source: allAfrica
East African (Nairobi)
7 August 2007
Posted to the web 7 August 2007
Wangari Maathai
Nairobi
Africa is the continent that will be hit hardest by climate change. Unpredictable rains and floods, prolonged droughts, subsequent crop failures and rapid desertification, among other signs of global warming, have in fact already begun to change the face of Africa.
The continent’s poor and vulnerable will be particularly hit by the effects of rising temperatures – and in some parts of the continent, temperatures have been rising twice as fast as in the rest of the world.
In wealthy countries, the looming climate crisis is a matter of concern, as it will affect both the wellbeing of economies and people’s lives. In Africa, however, a region that has hardly contributed to climate change – its greenhouse gas emissions are negligible when compared with the industrialised world’s – it will be a matter of life and death.
Therefore, Africa must not remain silent in the face of the realities of climate change and its causes. African leaders and civil society must be involved in global decision-making about how to address the climate crisis in ways that are both effective and equitable.
FOR THIS reason, when the G-8 heads of state met in early June in Heiligendamm in Germany, [continue reading]

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