Dr Russel Norman: Super Cyclone Pam and climate change
Dr Russel Norman's speech in Parliament on Super Cyclone Pam and climate change
The Green Party’s thoughts and condolences are with the people of Vanuatu, whose country has been devastated by Super Cyclone Pam.
Our sympathies are with the families and friends of
those who have lost loved one in this disaster, with reports
of many deaths and many more injured.
We are also
thinking about the wider Vanuatu community in New Zealand
and abroad. We hope they have been able to contact your
loved ones and be assured of their safety.
But as well as expressing our condolences and sympathies, today, we also express our pain, anger and solidarity with our Pacific neighbours who are bearing the brunt of climate change.
Messages of condolences from this house have no meaningful effect if they are not backed by action to ensure such horrors are not repeated.
Words from professional politicians will never be a match for actions from real leaders.
And if Cyclone Pam has taught us nothing else it is that the time for leadership on climate change is now.
Tropical Cyclone Pam had the strongest winds of any South Pacific tropical cyclone on record. Waiting and doing nothing on the climate means bigger cyclones, more death and destruction, more speeches in this house, while the people of the Pacific plead for action.
I don't want to have to stand in this House again while we earnestly express condolence for the victims of another climate related catastrophe, while the Government sits on its hands and does nothing to change the course of history.
What our brothers and sisters in the Pacific need to hear from us today is that we take climate change seriously, and that we will take meaningful action to reduce our emissions and show climate leadership on the world stage and actually try to stop the increasing intensity of these super storms.
Vanuatu's President
Baldwin Lonsdale has said that climate change is a key
factor in the loss of life, destruction and wreckage left in
the wake of Super Cyclone Pam.
"Climate change is
contributing to the disaster in Vanuatu," said President
Lonsdale.
He wasn’t alone in linking this disaster to climate change.
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Saturday, that climate change is making extreme weather the new normal.
Super cyclones
should not be the new normal. Their increasing size is a
man-made aberration. There is nothing normal about changing
our climate and causing mass devastation.
But it wasn’t
just the President of Vanuatu and the Secretary General of
the United Nations making the link between cyclone Pam and
climate change.
It was also the Vice President of the World Bank, Rachel Kyte. She is calling out governments whose polices don’t reflect the urgency which is needed to act on climate change.
The President of Vanuatu, the Secretary General of the UN, the Vice President of the World Bank. All making the link, all calling for action…while all we do is limit ourselves to condolences and sending aid to clean up the mess.
This tragedy is in our backyard and must serve as a wakeup call for real leadership and action on climate change in New Zealand.
Our part of the world in uniquely vulnerable to the changing climate.
The United Nations World Risk Report systematically considers a country’s vulnerability, and its exposure to natural hazards.
Number 1 on their list is Vanuatu. Number 2 is the Philippines.
Vanuatu, Super Cyclone Pam. Philippines Super Typhoon Hayian.
If we truly want to see the people of Vanuatu, the Philippines, and the rest of the Pacific live their lives without the constant fear and threat of climate change-related disasters, then we need to act.
I would like to commend the Government’s initial response of sending assistance to Vanuatu but in addition to aid and rebuild assistance, why don't we also make reducing our carbon emissions at home part of our response to this tragedy?
Why don't we commit to showing global leadership at the Paris climate conference later this year?
Why not make our response an enduring solution to climate change, rather than just a dollar donation to cleaning up its aftermath?
Yes we should be sad. Yes we should send condolences, but yes we should also lead.
True empathy from this Parliament would involve playing our part in building a safer world and more stable climate.
ends