its heaviest brunt. We won’t reach an effective climate agreement if rich countries fail to acknowledge their moral and historical responsibilities.”
Syeda Rezwana Hasan, lawyer at the Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Society, agreed that rich countries have the obligation to support developing countries on climate change. “For me this is a question of environmental law, which states that no country may suffer from excessive damage caused by the development of another,” she said
Developing countries need adequate financial and technological support to adapt to climate change and to pursue low carbon development. The EU has so far failed to agree on how much money they will put on the table for climate finance. The risk exists that EU countries will repackage current aid money, meaning that funds intended to support improvements in health and education will be used to tackle climate change.
Climate finance will be a deal maker or breaker at the climate talks in Copenhagen, Broederlijk Delen and CIDSE therefore urge the EU to set the example with strong financial commitments.
Onze resultaten
“Zonder Broederlijk Delen zou ik nog steeds in de mijn aan het werk zijn. Met hun hulp vond ik de moed om door te zetten en mijn diploma rechten te behalen.”
Lees het verhaal van Vidal in Peru
Van elke euro die je Broederlijk Delen schonk in 2010 ging 85,5 cent rechtstreeks naar onze doelstelling: zorgen dat mensen in het Zuiden hun eigen plannen waarmaken. Download het jaarverslag
