Sommet de l'ONU sur le climat 2011, Durban
-
1
-
2
-
3
-
4
- Oxfam a uni ses forces cette année à celles de Green TV pour vous tenir informé-e des dernières nouvelles, des scoops et de toute la mobilisation qui se déroule autour du sommet de la COP 17 sur le changement climatique.
- Partout dans le monde, les gens unissent leurs forces pour demander à nos dirigeant-e-s de passer maintenant à l’action en vue de réduire les émissions nuisibles et de payer pour aider les pays à s’adapter au changement climatique.
- Changement climatique, conférence des Nations unies, développement international... Pour mieux comprendre les enjeux, retrouvez ici nos réponses à quelques unes des questions les plus fréquemment posées.
L'accord conclu par les négociateurs du sommet de l'ONU sur le climat à Durban, en Afrique du Sud, ne constitue qu'un strict minimum et trace un chemin étroit et parsemé d'embûches pour éviter un réchauffement de 4 degrés.
Blogs
Le G8 doit remplir sa part du marché
16 May, 2012, 12:24 BSTCet article fait partie d’une série de blogs rédigés par des ONG de premier plan pour attirer l’attention sur une variété de problèmes que le G8 devrait aborder lors de son Sommet qui se tiendra les 18 et 19 mai à Camp David, dans un lieu reculé du Maryland.
Prêts pour l’avenir ? La route chaotique vers de nouveaux objectifs de développement
7 May, 2012, 12:42 BSTL’agenda du développement post-2015 (c'est-à-dire post-Objectifs du millénaire pour le développement) doit se concentrer sur des objectifs durables et équitables, qui bénéficieront aux plus pauvres, expliquent Lysa John, experte...
La vraie crise économique, c’est la faim
4 May, 2012, 17:17 BSTLa faim touche environ un milliard de personnes dans le monde et, tandis que la crise économique persiste, les efforts de relance de la croissance risquent en fait d’aggraver la situation.
Mondialiser la résistance et porter le message dans la rue : « femmes, vie, liberté » !
1 May, 2012, 10:19 BSTJameen Kaur a participé au 12e forum international de l'AWID sur les droits des femmes et le développement qui a eu lieu du 19 au 22 avril 2012 à Instanbul, en Turquie.Crise alimentaire en Mauritanie : quand les comptes sont toujours négatifs
27 March, 2012, 9:54 BST« J'avais cinq chèvres. J’en ai vendu trois il y a plus d'un mois pour acheter du riz, ce qui nous a permis de survivre jusqu’à maintenant. Je serai obligée de vendre les deux qui me restent à court terme pour tenir encore quelques mois. » « Et après ? » « Après rien », répond, le regard baissé, Aminata Ndiaye, tout en continuant d’allaiter le plus jeune de ses cinq enfants, à Kagnadé, une communauté...
Flickr
-
The 'doughnut' - A safe and just space for humanity within planetary and social boundaries
Oxfam International | 12 Jan, 2012Achieving sustainable development for nine billion people has to be high on the list of humanity’s great uncharted journeys. So here’s an idea for a global-scale compass to point us in the right direction -- the doughnut.
Who’s stressing the planet?
The rich, not the poor. Bringing everyone alive today above the social foundation need not stress planetary boundaries.
The real source of stress is excessive resource use by roughly the richest 10 percent of people in the world– backed up by the aspirations of a rapidly growing global middle class seeking to emulate those unsustainable lifestyles. Thanks to the extraordinary scale of global inequality, widespread poverty coexists with dangerous planetary stress.
What about growth?
The aim of economic development must be to bring humanity into the safe and just space, ending deprivation and keeping within safe levels of resource use. Traditional growth policies have largely failed to deliver on both accounts: far too few benefits of GDP growth have gone to people living in poverty, and far too much of GDP’s rise has been at the cost of degrading natural resources.
