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      C&C Support Rising - Guardian         Jun 16, 2008 16:09 PDT          
"Many, now including the UK parliament's all-party climate group, Gordon 
Brown, Tony Blair, David King, Ross Garnaut and his equivalent here 
Nicholas Stern, Angela Merkel, Nicholas Sarkozy, Crispin Tickell and 
many others support this [C&C] argument".

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/jun/17/climatechange.geology 

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"Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) achieved a "balance of terror" 
during the cold war. It was frightening but it was "symmetric" on an 
east-west axis, and it was ultimately "rational" that neither side 
pushed the button. 

Since then, and despite the efforts of the UN, the near deadlock on 
restraining the greenhouse gas emissions causing climate to change is 
now 20 years old.

This has created an international political climate of Mutually Assured 
Suicide (MAS). This time, on a north-south axis, both sides have got 
their feet flat on the accelerator pedals, and it is now more terrifying 
because it's patent. Also, unlike MAD, while imminent climate disaster 
may become symmetric in effect, it is not symmetric in its causes, and 
the rationality that caused us to stop last time now needs to be 
adjusted to reflect this asymmetry.

The objective of the UN climate treaty is framed as an upper limit to 
greenhouse gas accumulation in the global atmosphere on which we all 
depend for a stable climate. Emissions are proportional to wealth so 
both of these, as a tension between rich and poor within the 
over-consumption causing climate change, are problems. That is why the 
UN itself has said that an overall contraction of emissions within which 
a convergence to equal shares per capita is "inevitably required" to 
achieve the treaty's objective. 

Many, now including the UK parliament's all-party climate group, Gordon 
Brown, Tony Blair, David King, Ross Garnaut and his equivalent here 
Nicholas Stern, Angela Merkel, Nicholas Sarkozy, Crispin Tickell and 
many others support this argument.

We must make the transition Lynas rightly argues for, and we must 
redress both the over-consumption and the asymmetry within it." 

Aubrey Meyer 
The Global Commons Institute 

Aubrey Meyer
GCI
37 Ravenswood Road
LONDON E17 9LY
Ph 0208 520 4742