Lord Monckton kicked out of international climate change conference after posing as a delegate
Christopher
Monckton, a UK Independence Party activist and dogged critic of the
environmentalist movement, has been turned out of an international
climate change conference in Qatar after posing as a delegate.
7
December, 2012
Lord
Monckton had intended to arrive in Doha, Qatar’s capital, in Arab
dress and riding a camel called Aziz, but according to his blog, he
tried to climb into the saddle after reciting a quatrain from the
Rubaiyyat of Umar Khayyam in Aziz’s ear and the animal tossed him
onto a nearby sand dune.
Instead,
he turned up in a pin striped suit and having falsely identified
himself as the representative from Myanmar, he switched on a
microphone and announced:
“In the 16 years we have been coming to
these conferences, there has been no global warming at all.
“Secondly,
even if we were to take action to try to prevent global warming the
cost of that would be many times greater than the cost of taking
adaptive measures later.”
He
was ejected for “violating the UN code of conduct” and
“impersonating a party.”
A
journalist and hereditary peer who has never held a seat in the House
of Lords, Lord Monckton worked briefly in Downing Street in Margaret
Thatcher’s time, and joined UKIP in 2009 as chief spokesman on
climate change.
The
one thing I DON'T like about RT is that they tend towards being
climate change sceptics
Dead On Arrival: No consensus at climate summit despite ‘scare stories'
RT,
7
December, 2012
The
18th Climate Change Summit in Doha is drawing to an end after once
again failing to find common consensus on what it calls a major
threat to human existence. Failure seemed inevitable after climate
skeptic Lord Monckton crashed the event.
With
less than a day left in the marathon 11-day UN summit being held in
Doha, Qatar, the delegates in attendance are no closer to finding a
solution to the current stalemate on climate change. The two-week
meeting is due to end this Friday, and will likely end in deadlock.
With
the Kyoto treaty – the previous international climate treaty –
effectively dead in the water after the failure to extend it beyond
2012, ideas on how to revive the climate change debate have gained
little traction.
The
other main agendas of the summit included acknowledging the need “for
scaling up climate finance and pathways for the mobilization of USD
100 billion every year until 2020,” as well as “working out
long-term cooperation action to be taken under the convention.
But
no clear consensus was reached, with a group of leading NGOs,
including Greenpeace, Oxfam and WWF, issuing a statement warning that
the talks were “sleepwalking into disaster,” and calling for more
clarity on climate finance.
“Does
Doha want to be known as a place where ideas come to die?” a
campaign coordinator at NGO tcktcktck remarked.
The
most eye-catching moment was likely when Lord Monckton, a staunch
critic of the climate change movement, gate crashed the summit by
disguising himself as a delegate from Myanmar.
Monckton
switched on a microphone and said, "In
the 16 years we have been coming to these conferences, there has been
no global warming at all."
“Secondly,
even if we were to take action to try to prevent global warming the
cost of that would be many times greater than the cost of taking
adaptive measures later,” he added. “So our [the Committee for a
Constructive Tomorrow] recommendation therefore is that we should
initiate very quickly a review of the science to make sure we are all
on the right track. Shukran Iktir, ”
before he was escorted out for “violating the UN code of conduct"
and "impersonating a party” amid confused murmurs and boos
filling the hall.
Over
17,000 participants have attended the summit in what is the largest
conference to have ever been held in Qatar, according to TTGmice.com.
The
EU, Australia, Ukraine, Norway, Switzerland – the main backers of
the Kyoto Treaty – are willing to extend legally binding cuts in
carbon emissions from 2012 until 2020. However, these nations account
for less than 15 percent of world carbon emissions.
Meanwhile,
Russia, Japan and Canada have all withdrawn their participation,
since large developing nations like China are not participating.
A
legally binding agreement preserving the Kyoto Treaty goals is seen
as the backbone to creating a new, global agreement by 2015.
he
issue of climate change has become a topic of heated debate in recent
years. Supporters claim human activity is to blame for the rise in
temperatures and sporadic weather changes seen in areas of the globe.
Critics,
however, say those claims are not substantiated with science, and
argue that there has been little, if any, climate change over the
course of human history.
A general view shows the opening ceremony of the 18th United Nations (UN) climate change conference in Doha on November 26, 2012 (AFP Photo / Karim Jaafar / Al-Watan Doha)
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