Read more on the GROW blog:Can we live inside the doughnut? Why the world needs planetary and social boundariesand tell us what you think about this model of growth! -
Demonstrators try to access the UN plenary
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Demonstrators try to access the UN plenary
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
New Zealand Earns First Place Fossil, United States and Canada Share“Colossal Fossil”
Oxfam International | 10 Dec, 2011At the final day of the United Nations climate negotiations for 2011, countries received their biggest shaming yet for blocking greater progress in the talks. With the final outcome of negotiations not yet decided, it was at least clear enough which nations had done their worst in the last day and the entire two weeks. New Zealand took the infamous 1st prize for its strongest statement yet against continuing Kyoto. But Canada earned yet another Colossal Fossil for scoring the most dirty points at these negotiations.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
New Zealand Earns First Place Fossil, United States and Canada Share“Colossal Fossil”
Oxfam International | 10 Dec, 2011At the final day of the United Nations climate negotiations for 2011, countries received their biggest shaming yet for blocking greater progress in the talks. With the final outcome of negotiations not yet decided, it was at least clear enough which nations had done their worst in the last day and the entire two weeks. New Zealand took the infamous 1st prize for its strongest statement yet against continuing Kyoto. But Canada earned yet another Colossal Fossil for scoring the most dirty points at these negotiations.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
New Zealand Earns First Place Fossil, United States and Canada Share“Colossal Fossil”
Oxfam International | 10 Dec, 2011At the final day of the United Nations climate negotiations for 2011, countries received their biggest shaming yet for blocking greater progress in the talks. With the final outcome of negotiations not yet decided, it was at least clear enough which nations had done their worst in the last day and the entire two weeks. New Zealand took the infamous 1st prize for its strongest statement yet against continuing Kyoto. But Canada earned yet another Colossal Fossil for scoring the most dirty points at these negotiations.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
New Zealand Earns First Place Fossil, United States and Canada Share“Colossal Fossil”
Oxfam International | 10 Dec, 2011At the final day of the United Nations climate negotiations for 2011, countries received their biggest shaming yet for blocking greater progress in the talks. With the final outcome of negotiations not yet decided, it was at least clear enough which nations had done their worst in the last day and the entire two weeks. New Zealand took the infamous 1st prize for its strongest statement yet against continuing Kyoto. But Canada earned yet another Colossal Fossil for scoring the most dirty points at these negotiations.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
New Zealand Earns First Place Fossil, United States and Canada Share“Colossal Fossil”
Oxfam International | 10 Dec, 2011At the final day of the United Nations climate negotiations for 2011, countries received their biggest shaming yet for blocking greater progress in the talks. With the final outcome of negotiations not yet decided, it was at least clear enough which nations had done their worst in the last day and the entire two weeks. New Zealand took the infamous 1st prize for its strongest statement yet against continuing Kyoto. But Canada earned yet another Colossal Fossil for scoring the most dirty points at these negotiations.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
New Zealand Earns First Place Fossil, United States and Canada Share“Colossal Fossil”
Oxfam International | 10 Dec, 2011At the final day of the United Nations climate negotiations for 2011, countries received their biggest shaming yet for blocking greater progress in the talks.
Though the final outcome of negotiations had not yet been decided, it was at least clear enough which nations had done their worst in the last day and the entire two weeks.
New Zealand took the infamous 1st prize for its strongest statement yet against continuing Kyoto.But Canada earned yet another Colossal Fossil for scoring the most dirty points at these negotiations.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Let them eat carbon
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Ever tried eating coal? Oxfam's stunt shows how the food we all rely on is at risk in the face of a changing climate. Instead of delivering solutions in Durban to help protect the millions of people on the front lines of the climate crisis, certain countries are standing in the way of progress at the talks.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Let them eat carbon
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Ever tried eating coal? Oxfam's stunt shows how the food we all rely on is at risk in the face of a changing climate. Instead of delivering solutions in Durban to help protect the millions of people on the front lines of the climate crisis, certain countries are standing in the way of progress at the talks.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Let them eat carbon
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Ever tried eating coal? Oxfam's stunt shows how the food we all rely on is at risk in the face of a changing climate. Instead of delivering solutions in Durban to help protect the millions of people on the front lines of the climate crisis, certain countries are standing in the way of progress at the talks.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Let them eat carbon
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Ever tried eating coal? Oxfam's stunt shows how the food we all rely on is at risk in the face of a changing climate. Instead of delivering solutions in Durban to help protect the millions of people on the front lines of the climate crisis, certain countries are standing in the way of progress at the talks.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Let them eat carbon
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Oxfam is calling for urgent action at COP17 in Durban to tackle climate change.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Let them eat carbon
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Ever tried eating coal? Oxfam's stunt shows how the food we all rely on is at risk in the face of a changing climate. Instead of delivering solutions in Durban to help protect the millions of people on the front lines of the climate crisis, certain countries are standing in the way of progress at the talks.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Let them eat carbon
Oxfam International | 9 Dec, 2011Ever tried eating coal? Oxfam's stunt shows how the food we all rely on is at risk in the face of a changing climate. Instead of delivering solutions in Durban to help protect the millions of people on the front lines of the climate crisis, certain countries are standing in the way of progress at the talks.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Responding to journalists
Oxfam International | 8 Dec, 2011Kelly Dent, Head of the Oxfam Delegation, responding to journalists questions.
Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Panel of experts
Oxfam International | 8 Dec, 2011Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Taking notes
Oxfam International | 8 Dec, 2011Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam -
Oxfam team
Oxfam International | 8 Dec, 2011Find out more about Oxfam's work at UN climate summit 2011 in Durban, South Africa
Credit: Ainhoa Goma/Oxfam

























