ICP
Asks UN of
Climate
Finance Shortfall
& the
Pope, No TPP
to Redford
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, June
29, more
here --
Alongside the
UN's “high
level meeting
on climate
change” on
June 29, Inner
City Press
asked Janos
Pasztor and
Amina Mohammed
of the UN
about the
critique by
Brazil, South
Africa, India
and China
(BASIC) that
the developed
world is not
moving toward
$100 billion a
year in
climate
finance by
2020. Also,
Inner City
Press asked
the Cardinal
on the panel,
what does the
Pope think of
it?
Pasztor said
the key is
credible
measuring of
financing, and
that Ban
Ki-moon has
spoken to the
G-7. The
Cardinal said
the Pope's two
principles are
solidarity and
subsidiarity.
The SDG
connection
will become
clear when the
UN uploads the
briefing
video.
But -- this
press
conference at
least was
substantive.
Two hours
later, the UN
presented
Robert
Redford, solo,
taking
questions
ranging from
his movies to
Obama and
called it
climate
change. The UN
Correspondents
Assocation,
which didn't
even have a
question for
Ban on climate
change earlier
in the day,
was given the
first question
to Redford; it
was sloppily
asked and is
almost sure
not to be
written up. No
one asked, or
was permitted
to ask, about
fracking or
the Trans
Pacific
Partnership.
And so it goes
at the UN.
Back on June
18 when the UN
gave a climate
change
briefing by
UNDP's Cassie
Flynn, and Jo
Scheuer, on
June 18 Inner
City Press
asked about
the
under-funding
of the Least
Development
Countries
Fund, and if
South Korea is
backsliding in
its Intended
Nationally
Determined
Contributions.
Video
here.
The
answers, on
film, were to
promote other
funding
vehicles, and
to say that
South Korea
has still yet
to file its
INDC.
Pasztor said
that the CDM
is still
needed; he
said country
have committed
not to
backslide. Video here. (South Korea has yet
to submit its
INDCs, it
seems). Inner
City Press
asked Pasztor
to provide a
comment, if he
has one, once
South Korea's
filing is
made.
The Pope's
encyclical, he
said, is due
on June 18...
Back
on May 5,
Inner City
Press asked
him about
criticism of
the Green
Climate Fund,
including at
the recent
Permanent
Forum on
Indigenous
Issues. Video
here and
embedded
below.
Specifically,
why will the
"Green"
Climate Fund
provide
financial for
coal-powered
plants?
Pasztor
replied that
some felt that
an exclusion
for coal would
have been
divisive. On
statements at
the PFII that
the UN is
helping to
"monetize"
nature,
Pasztor
replied that
most states
feel
differently.
But what about
the
indigenous?
Pasztor
in his opening
statement had
praised the UN
Pension Fund
for now
investing in
"green
equities" and
"green bonds."
Since the UN
has responded
to Press
questions
about
irregularities
alleged at the
Pension Fund
by emphasizing
how separate
and
independent it
is, Inner City
Press asked
Pazstor if the
UN Secretariat
had brought
about this
Pension Fund
decision.
Pazstor
replied that
the Pension
Fund answers
to the
Secretary
General and
that "she" -
Carolyn
Boykin,
presumably -
had made this
decision.
We'll have
more on this,
after noting
Pasztor by no
means the
least
responsive UN
official...
When
last September
21 the
People's
Climate March
assembled at
Manhattan's
Columbus
Circle, there
were
anti-corporate
puppets in
front of the
Trump
International
Hotel and
Tower,
speeches by
coal miners
and from the
Marshall
Islands.
Many called on
the UN to do
better. But UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon joined
the march
mid-way, at
Radio City
Musical Hall
with New York
Mayor Bill de
Blasio.
Senator Chuck
Schumer was on
hand, walking
by a Bronx
contingent
chanting how
Fresh Direct
has broken its
promises.
Inner City
Press' 90
second video
of the march
is here.
The UN's or
"BKM" (Ban
Ki-moon)
Climate Summit
will feature
Cargill and
Walmart,
Credit
Agricole and
Bank of
America. The
last of these
is the first,
in terms of
funding
mountain top
coal removal.
These are the
contradiction.
Inner City
Press tweeted
photos on @InnerCityPress. More to
follow.
The night
before the
People's
Climate March,
the UN
buildings on
First Avenue
lit up with
photos and
footage of
trees and fish
and written
messages.
It is called
"illUmiNations."
Inner City
Press video
here.
Looking back
at the UN's
press release
for the
upcoming "VIP
Press
Screening" --
hard to know
how they could
exclude
non-VIPs from
it, or why
they would
want to --
there were
laudatory
quotes about
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon, and:
Obscura
Digital
has staged
similar
large-scale
architectural
mapping
projection
events on the
Sydney Opera
House, the
Guggenheim
Museum, and
the Sheikh
Zayed Grand
Mosque. For
examples of
previous work,
please visit
the following
link http://wdrv.it/1tx7Emd.
In
that video
compilation,
well worth
watching,
there are also
corporate
projects for
Coca-Cola and
YouTube owned
by Google,
with history
at the UN.
A message
Inner City
Press photographed
on September
19, here,
was "In
nature's
economy, the
currency is
not money but
life." Is this
true of
Coca-Cola?
There are
questions
about the UN's
UNcritical
approach to
corporations
and corporate
"partnerships."
In the run up
to the UN's
September 23
Climate
Summit, the UN
put out a
media advisory
promoting the
participation
of 14
corporations
ranging from
Saudi Aramco
through Cargill,
McDonald's and
Walmart to Bank of America and
Credit
Agricole.
Orr mentioned
a luncheon
during the
summit about
carbon pricing
and the UN
Global
Compact, a
branch of the
UN which
repeatedly
says it does
not enforce
substantive
standards,
only
encourages
reporting and
dialogue.
Well,
Saudi Aramco
did not
respond to
the complaint
about
“employees
allegedly
dismissed
after being
detained for
participation
in civil
rights
protests in
Saudi Arabia.”
And what of
the
environment?
Bank of
America has
been the
number one
funder of
mountain-top
removal coal
mining, but
Ban Ki-moon
made it
chairman the
chief of his
Sustainable
Energy for All
initiative.
On behalf of
the Free
UN Coalition
for Access,
Inner City
Press asked
that those
making
commitments,
like the 14
corporations
named, hold
question and
answer
sessions
during the
summit. We'll
see.