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Climate change has knocked out every other issue from the
environmental activists’ agenda in the last nine months,
said a new report on NGO campaigning published today.
The report, Where are NGOs concentrating their campaigning
resources?, produced by SIGWatch, the NGO and issues
tracking firm, showed campaigning on climate change is running
at five times the level of the next most popular issues
such as agricultural biotechnology and nuclear energy and
ten times more than hitherto top issues like pesticides.
Only in South America is action on climate change not a
top priority for NGOs.
Robert Blood, author of the report and director of SIGWatch:
" The dominance of climate change in advocacy campaigning
reflects a dramatic pivot by the environmental movement
and its allies within the last three years, away from traditional
environmental concerns.”
“We have also seen a marked acceleration in climate
campaigning in the run-up to the international climate negotiations
in Copenhagen in December. After Copenhagen, what will the
NGOs do with their campaigning resources? My guess is that
they will develop a whole new environmental theme, probably
on water footprint, paralleling their campaigns on carbon.”
After climate change, NGO priorities diverge strongly between
North America, Europe, South America and Asia.
North American NGOs are most worried about oil and gas
drilling, protecting the Arctic, the impact of coal mining
and mercury pollution from coal-fired power generation but
their European counterparts are more concerned about corporate
social responsibility, road building, cattle ranching in
rainforests, pesticide residues in food, and storing nuclear
waste.
South American NGOs are anxious about the environmental
impacts of aquaculture, mining, hydro dams, plantation forestry
and the impact of resource extraction on indigenous people
while Asia-Pacific NGOs have above average concern about
palm oil, aquaculture, pesticides in textiles and coral
reef conservation.
Nonetheless green issues dominate everywhere, not least
because environmental NGOs are far more numerous and wealthier
than their counterparts in human rights, animal rights or
third world development.
SIGWatch also identified issues where campaigning activity
is rising fastest across the globe.
Top of the list is investment in the arms industry, following
by oil sands (tar sands), impact of pesticides on community
health, carbon emissions from shipping, nanosilver, and
formaldehyde in household products.
Readers can download a free copy of this report from http://www.sigwatch.com/index.php?id=139.
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