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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Kerry urges nations to back Paris climate change talks
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 12, 2015


India court rules in favour of Greenpeace activist
New Delhi (AFP) March 12, 2015 - A court on Thursday ordered the Indian government to remove the name of a Greenpeace activist from a list of suspicious persons, her lawyer said, after she was prevented from travelling to London.

Indian campaigner Priya Pillai was about to fly to London on January 11 to brief British MPs on her work when immigration officials stopped her and stamped "offload" on her passport.

She took legal action against the Indian government, and on Thursday the Delhi High Court ordered authorities to remove her name from an official list of people who must be checked at immigration and expunge the incident from her records.

"The court said that she hadn't done anything illegal," Pillai's lawyer Indira Jaising told AFP.

"You can investigate (Greenpeace) accounts, but that doesn't take away the right to dissent."

The Press Trust of India news agency said the judge declined to order an inquiry into the immigration officials who prevented her from travelling, or to grant her compensation.

India has clamped down on activist groups over the past two years, including restricting direct transfers of foreign donations, following campaigns that have delayed important industrial projects.

Pillai's work centres on a Greenpeace campaign against a new open-cast coal mine in a forest in the central state of Madhya Pradesh.

The campaign group says the project will hit dozens of tribal communities as well as wildlife including elephants and leopards.

She tweeted that the ruling was a "victory for democracy & free speech" and a "symbolic win for Indian people & movements who dare to have a different dream for our country".

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's right-wing government tightened controls over foreign fund transfers to Greenpeace India in June, following accusations that foreign-funded campaign groups were hurting India's economy.

US Secretary of State John Kerry Thursday urged nations to set ambitious goals to curb greenhouse gases, warning climate change deniers that gambling with the Earth's future was a risky business as "there is no Planet B."

"We have nine short months to come together around the kind of agreement that will put us on the right path," Kerry said ahead of a key UN climate change conference to be held in Paris in December.

Countries, which are tasked with trying to limit the rise in global temperatures to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-Industrial Revolution levels, have until March 31 to announce their commitment to cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

The United States, which accounts for 12 percent of global emissions, has announced it plans to reduce them by 26-28 percent in 2025 compared with their level in 2005.

"If we fail, future generations will not and should not forgive those who ignore this moment, no matter their reasoning," said Kerry, long a passionate environmental advocate, adding that "for decades now the science has been screaming at us."

"Future generations will judge our effort, not just as a policy failure, but as a collective, moral failure of historic consequence," he told the Atlantic Council.

"And they will want to know how world leaders could possibly have been so blind, or so ignorant, or so ideological, or so dysfunctional, and, frankly, so stubborn that we failed to act on knowledge that was confirmed by so many scientists in so many studies over such a long period of time."

The top US diplomat, who during more than two years in office has given a number of major climate change speeches, sought to convince skeptics by making an economic argument for developing alternative energy sources like wind and solar power.

"Clean energy is not only a solution to climate change. Guess what? It's also one of the greatest economic opportunities of all time," Kerry said.

"The global energy market of the future is poised to be the largest market the world has ever known. We're talking about a $6 trillion market today with four to five billion users today. That will grow to nine billion users over the next few decades."

And he predicted that by 2035 investment in the energy sector was expected to reach some $17 trillion -- more than the entire current GDP of China.

But investing in new technology to bring renewable energy sources to every community meant governments would have to "phase out wasteful fossil fuel subsidies" to dirty power sources such as oil and coal, he said.

"Gambling with the future of Earth itself when we know full well what the outcome would be is beyond reckless; it is just plain immoral, and it is a risk that no one should take," Kerry said.

"And we need to face reality: There is no Planet B."


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