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KILIMANJARO SET TO LOSE ITS ICE FIELD BY 2015 DUE TO CLIMATE CHANGE 6 November 2001
As environment ministers from around the world gather in Marrakech to finalise the Kyoto Protocol, a Greenpeace team on Mount Kilimanjaro spoke with journalists covering the climate negotiations in Marrakech live via a video conference. "We are here to show government ministers coming to Marrakech that climate change is happening now and to remind them what is at risk if they fail to produce an environmentally sound protocol," said Greenpeace campaigner Joris Thijssen, on Kilimanjaro. "It’s not just glaciers and ice fields around the world. In Morocco the country is suffering crippling drought for the third successive year which is affecting two-thirds of the country; the snow fields in the Atlas Mountains are disappearing and water supplies are at extremely low levels." "Russia, Australia,
Japan and Canada are attempting to ensure that the final details of the
Kyoto Protocol are as weak as possible, to protect their greenhouse gas
polluting industries," said Thijssen. "But this is the price
we pay if climate change is allowed to go unchecked – here in Africa we
will not only lose glaciers, but will face more extreme droughts and floods,
widespread agriculture loses, and increased infectious diseases, all of
which are felt hardest by people in developing nations." In February
this year Lonnie Thompson, professor of geological sciences at Ohio State
University, reported that at least one-third of the ice field on Tanzania's
Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa has disappeared, or melted, in the last dozen
years. More than 80 percent of the ice field has been lost since it was Earlier this year,
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a group of more
than 2500 scientists around the world, released its latest report on climate
change. They expect that the average global temperature "This is not just about losing beautiful landscapes. Climate change effects the whole ecosystem and that means people’s lives all around the globe," said Thijssen. "Businesses and governments must realise that unless coal, oil and gas, which produce the bulk of global greenhouse emissions, are rapidly phased out and replaced with renewable energy sources, we are going to see more and more devastation, and face higher and higher costs of attempting to keep up with an unpredictably changing world." FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT: - To speak to the team on Mount Kilimanjaro via satellite phone contact media officer Louise Fraser in Marrakech (GMT time) on +212 6 1103 885 or on +31 6 5395 5202. Interviews with Bill Hare, Greenpeace climate policy director, are available on +212 6 1103 972 or on +31 6 21296899. Contact Professor
Lonnie Thompson via Ohio State University’s Byrd Polar Research Centre
on + 1 614 292 6531. For photographs contact John Novis in Amsterdam on +31 20 524 9580 or +31(0) 6 53819121
Climate change impacts on glaciers around the world (pdf) Climate change impacts around the world (pdf) View the satellite images of Mount Kilimanjaro on the NASA site: Kilimanjaro glacier
Nov. 1990 and Dec. 2000: http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/viewrecord?7676 More snow and ice
images:
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