PRESS ADVISORY

THE DURBAN GROUP - International Climate Experts Reveal Who Profits,

Who Pays in Climate Crisis

To set up interviews, call Ryan Hodum: 514-578-5473 or email at seen@seen.org

        MONTREAL, November 30th, 2005 -The Durban Group for climate justice, a coalition of activists and experts from across the globe* who focus on the impacts that climate change and carbon trading are having on traditional, local and indigenous communities, are holding a press conference to reveal the enormous price local communities and the poorest are paying for carbon trading and climate change on December 1, 2005, at the Palais de Congres in Montreal, room Riviere Bay du Nord from 11:30 a.m. until noon.

        People in India are being thrown off their land to make way for massive tree plantations. Individual activists, and even groups of villages who resist are threatened, arrested, forcibly thrown off lands they have inhabited for generations, labeled as terrorists or shot dead: adults, women and children alike. We cannot ignore these social injustices instigated by carbon trading added to the social injustices of climate change if we are to succeed in reversing climate instability," said Anastasia Pinto Director of the Indian NGO CORE, an Indigenous Peoples research organization from India.

        We reject the notion that carbon trading will halt the climate crisis. This crisis has been caused more than anything else by the excessive consumption of fossil fuels and by deforestation. Carbon trading gives the illusion of action, while countenancing continuing massive public investment in fossil fuels and deforestation," said Jutta Kill coordinator of the EU forest campaign group Fern, based in Belgium.

        These negotiations are all about making money off the climate crisis, not about bringing about a change in the current system of heavy subsidies for the fossil fuel industry. The truth of the global environmental crisis is beyond economic perspectives," said Arief Wicaksono of OilWatch International, headquartered in Ecuador.

        The World Bank is developing a monopoly position, profiting from carbon trading while investing heavily in fossil fuels. This is made worse by the G8 suggesting they should lead the way in a 'new framework' on climate change. If we really want to see clean development, the World Bank should stop its massive investment in fossil fuel companies like Halliburton and Exxon-Mobil, and get out of the carbon trading business," said Daphne Wysham, a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC, and co-author of "Wrong Turn from Rio: The World Bank's Road to Climate Catastrophe," available at www.seen.org.

        In addition to the press conference, The Climate Justice Convergence Center on 2074 Clark St. will be holding panels and showing films through Dec.8, 2005, on issues ranging from criticisms of the carbon trade, alternatives to the Clean Development Mechanism, climate justice and human rights, renewable energy solutions from Indigenous communities, lessons from pollution trading that Kyoto should have learned and many more. For more information on these events, visit: http://www.carbontradewatch.org/durban/programme.doc or download a copy of the publication, "Trouble in the Air: Global Warming and the Privatized Atmosphere" at http://www.tni.org/books/troubleintheair.htm.

        For ongoing commentary from the Durban group, visit: www.climatejustice.blogspot.org

*FOR A LIST OF INDIVIDUAL EXPERTS IN THE DURBAN GROUP SEE REVERSE SIDE

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NAME ORGANIZATION PHONE EMAIL KEY ISSUES, LANGUAGE
Tom Goldtooth Indigenous Environmental Network (218) 760-0442 ien@igc.org Environmental Justice
Clay Thomas Indigenous Environmental Network (218) 760-1370 ienoil@igc.org Energy Policy and Development
Heidi Bachram Carbon Trade Watch (514) 843 5247 heidi@carbontradewatch.org Social Justice Aspect of Carbon Trading
Norman Phillip Transnational Institute (514) 843 5247   Carbon Trading and Effects on Communities
Arief Wicaksono OilWatch International 6281511 202764 ariefw@jatam.org Petrol Activity in Southeast Asia
Fabian Pacheco OilWatch International 6281511 202764 ecologismoprofundo@hotmail.com Energy and Oil; Expert on Costa Rica; Fluency in Spanish
Wally Menne Timber Watch (514) 843 5247 plantnet@iafrica.com Forestry Expert; Expert on South Africa
Jutta Kill FERN   44 7931 576538 jutta@fern.org Carbon Sinks and Trading Alternatives
Anna Filippini World Rainforest Movement 44 7931 576538 anafili@wrm.org.uy CDM projects; Expert on Uruguay; Fluency in Spanish
Larry Lohmann Corner House (514) 843 5247 larrylohmann@gn.apc.org Problems of the US Trading Mechanism
Daphne Wysham Institute for Policy Studies (514) 578-5431 or (301) 573-2468 dwysham@seen.org World Bank, Public Subsidies for Fossil Fuels, Carbon Trading and Climate Expert
Nadia Martinez Institute for Policy Studies (514) 578-6370 nmartinez@seen.org World Bank, IDB and Energy Expert; Fluency in Spanish
Ryan Hodum Institute for Policy Studies (514) 578-5473 ryan@seen.org MEDIA CORRESPONDENT
Michael Dorsey Dartmouth College (734) 945-6424 Michael.K.Dorsey@dartmouth.edu Environmental Equity; Fluency in Spanish
Graham Erion York University   (416) 795-8044 graham@erion.ca Carbon Trading and the Carbon Market