On the way to
the Stadion Narodowy – the national
stadium in Warsaw hosting the COP 19 UN Climate Talks – I pointed out to
a colleague that the building looked like the cup part of a cupcake. She said
it looked like a circus tent.
From a metaphorical point of view,
she’s mostly right. The spectacle element is definitely there. You have an
audience raptly caught up in the chattering of overly-dressed Masters of
Ceremony. You have the thrill of listening to high-wire phrases like, “You know
very well that no-one expects us all contribute the same level of effort in
this quest for better tomorrow [SIC],” and, “We are all aware of the role of
the Kyoto Protocol in the mitigation effects deployed by parties listed in
Annex I and the importance of maintaining the continuity of the mitigation
procedures adopted by those parties.”
The circus animals would be the beleaguered whipped journalists. They are forced to walk circles around a stadium the size of a large city block, hoping to get statements from officials which carry slightly more meaning than the types of things you get from athletes: “We played hard and we’ll continue to play hard and keep up the offence and try to keep it in the zone and maybe stop climate change. Thanks Bob.”
The circus animals would be the beleaguered whipped journalists. They are forced to walk circles around a stadium the size of a large city block, hoping to get statements from officials which carry slightly more meaning than the types of things you get from athletes: “We played hard and we’ll continue to play hard and keep up the offence and try to keep it in the zone and maybe stop climate change. Thanks Bob.”
It’s worth noting that the
journalists, the most reliable source for the rest of the world to know what’s going on, are kept in a room which is so far away from where anything is
actually happening, they may as well be in Gdansk.
I asked another colleague if the
other COPs were like this – with the great distance between the press
and the plenary rooms. She said, “Yes.”
I said, “Okay, next time we’re all bringing bicycles.”
I said, “Okay, next time we’re all bringing bicycles.”
And like most circuses, or any
place with a captive audience, you even have ridiculously overpriced ‘sandwiches’
which contain nothing but a leaf of lettuce.
With head of the UNFCCC, Christiana Figueres, considering
speaking at a concurrently running ‘Coal Summit’ in Warsaw, and the hastily
pulled blog
post by Polish COP 19 organizers which said a melting arctic is an
opportunity to “save time and energy” – it seems the circus might have bled out
onto the streets.
Frankly, considering the fact that
a ‘Coal summit’ is even allowed to happen during COP19, or that certified
morons are organizing the thing in the first place, suggest the Polish
Government is inhaling its own fumes.
The circus metaphor pretty much ends there, though.
The circus metaphor pretty much ends there, though.
You see, at a circus, even if it’s
a clown shot out of a cannon, things actually get done. Right now, listening to
long droning platitudes as everyone thanks everyone else for showing up, and
for being in Poland, and for being themselves, and for being themselves while
in Poland, the whole thing strikes me as going nowhere.
This is largely because everybody
is pretty much saying the same thing: Something bad is happening to the planet,
something needs to be done, that something needs a plan, but first we need to
plan how we’re going to plan that something. Let’s all agree to plan to make a
plan to deal with that something.
Truth is, the only person that said
anything worth listening to was the head of Philippines delegation. You see, his
brother is pulling bodies out of the rubble after a mega-Typhoon (“mega” being
the new addition to anything which is, apparently, not bad enough) turned vast
parts of his island into wet debris. He’s pretty sure that climate change is
the cause of it. And he’s pretty sure the people making plans to make a plan
about something are complicit by sitting around squabbling about minutia and
personal responsibility.
Granted, it is early days. Something long and sausage-shaped may come out of all of this glad-handing and platitude-wielding. Who knows, maybe they’ll fire a delegate out of a cannon up into the coal-choked Warsaw sky.
Maybe, but I doubt it.
1 comment:
They tried to replace coal with biomass... But it does not quite work out. Food vs Fuel etc. Not that a lot of people eat wood pellet or palm kernel shells. Mind you some kids do eatpalm kernel shells, but am sure it would not be their first choice if presented with a better alternaltive like actual food. The earth is (mega) doomed.
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