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Ciarán Cuffe TD GREEN PARTY Dún Laoghaire |
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| Speeches: Private Members Motion on G8 Summit and Overseas Aid 29 June 2005
I
wish to talk about solemn commitments, climate change and fairness.
Since the foundation of this State, Ireland has had an excellent
reputation in assisting developing regions of the world.
In the fields of education and health care, the Irish, initially through
the religious orders and in more recent times through the aid agencies, have
earned an enviable reputation in assisting the less well-off of the world.
That reputation is in danger of being squandered.
In a time of unprecedented economic prosperity, it is shameful that
reputation is being tarnished.
It
was tarnished by our Taoiseach reneging on the solemn commitment he made on 3
September 2002 when he stated that the decline in overseas development aid in
the 1990s was shameful, indefensible and inconsistent with the commitments given
at Rio. The Taoiseach reiterated
Ireland's absolute commitment to achieving by 2007 the UN target of spending
0.7% of GNP on overseas development assistance. That is what the Taoiseach said but it will not be delivered.
That has damaged Ireland's reputation in the United Nations, with
developing countries and in the international diplomatic sphere.
It is not good enough to renege on that commitment.
In
terms of climate change, Ireland did well under Kyoto and was given very
generous allowances. However, it
will still be an uphill struggle to achieve them.
We were allowed a 13% increase from 1990 until the 2008 to 2012 period.
We are already double the increase we were given and it will be very
difficult to achieve the original target within the period.
We are close to the bottom of the league in terms of distance from
targets.
The
Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government, Deputy Roche, and
the Minister for Transport, Deputy Cullen, must switch tack but that is a good
news story because it will mean improvements in the quality of life, better bus
services, towns and cities designed around people rather than cars, rural bus
services, better long distance rail services, a shift in energy policy to wind
turbines, tidal turbines, biomass and away from sugar into ethanol.
I am not convinced the Government is making that switch and that its
heart is in it. There must be a
significant change in that regard. It
will be difficult and expensive to buy our way out of climate change but it will
not be a matter of life and death. For
people in developing countries, climate change is already a matter of life and
death. In those countries, famine,
disease and poverty, in many instances caused by climate change, are already
killing people. Subsistence farmers cannot wait for the rain to come the next
year and, as a result, they die.
The richest countries in the world are causing climate change. We are causing it - the G8 and those countries that have wealth. From a moral perspective, it is crucial that Ireland plays its part and that we assist those countries to the best of our ability. It is not good enough to talk about what will be chopped in Ireland in order for us to fulfill our commitment. It is imperative for the Minister of State to make the commitment to increasing our development aid. Tens of thousands of children are dying every day in the developing world because he has not made that commitment.
The
European Commission has already made strong commitments on climate change.
It has made a commitment of 15-30% reductions by 2020 and 50-80%
reductions by 2050. It is crazy that Ministers here are continuing as if nothing
will ever change. It is crucial
that Ireland plays its part and it is about fairness, about contraction and
convergence. It is about ensuring
that people in developing countries are given the same kind of allowances we
will be given. We must ratchet down
emissions. If it does not happen on
the Minister of State's watch, it will be much more difficult to have reductions
in climate change in the future. We
must make that commitment and it is not good enough to water down our motion.
It is not good enough to avoid the science and to avoid the facts.
Climate
change is a science and the Minister of State must give a commitment that he
will make those changes. We must
look at what increase in global temperatures is acceptable and we must deal with
that. We must set a target and work
backwards from that. Ireland does
not even have an up to date climate change strategy. It is years out of date and we have not seen any commitment
to revising that within an appropriate timescale.
I want the Minister of State to make a commitment to achieve what we have
put down in our motion. I do not
want him to do it in a wishy-washy Fianna Fáil way, but in a scientific way
with a commitment that our Taoiseach gave three years ago.
I think that is fair, it is equitable and it should be delivered. Page last updated 2 March 2006
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Ciarán Cuffe is a TD for the Dún Laoghaire
Dáil Constituency. Ciarán can be contacted at Dáil Éireann, Kildare Street,
Dublin 2 or 96 Patrick Street, Dún Laoghaire Tel. 284 6060
or 618 3082, Fax 618 4341, Email
Ciaran |