The politics of tackling climate change
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Tackling climate change is a tough challenge for politicians in democracies. How do you persuade people to make sacrifices now to prevent climate change in the future and remain popular enough to get re-elected? That's the conundrum that the world needs to resolve.
Britain's climate change minister, Ed Miliband, has said he wants a popular movement to push the world's politicians to secure an agreement to reduce emissions. But in the last couple of months British climate campaigners have felt persecuted by the Labour government. There was the police raid on anti-coal campaigners in Nottingham, police attempts to infiltrate the direct action organisation and claims from that police were taking photos of comings and goings at its London headquarters.
In our latest Ethical Man film I travel to Washington for the summit of climate activists. Senior administration members were there in force. They seemed to regard the climate activists in DC as an army of potential ambassadors for President Barack Obama's climate policy - not a rabble of radicals to be infiltrated and neutralised.
It is an interesting contrast. Yesterday I spoke to Ed Miliband about it. .
I met him at the British Embassy in Washington where he has been attending a major international meeting on climate change. The meeting is Mr Obama's attempt to kick start international climate negotiations.
Mr Obama invited ministers from 16 major economies which together are responsible for 80% of the world's emissions. The idea is to get the various parties talking to try and get some momentum going in the run up to the this December.
The Copenhagen Conference really is a big deal. It is where the successor to the Kyoto protocol will be negotiated. The meeting is crucial because many environmentalists believe this will be the last chance the world has to get to grips with reducing emissions if we are to avoid uncontrolled climate change.
What Mr Obama hopes is that the talks I've been following here in Washington will make agreement easier. As I reported on Newsnight last night, the good news is that everyone seemed to agree that they went well. The bad news is that there are still big differences between countries, particularly between the developed and developing world. .