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Climate Summit in Doha characterized by lack of ambition

Climate Summit in Doha characterized by lack of ambition | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
In truth, there was little expectation that this year's summit would be groundbreaking. Many of the issues on the docket had been long-discussed in previous meetings and the conference was repeatedly described as transitional before, assumedly, the real work gets under to set up a global treaty by 2015 to go into place by 2020 (a year some scientists say will be too late to avoid a global rise above 2 degrees Celsius).

Given this, many observers were also surprised as how acrimonious and contentious the conference was—and many hoped for a stronger, even in it limited capacity, agreement.

"This outcome represents a failure of ambition and yet another failure of political will—the latest in a long line of pledges to take real action someday, but not today," said the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL) President Carroll Muffett. "Governments have now squandered decades that could have been spent averting climate disaster."
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Inner city residents have the highest environmental impact | The Urbanist

Inner city residents have the highest environmental impact | The Urbanist | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
Despite high densities, inner city residents have the largest negative impact on the environment because they're richer and live in smaller households...

 

"The first attribute is wealth – inner city residents are richer on average than other Australians. Income is very strongly correlated with environmental impact. Wealthier people buy more “stuff” like food, furniture, electronics and clothes that has a high direct and indirect negative impact on the environment. They fly a lot more than others too, both for work and leisure."

 

"The second attribute is household size – inner city residents live on average in smaller households, mostly of one and two persons. Their per capita environmental impact is consequently large because they don’t take advantage of economies of scale."

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