Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


UN's Ban Says Global Warming is 'An Emergency'
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

ANTARTICA: November 12, 2007


EDUARDO FREI BASE, Antarctica - With prehistoric Antarctic ice sheets melting beneath his feet, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called for urgent political action to tackle global warming.


The Antarctic Peninsula has warmed faster than anywhere else on Earth in the last 50 years, making the continent a fitting destination for Ban, who has made climate change a priority since he took office earlier this year.

"I need a political answer. This is an emergency and for emergency situations we need emergency action," he said during a visit to three scientific bases on the barren continent, where temperatures are their highest in about 1,800 years.

Antarctica's ice sheets are nearly 1.5 miles (2.5 km) thick on average -- five times the height of the Taipei 101 tower, the world's tallest building. But scientists say they are already showing signs of climate change.

Satellite images show the West Antarctic ice sheet is thinning and may even collapse in the future, causing sea levels to rise.

Amid occasional flurries of snow, Ban flew over melting ice fields in a light plane, where vast chunks of ice the size of six-story buildings could be seen floating off the coast after breaking away from ice shelves.

"All we've seen has been very impressive and beautiful, extraordinarily beautiful," he said late on Friday. "But at the same time it's disturbing. We've seen ... the melting of glaciers."


MELTING

Ban is preparing for a UN climate change conference in Bali, Indonesia, in December, which is expected to kick off talks on a new accord to curb carbon emissions after the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012.

Ban has focused strongly on the environment and held a climate change summit at the United Nations on the eve of the annual General Assembly gathering of world leaders.

On Saturday, he continued his South American tour at Chilean national park Torres del Paine, taking a helicopter tour over Patagonian ice fields that scientists say are melting fast. Ban was flown over a glacier marked by large cracks from ice that has melted and broken away.

"(Climate) change is progressing much faster than I had thought," he said, calling on developed countries in particular to do more.

Ban, the first UN chief to visit Antarctica, was also due to visit the Amazon rain forest in Brazil, a leading force in developing biofuels from crops as an alternative to fossil fuels. Fears about climate change have fueled a boom in biofuels.

Despite the controversy of diverting food crops into fuel production, Ban has said alternative energy sources are vital to addressing climate change.

Antarctica -- a continent with only about 80,000 temporary residents -- is 25 percent bigger than Europe and its ice sheets hold 90 percent of the fresh water on the Earth's surface.


Story by Juan Jose Lagorio


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
12 NOV 2007
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

ANTARTICA:
UN's Ban Says Global Warming is 'An Emergency'

AUSTRALIA:
Thousands of Australians Rally on Climate Change

AUSTRALIA:
Australian State Culls Thousands of Wild Horses

CANADA:
Canadian Village Calls for End to Oil Sand Projects

CHINA:
New EU Fish Law Means China Must Step Up Oversight

CHINA:
China Emission-Cutting Fund to Reap up to US$3 Bln

CHINA:
China Blocks River to Build Second Largest Dam

CONGO:
Six Arrested in Congo Radioactive Dumping Scandal

CUBA:
French Fry Oil to be Tested on Guantanamo Fleet

GERMANY:
Czech Leader Raises New Doubts on Climate Change

INDONESIA:
Moderate Quake Strikes Indonesia's Sumatra

INDONESIA:
Nations Share Blame for Indonesia Deforestation - VP

INDONESIA:
Indonesia's Child of Krakatau Volcano Spits Flames

INTERNATIONAL:
Key Facts About Oil Spills

INTERNATIONAL:
UN Climate Panel to Meet for Summary Report

NETHERLANDS:
Dutch, British Flood Fears Ease After Surge Passes

NORWAY:
Seas to Absorb Greenhouse Gas, But Food Chain Hit

RUSSIA:
Russian Oil Tanker Breaks Up Off Crimea

TURKEY:
Turkish Parliament Approves Nuclear Power Law

UK:
Rich Must Bear Climate Change Costs - Report

UK:
Australia Faces Worst Cyclone Season in Yrs - Study

URUGUAY:
Uruguay's Approval of Paper Mill Angers Argentina

US:
Acciona Plans Bigger Solar Thermal Plant in US

US:
Republicans Urge Slowdown on US Carbon-Cap Bill

US:
Toyota Enlists Calif Researchers for Plug-In Prius

US:
Climate Change Endangers Alaska's Coastal Villages

US:
New Biofuel Crops Pose Risks to Farms, Ecosystems

US:
San Francisco Oil Spill Larger Than Thought

US:
Remnant of Yellowstone Volcano Rising, Study Finds

VIETNAM:
Typhoon Weakens, Rains to Strike Flood-Hit Vietnam



previous day
today's news
next day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant