We geoengineers need to make our governments to include references to 
geoengineering. I am enclosing below statement from His Excellency President 
Evo Morales to Poznan summit:
 
 
 
28 Nov 2008 – Climate Change: Save the Planet from Capitalism





 
Un-official translation 
 
Sisters and brothers: 
 
Today, our Mother Earth is ill. From the beginning of the 21st century we have 
lived the hottest years of the last thousand years. Global warming is 
generating abrupt changes in the weather: the retreat of glaciers and the 
decrease of the polar ice caps; increasing sea levels and the flooding of 
coastal areas, where approximately 60% of the world population live; the 
increase in the processes of desertification and the decrease of fresh water 
sources; a higher frequency of natural disasters that the communities of the 
earth suffer; the extinction of animal and plant species;1 and the spread of 
diseases in areas that before were free from those diseases. 
 
One of the most tragic consequences of climate change is that some nations and 
territories are condemned to disappear due to the increasing sea level. 
 
Everything began with the industrial revolution in 1750, which gave birth to 
the capitalist system. In two and a half centuries, the so called “developed” 
countries have consumed a large part of the fossil fuels created over five 
million centuries. 
 
Competition and the thirst for profit without limits of the capitalist system 
are destroying the planet. Under capitalism we are not human beings but 
consumers. Under capitalism mother earth does not exist, instead there are raw 
materials. Capitalism is the source of the asymmetries and imbalances in the 
world. It generates luxury, ostentation and waste for a few, while millions in 
the world die from hunger. In the hands of capitalism everything becomes a 
commodity: the water, the soil, the human genome, the ancestral cultures, 
justice, ethics, death … and life itself. 
 
Everything, absolutely everything, can be bought and sold and under capitalism. 
And even “climate change” itself has become a business. 
 
“Climate change” has placed all humankind before a great choice: to continue in 
the ways of capitalism and death, or to start down the path of harmony with 
nature and respect for life. 
 
In the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, the developed countries and economies in transition 
committed to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by at least 5% below the 
1990 levels, through the implementation of different mechanisms among which 
market mechanisms predominate. 
 
Until 2006, greenhouse effect gases, far from being reduced, have increased by 
9.1% in relation to the 1990 levels, demonstrating also in this way the breach 
of commitments by the developed countries. 
 
The market mechanisms applied in developing countries2  have not accomplished a 
significant reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. 
 
Just as the market is incapable of regulating global financial and productive 
systems, the market is unable to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and will 
only generate big business for financial agents and major corporations. 
 
 
The earth is much more important than stock exchanges of Wall Street and the 
world. 
 
While the United States and the European Union allocate 4,100 billion dollars 
to save the bankers from a financial crisis that they themselves have caused, 
programs on climate change get 313 times less, that is to say, only 13 billion 
dollars. 
 
The resources for climate change are unfairly distributed. More resources are 
directed to reduce emissions (mitigation) and less to reduce the effects of 
climate change that all the countries suffer (adaptation).3 The vast majority 
of resources flow to those countries that have contaminated the most, and not 
to the countries where we have preserved the environment most. Around 80% of 
the Clean Development Mechanism projects are concentrated in four emerging 
countries. 
 
Capitalist logic promotes a paradox in which the sectors that have contributed 
the most to deterioration of the environment are those that benefit the most 
from climate change programs. 
 
At the same time, technology transfer and the financing for clean and 
sustainable development of the countries of the South have remained just 
speeches. 
 
The next summit on Climate Change in Copenhagen must allow us to make a leap 
forward if we want to save Mother Earth and humanity. For that purpose, we 
propose the following for the process from Poznan to Copenhagen: 
 
 
Attack the structural causes of climate change 
 
1) Debate the structural causes of climate change. As long as we do not change 
the capitalist system for a system based on complementarity, solidarity and 
harmony between people and nature, the measures that we adopt will be 
palliatives that will be limited and precarious in character. For us, what has 
failed is the model of “living better”, of unlimited development, 
industrialisation without frontiers, of modernity that deprecates history, of 
increasing accumulation of goods at the expense of others and nature. For that 
reason we promote the idea of Living Well, in harmony with other human beings 
and with our Mother Earth. 
 
2) Developed countries need to control their patterns of consumption - of 
luxury and waste - especially the excessive consumption of fossil fuels.  
Subsidies of fossil fuel, that reach 150-250 billion dollars,4 must be 
progressively eliminated. It is fundamental to develop alternative forms of 
power, such as solar, geothermal, wind and hydroelectric both at small and 
medium scales. 
 
3) Agrofuels are not an alternative, because they put the production of 
foodstuffs for transport before the production of food for human beings. 
Agrofuels expand the agricultural frontier destroying forests and biodiversity, 
generate monocropping, promote land concentration, deteriorate soils, exhaust 
water sources, contribute to rises in food prices and, in many cases, result in 
more consumption of more energy than is produced. 
 
 
Substantial commitments to emissions reduction that are met 
 
4) Strict fulfilment by 2012 of the commitments5 of developed countries to 
reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least by 5% below the 1990 levels. It is 
unacceptable that the countries that polluted the planet throughout the course 
of history make statements about larger reductions in the future while not 
complying with their present commitments. 
 
5) Establish new minimum commitments for developed countries of greenhouse gas 
emission reduction of 40% by 2020 and 90% by 2050, taking as a starting point 
1990 emission levels. These minimum commitments must be met internally in 
developed countries and not through flexible market mechanisms that allow for 
the purchase of certified emissions reduction certificates to continue 
polluting in their own country. Likewise, monitoring mechanisms must be 
established for measuring, reporting and verifying that are transparent and 
accessible to the public, to guarantee compliance with commitments. 
 
6) Developing countries not responsible for the historical pollution must 
preserve the necessary space to implement an alternative and sustainable form 
of development that does not repeat the mistakes of savage industrialisation 
that has brought us to the current situation. To ensure this process, 
developing countries need, as a prerequisite, finance and technology transfer. 
 
 
An Integrated Financial Mechanism to address ecological debt 
 
7) Acknowledging the historical ecological debt that they owe to the planet, 
developed countries must create an Integrated Financial Mechanism to support 
developing countries in: implementation of their plans and programmes for 
adaptation to and mitigation of climate change; the innovation, development and 
transfer of technology; in the preservation and improvement of sinks and 
reservoirs; response actions to the serious natural disasters caused by climate 
change; and the carrying out of sustainable and eco-friendly development plans. 
 
8) This Integrated Financial Mechanism, in order to be effective, must count on 
a contribution of at least 1% of the GDP of developed countries6 and other 
contributions from taxes on oil and gas, financial transactions, sea and air 
transport, and the profits of transnational companies.  
 
9) Contributions from developed countries must be additional to Official 
Development Assistance (ODA), bilateral aid or aid channelled through organisms 
not part of the United Nations. Any finance outside the UNFCCC cannot be 
considered as the fulfilment of developed countries’ commitments under the 
Convention. 
 
10)  Finance has to be directed to the plans or national programmes of the 
different States and not to projects that follow market logic. 
 
11)  Financing must not be concentrated just in some developed countries but 
has to give priority to the countries that have contributed less to greenhouse 
gas emissions, those that preserve nature and/or those that are suffering most 
from the impacts of climate change. 
 
12) The Integrated Financial Mechanism must be under the coverage of the United 
Nations, not under the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and its intermediaries 
such as the World Bank or regional development banks; its management must be 
collective, transparent and non-bureaucratic. Its decisions must be made by all 
member countries, especially by developing countries, and not just by donors or 
administrative bureaucracies. 
 
 
Technology Transfer to developing countries 
 
13) Innovation and technology related to climate change must be within the 
public domain, not under any private monopolistic patent regime that obstructs 
and makes technology transfer more expensive to developing countries. 
 
14) Products that are the fruit of public financing for technology innovation 
and development have to be placed within the public domain and not under a 
private regime of patents,7 so that they can be freely accessed by developing 
countries. 
 
15) Encourage and improve the system of voluntary and compulsory licenses so 
that all countries can access products already patented quickly and free of 
cost. Developed countries cannot treat patents and intellectual property rights 
as something “sacred” that has to be preserved at any cost. The regime of 
flexibilities available for intellectual property rights in the cases of 
serious problems for public health has to be adapted and substantially enlarged 
to heal Mother Earth. 
 
16) Recover and promote indigenous people’s practices in harmony with nature 
which have proven to be sustainable through centuries. 
 
 
Adaptation and mitigation with the participation of all the people 
 
17) Promote mitigation actions, programs and plans with the participation of 
local communities and indigenous people in the framework of full respect for 
and implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of 
Indigenous Peoples. The best mechanisms to confront the challenge of climate 
change are not market mechanisms, but conscious, motivated, and well organized 
human beings endowed with an identity of their own. 
 
18) The reduction of emissions from deforestation and forest degradation must 
be based on a mechanism of direct compensation from developed to developing 
countries, through a sovereign implementation that ensures broad participation 
of local communities, and a mechanism for monitoring, reporting and verifying 
that is transparent and public. 
 
 
A UN for the Environment and Climate Change 
 
19) We need a World Environment and Climate Change Organization to which 
multilateral trade and financial organizations are subordinated, so as to 
promote a different model of development that is environmentally friendly and 
resolves the profound problems of impoverishment.  This organization must have 
effective follow-up, verification and sanctioning mechanisms to ensure that the 
present and future agreements are complied with. 
 
20) It is fundamental to structurally transform the World Trade Organization, 
the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the international economic 
system as a whole, in order to guarantee fair and complementary trade, as well 
as financing without conditions for sustainable development that avoids the 
waste of natural resources and fossil fuels in production processes, trade and 
product transport.
In this negotiation process towards Copenhagen, it is fundamental to guarantee 
the participation of our people as active stakeholders at a national, regional 
and worldwide level, especially taking into account those sectors most 
affected, such as indigenous peoples who have always promoted the defense of 
Mother Earth. 
 
Humankind is capable of saving the earth if we recover the principles of 
solidarity, complementarity, and harmony with nature in contraposition to the 
reign of competition, profits and rampant consumption of natural resources. 
 
 
November 28, 2008 
Evo Morales AymaPresident of Bolivia 
 
1Due to the “Niña” phenomenon, that becomes more frequent as a result of 
climate change, Bolivia has lost 4% of its GDP in 2007. 
 
2Known as the Clean Development Mechanism 
 
3At present there is only one Adaptation Fund with approximately 500 million 
dollars for more than 150 developing countries. According to the UNFCCC 
Secretary, 171 billion dollars are required for adaptation, and 380 billion 
dollars are required for mitigation. 
4Stern Review 
 
5Kyoto Protocol, Art. 3. 
 
6The Stern Review has suggested one percent of global GDP, which represents 
less than 700 billion dollars per year. 
 
7According to UNCTAD (1998), Public financing in developing countries 
contributes to 40% of the resources for innovation and development of 
technology. 
 
 
Un-official translation :  
http://www.boliviainfoforum.org.uk/news-detail.asp?id=51
 
 
 
_________________________________________________________________
Imagine a life without walls.  See the possibilities. 
http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/122465943/direct/01/
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