The International Union of Railways (UIC), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the global conservation organization WWF today launched the symbolic one-month and nearly 9,000 kilometer-long train journey from Kyoto to Copenhagen to document the impacts of climate change and raise awareness of low-carbon transport solutions.
The project is done in partnership with the Seal the Deal! campaign led by the United Nationsto galvanize political will and public support for reaching a comprehensive global climateagreement at the UN climate change conference (COP 15) in Copenhagen in December thisyear.
Train operators from around the world will participate in the Train to Copenhagen campaignwith the aim of raising awareness of transport’s influence on climate change.The transport sector is major producer of CO2 emissions, already accounting for over onefifthof global CO2 emissions. These emissions are projected to double within only 40 years.Railways are crucial in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and in developing sustainabletransport systems.
The campaign will kick off on 5 November with the UIC Climate Change and Rail Seminar inthe Japanese city of Kyoto – the birthplace of the current Climate Change Protocol, thecurrent commitment period of which is due to end in 2012. The message for COP15participants will be carried to Copenhagen through a symbolic rail journey from Kyoto toCopenhagen.
During the train journey through Russia, environmental experts and climate changecampaigners will send eye-witness accounts of global warming signs underway. Siberia is aglobal climate change “hotspot”, where thawing permafrost and melting peat bogs couldslowly release billions of tons of methane and carbon dioxide into the atmosphere over thecoming years.
On 5 December in Brussels, the Climate Express will take on board more than 400 climatechange negotiators, campaigners and other high-profile personalities going to Copenhagento participate in COP 15, for a 12-hour on-track conference focusing on how we can solvethe challenges posed by the transport sector with regard to global warming.On arrival to Copenhagen, the Climate Express, which will be powered by 100% renewableenergy, will remain at Copenhagen Central Station throughout the two-week conference,serving as a mobile exhibition open to the public about low-carbon transport solutions.Jean-Pierre Loubinoux, Director General of UIC, said: “The Train to Copenhagen team hasone goal: bringing people to Copenhagen and bringing COP15 to the people. Taking the trainis part of the solution in combating global warming. Trains are the most environmentallyfriendly mode of transport, so why would you travel by any other means to the one event in2009 that can make a difference to the planet’s future?”
The Chairman of the Board of the SJSC "Latvijas dzelzceļš" Ugis Magonis expressed his amendment with the trends that people in Europe receive more information about train transport ar 'green transport': "We follow the call of the organizers of this campaign and coocperate with this iniciative. One locomotive on its own can transport as much freight as 200 lorries, but with far less environment pollution. Everyone who cares for our environment and the future of our Earth should keep it in mind, before chosing the way of transportation."
UN Under-Secretary-General and UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner said: “We are onthe road to nowhere if existing policies and economic models prevail with their overemphasis on private cars and on shifting shipments of goods to the roads. The Train toCopenhagen project is a showcase of sustainable transport solutions that will be part andparcel of a resource-efficient, low-carbon Green Economy of the 21st Century. By Sealing theDeal on an ambitious climate agreement in Copenhagen, governments will get into gear topropel the world to a low-carbon future so that societies may also finally embark on a journeyto more sustainable transport.”
Yvo de Boer, Executive Secretary, UN Framework Convention on Climate Change(UNFCCC) said: “It is clear that business as usual is not an option if we want to reversecurrent trends and prevent catastrophic climate change. If we can really integrate the costs ofpollution into the price of transportation, rail will be a big winner.”Kim Carstensen, Leader of WWF’s Global Climate Initiative, said “The Train to Copenhagenis symbolic of the long journey we have taken in addressing climate change since Kyoto. Weknow where we are heading, but world leaders need to add much more steam to guarantee afair, ambitious, and binding climate deal in Copenhagen."
Notes to Editors:The Climate Express project is launched in conjunction with Global Climate Week (21-25September) organized by the United Nations (http://www.sealthedeal2009.org/global-climateweek) and the UIC Energy Efficient Days 2009 (23-25 September) in Tours, France(http://www.energy-efficiency-days.org).
For more information contact:At UIC: Delphine Margot, on tel.: +33 1 44 49 20 55, or email margot@uic.org;or
Liesbeth de Jong, on tel.: +33 1 44 49 20 53, or email dejong@uic.orgAt
UNEP: Nick Nuttall, UNEP Spokesperson, on mobile +41 79 596 5737 or emailnick.nuttall@unep.org; or
Xenya Scanlon, Information Officer, on mobile +254 721 847 563 or email xenya.scanlon@unep.org
At WWF Owen Gibbons, Campaign Leader, Global Deal Campaign,on tel.: +4122364 9075; or email ogibbons@wwfint.org