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Global Ethics Corner: Was Durban Doomed?

Series: Global Ethics Corner
From: Carnegie Council
Length: 00:02:00

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With the 17th annual global climate change talks foundering in Durban, little hope is left for a worldwide initiative designed to combat global warming. Will local efforts be enough or does this latest setback truly doom a future of sustainability and worldwide cooperation? Read the full description.

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Global Ethics Corner is a weekly 2 minute segment devoted to newsworthy ethical issues. It presents both sides of an issue, asking viewers to weigh the information and make up their own minds.

Also in the Global Ethics Corner series

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Piece Description

Global Ethics Corner is a weekly 2 minute segment devoted to newsworthy ethical issues. It presents both sides of an issue, asking viewers to weigh the information and make up their own minds.

Transcript

Global climate change talks took a blow recently. On December 12, Canadian officials announced plans to abandon the Kyoto Protocol, which is the world's only legally binding agreement to tackle global warming.

This decision came on the heels of the 17th annual global climate change talks, held in Durban, South Africa. Haven't heard of them? You're not alone.

Unlike Kyoto or Copenhagen, the latest round of global climate change talks received little buzz in the mainstream press. And for good reason: they accomplished next to nothing.

Hopes that Durban would produce a successor to Kyoto foundered. Instead, Durban signatories pledged only to work towards a new global treaty.

The very desirability of such a treaty lies in question. Across the globe, countries are taking independent approaches to tackle global warming. Ninety countries have already introduced plans to cut carbon emissions...
Read the full transcript

Additional Credits

Deborah Carroll - Producer
William Vocke - Writer
Marlene Spoerri - Contributing Writer
Julia Kennedy - Content Editor
Robert Smithline - Editor
Terence Hurley - Editor
Gusta Johnson - Production Assistant

Related Website

www.carnegiecouncil.org