All Aboard UN Kyoto-Copenhagen Express
New York, Oct 28 2009 1:10PM
A one-time train link between Kyoto and Copenhagen opens up next week – a United Nations-sponsored one-month, 9,000-kilometre journey symbolically joining the site of the last global warming pact with what is hoped to be the birthplace of the next major, and stricter, treaty to combat climate change.
Launched by the UN Environment Programme (http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=596&ArticleID=6328&l=en&t=long),
the International Union of Railways (UIC) and the global
conservation organisation WWF, the Train to Copenhagen –
in fact a carriage – will role across the globe through
the vast wilds of Russian Siberia and into Europe as part of
the UN Seal the Deal! campaign to galvanise political will
and public support for reaching a comprehensive global
climate agreement in December.
Train operators from
around the world will participate in the Train to
Copenhagen, raising awareness of the impact of the transport
sector, which already accounts for over one fifth of global
CO2 greenhouse emissions. These emissions are projected to
double within only 40 years and railways are crucial in
reducing greenhouse gas emissions and developing sustainable
transport systems.
“We are on the road to nowhere if
existing policies and economic models prevail with their
over-emphasis on private cars and on shifting shipments of
goods to the roads,” UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner
said. “The Train to Copenhagen project is a showcase of
sustainable transport solutions that will be part and parcel
of a resource-efficient, low-carbon Green Economy of the
21st Century.
“By Sealing the Deal on an ambitious
climate agreement in Copenhagen, governments will get into
gear to propel the world to a low-carbon future so that
societies may also finally embark on a journey to more
sustainable transport.”
During the journey,
environmental experts and climate change campaigners will
send eye-witness accounts of global warming signs under way.
Siberia is a global climate change hotspot, where thawing
permafrost and melting peat bogs could slowly release
billions of tons of methane and carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere over coming years.
The Train will roll out
of Kyoto station on 5 November – leaving behind the
Japanese city where the Kyoto Protocol that sets binding
greenhouse gas reduction targets for 37 industrialized
countries and the European Union (EU) was adopted on 11
December 1997 – and make its way by ferry to Daejeon,
Republic of Korea (ROK).
There it will board another
ferry for Vladivostok in Russia’s Far East for that vast
transcontinental journey to drum up support for a new
compact with much stronger cuts to replace the Protocol on
the expiration of the first commitment period at the end of
2012.
Rumbling across Siberia, it will be hauled along
the famous Trans-Siberian Railway and go by ferry across
Lake Baikal, the most voluminous freshwater lake in the
world, and stop in Moscow, the Polish city of Poznan and
then Berlin before arriving on 5 December in Brussels, where
it will join the Climate Express, which will be powered by
100 per cent renewable energy.
This Express will take
on board more than 400 climate change negotiators,
campaigners and other high-profile personalities going to
Copenhagen, for a 12-hour on-track conference focusing on
how to solve the challenges posed by the transport sector
with regard to global warming.
On arrival, the
Climate Express will remain at Copenhagen Central Station
throughout the two-week conference, serving as a mobile
exhibition open to the public about low-carbon transport
solutions.
“It is clear that business as usual is
not an option if we want to reverse current trends and
prevent catastrophic climate change,” UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (http://unfccc.int/) ) Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer
said. “If we can really integrate the costs of pollution
into the price of transportation, rail will be a big
winner.”
ENDS