Navigation


RSS: Latest News Feed



London Climate Change March Draws Tens of Thousands

Text Size: Make Text Size Smaller Make Text Size Bigger Reset Dec 6, 2009 @ 08:46 AM, Sci/Tech, The Associated Press

Email Friend
Print
Digg
Delicious
MySpace
Facebook
Twitter
Favorites
StumbleUpon

Google
Live

You need Flash player 8+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.

Thousands of people marched through central London over the weekend, encircling the Houses of Parliament near the River Thames and calling for a deal on climate change at the Copenhagen conference.

The Metropolitan Police in London said that about 20,000 people had joined the Stop Climate Chaos march on Saturday. Organizers, which included groups like Oxfam, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and W.W.F., estimated the turnout to have been about 40,000.

“We wanted to make a positive statement,” said Pip Cartwright, a retired teacher from Witney, in southern England. “It’s for the future. It’s not my generation that’s going to have the problem to solve.”

“The U.K. government must fight for a comprehensive, fair and binding deal at Copenhagen — that is our demand today, and we expect it to be fulfilled,” Barbara Stocking, chief executive of Oxfam in Britain, said in a statement.

“They must return home with a strong, effective climate deal both for our own sakes in the U.K. and for the millions of poor people already suffering from the effects of climate change around the world,” Ms. Stocking added.

Separately, thousands of people participated in climate marches in Glasgow, Belfast, Brussels, Paris and Dublin.

The Associated Press

Thousands of people marched through central London over the weekend, encircling the Houses of Parliament near the River Thames and calling for a deal on climate change at the Copenhagen conference.

The Metropolitan Police in London said that about 20,000 people had joined the Stop Climate Chaos march on Saturday. Organizers, which included groups like Oxfam, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and W.W.F., estimated the turnout to have been about 40,000.

“We wanted to make a positive statement,” said Pip Cartwright, a retired teacher from Witney, in southern England. “It’s for the future. It’s not my generation that’s going to have the problem to solve.”

“The U.K. government must fight for a comprehensive, fair and binding deal at Copenhagen — that is our demand today, and we expect it to be fulfilled,” Barbara Stocking, chief executive of Oxfam in Britain, said in a statement.

“They must return home with a strong, effective climate deal both for our own sakes in the U.K. and for the millions of poor people already suffering from the effects of climate change around the world,” Ms. Stocking added.

Separately, thousands of people participated in climate marches in Glasgow, Belfast, Brussels, Paris and Dublin.

The Associated Press

Source: New York Times


Bookmark and Share
« Back to Sci/Tech News

Related News

  • Protests Add Pressure For Copenhagen Climate Deal Dec 6, 2009 @ 08:46 AM

    Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, whose country is the world's number four greenhouse gas emitter, announced he would attend a closing summit in Copenhagen, joining 104 other leaders including Obama in a sign of growing momentum for a deal.


  • UK Climate Scientist Steps Down After E-Mail Flap Dec 6, 2009 @ 08:46 AM

    Dec. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Claims that scientists suppresseddata about global warming prompted the head of a Britishuniversity’s climate research center to step down pendingcompletion of an investigation.


  • Stolen E-Mails Sharpen a Brawl Between Climate Scientists and Skeptics Dec 6, 2009 @ 08:46 AM

    The University of East Anglia said yesterday that it was cooperating with police and launching its own internal probe into how thousands of e-mails and documents from its Climatic Research Unit ended up on the Internet last week, sparking an ongoing fight between climate scientists and skeptics who say the data breach suggests ethical lapses in the research community.


  • Scientist: Leak of climate e-mails appalling Dec 6, 2009 @ 08:46 AM

    LONDON — A leading climate change scientist whose private e-mails are included in thousands of documents that were stolen by hackers and posted online said Sunday the leaks may have been aimed at undermining next month's global climate summit in Denmark.


  • Finding the Smartphone Inside Motorola Dec 6, 2009 @ 08:46 AM

    LIBERTYVILLE, Ill. — Sanjay Jha’s honeymoon as co-chief executive at Motorola lasted just a few minutes into his first meeting with employees back in 2008.