Bangladesh, climate change rally 2008. Photo: Caroline Gluck, Oxfam / Flickr
Bangladesh, climate change rally 2008. Photo: Caroline Gluck, Oxfam / Flickr

The need for a Southasian perspective

We tend not to comprehend how ecologically inter-connected we are in the region.

Climate change has become the defining issue of our time. It is a quintessential global matter, since its effects respect no national or regional boundaries. Climate change is also a challenge that compels a global and collaborative response. We are all literally in the same boat, cast adrift in increasingly tumultuous seas. Unless we pull the oars together we may not make it to shore.

It is precisely this kind of collaborative response that must be constructed when we all meet at the 15th Conference of Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Copenhagen in December. Success at Copenhagen is particularly important for developing countries such as those in Southasia, since it is we who will suffer the most adverse consequences of the changing climate. While delegations of Southasian countries have had good consultation and cooperation among them as part of the larger G-77 and China grouping, we have not yet managed to project the specificity of our own regional situation at the multilateral negotiations currently under way. This is important to do, because Southasia is home to 1.3 billion people – we constitute one-sixth of the world's humanity.

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Himal Southasian
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