Dec. 8th Global Action Day on Climate Change, & Global Voices Environment Coverage

Global day of action on climate change
As the leaders of the world continue with negotiations in Bali to chart the successor to the Kyoto protocol, there are some major events this week to make a note of. The first – international demonstrations planned by the Global climate campaign around the world. In Kenya, the contacts are listed as

David Waiganjo dnwaiganjo[at]yahoo.com
(Inter-Varsity Environment Network and African Youth Initiative on Climate)

Charity Weru glady333ke[at]yahoo.com
(Kenya Young Greens)

Grace Akumu cnaf[at]cnaf.or.ke
(Executive Director, Climate Network Africa)

For December 8th there is a plan for a climate parade in Nairobi.

If you will be attending or have more information, please feel free to comment. I would love to see photos and if you are a Kenyan blogger attending the parade please give me a heads up whenever you write about it. Thank you!
From KenyanPoet, The Climate change Orchestra will be playing as part of the WAPI event at the British Council. More details here.
Avaaz in Bali
For the Africa online crew there is something for you, you can join the Virtual Rally on the same day Dec 8th by writing about climate change. You do not have to alter the tone of your ‘blog voice’, a quip, a video, a rant, your thoughts… You can also sign a petition here.

At global voices online, we have a special page with links to blogs covering Bali and Climate Change politics, so do check it out. I have been going through the feeds to keep it fresh just for you, so do not miss out on the river of news coming out of Bali. If you are an African blogger writing about the environment, this is the week to do it, Global voices links will show up on the Reuters page. How is that for getting your voice heard!
(please leave me a note if you write something, email is environment [at] globalvoicesonline [dot] org)

Quotables from Prof. Wangari Maathai

* If you donâ??t raise your voice, then your environmentalism means nothing; itâ??s mere tokenism or opportunism.

* The environment is very important in the aspects of peace because when we destroy our resources, they become scarce and we fight over that.

* We have a special responsibility to the ecosystem of this planet. In making sure that other species survive we will be ensuring the survival of our own.

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Solar Taxi

Via Digg

*Vid is abit grainy but not too bad, there is another one here.
This team is on a mission to showcase solutions to global warming…by driving a solar taxi. They are currently in India, where they spoke with the chairman of IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) Mr. Rajendra Pachauri. Incase you’ve been living under a rock for the past several months, IPCC were co winners of the Nobel Peace prize with Al Gore. The Solar Taxi team will be making their way to the United Nations conference on Climate Change next month in Bali Dec 3rd – 14th. How about a stop in Africa sometime in the future? They could even attend the Zero Africa Rally :)
Cool stuff.

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Organic Farmers Market – NBI Dec 15th

***Please note that the event is for December 15th. and not dec 8th. Thanks.
The latest Globalvoices environment post is on conservation efforts in Zambia, South Africa and D.R Congo. It also includes some links from Phil in Kenya and Mr. SSerwanga in Uganda, writing about carbon footprints and land rights respectively.

While I was writing that roundup I came across the Kenya Organic Agricultural Network. They’ve got an excellent event planned for Saturday December Dec 15th .
You can find more details here. I sure hope the Kwani folks make it there, because that would be just wonderful. A combination of great organic food, music, poetry and exhibits showing renewable energy services in Kenya! Excuse me while I figure out a way to teleport myself there.
Check out what is planned…

Farmers Market and Regional Trade Fair
This area will consist of 25-25 tents (10 x 10 ft and 25 x 25ft), where local organic
farmers and retailers will display and sell their produce and products, including at
least one tent devoted to information about organic food and farming run by the
Kenya Organic Agriculture Network (KOAN) and its members. Partners from East
Africa and beyond will be invited to give the market international flavour, offer
consumers a wide variety of choice and help stimulate regional trade.
Green Christmas Shopping
Purveyors of other types of environmentally friendly products and services will be
invited to exhibit at the market: natural health and beauty products, green crafts,
renewable energy services, recycled products, ecotourism, etc.
Organic Catering
Bridges Restaurant will provide fully organic catering services at reasonable prices.
Kamsitu Msituni
This nursery and garden centre will sell a variety of indigenous and useful exotic
trees, as well as organic gardening inputs such as compost and natural pest control
products.
Art Gallery
An art gallery will display and sell paintings and sculptures, focusing on smaller,
lower priced pieces to make art more accessible to the public.
Solar Cinema
A 50-seat cinema tent with projector or TV powered by solar PV will show
environment-themed films and documentaries for free. A solar cinema at an
Arboretum event in June 2007 featured the Academy Award-winning documentary
An Inconvenient Truth. Other films will be solicited from UNEP, KIFF/Alliance
Francaise and ZIFF.

Also from the same site, you can download the Bio Safety Bill, which I don’t know if its been passed or deffered till after the elections.

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The Flow of Flotsam

I was wondering what to write about for blog action day…Deforestation? possible land grabbing in Kenya? The need for recycling bins in apartment communities? the politics of climate change…many options to choose from. I happened watch wired science tonight, and they had a fascinating yet disturbing segment on ‘the garbage patch’. A flowing mass of garbage that goes with the currents spanning several oceans. Cargo that ended up in the seas, such as 80,000 pairs of Nike shoes gave the researchers some information about the flow of trash. Weirdly, a left shoe would end up on one shore and the right shoe on an entirely different shore. Intrigued? Below is the video from PBS.

As its mentioned in the video, perhaps if we see the sheer amount of plastic that is ending up in oceans and inside the bodies of countless birds and animals, we just might think twice about how we dispose of our plastic bottles.

Habib Koite of Mali has a beautiful song that captures feelings of concern about the environment and industrialization. Can we keep chugging along on the path to the new African Century without wrecking our environment?
Listen/download ‘Kumbin’.

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3 days to go: Blog Action Day, Join in and plant a tree!

blogactionday
On Monday October 15th, bloggers will be writing about one topic for one day…the environment. My idea for this day is to appeal to my fellow African bloggers to help make this a fun day in the African blogosphere. The idea is to make it even more special by not only talking about the environment, but by doing something, one thing. So please,

- Plant a tree
- Take a picture or have someone take a picture of you planting the tree
- Please post on your blog

I will be checking the African blogs starting on Sunday, to compile a feature for global voices online.
- Please leave a comment if you will be participating (though you don’t have to, you can tag your post with Africa + Blog Action Day)
Pass the idea along. If we can get one blogger from each country featured on Afrigator, Kenyaunlimited, Amatomu, mashada blogs etc planting a tree, we would really appreciate it.

*Incentive for the first Kenyan blogger to commit to participating: Airtime for you purchased through mamamikes!

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