testlogin1.safiri.pw Open in urlscan Pro
2606:4700:3034::ac43:ca89  Public Scan

URL: https://testlogin1.safiri.pw/
Submission: On May 13 via automatic, source certstream-suspicious — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

GET https://www.earthaction.org/.services/blog/6a00e550798c19883400e55065539f8833/search

<form id="search-blog" method="get" action="https://www.earthaction.org/.services/blog/6a00e550798c19883400e55065539f8833/search" class="form-search form-inline" role="search">
  <input type="search" name="filter.q" results="5" value="">
  <input type="submit" value="Search">
</form>

Text Content

EARTHACTION




 * Act Now
   
   Submit Your Writing Join the EarthAction Network      As an individual
        As an organization Update Your Membership Information

 * About Us
   
   Successes Who We Are      Our Staff      Our Interns      Board of Directors
        Partner Organizations Contact Us

 * Campaigns
   
   Campaign Center Highlighted Action Alerts Featured Campaigns and Projects
   Annual Campaign Reports

 * EA Blog
 * Donate



GETTING INDONESIA TO NET ZERO

As one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, Indonesia has committed to
using its sustainable transition to drive green and inclusive growth. Recent
steps by President Joko Widodo in the lead-up to Indonesia hosting the G20
summit in November 2022 underscore the country’s ambition to reduce its
emissions – including releasing a plan to achieve net zero emissions by 2060 or
sooner, endorsing the Global Coal to Clean Power Transition Statement at COP26,
and enhancing Indonesia’s Nationally Determined Contribution ahead of COP27.
 
This new Asia Society Policy Institute report, Getting Indonesia to Net Zerofrom
the High-level Policy Commission on Getting Asia to Net Zero explores how
Indonesia can further accelerate its transition to a resilient, net zero
emissions economy while benefitting its people and its place in the world. The
report is based on new modeling commissioned from Cambridge Econometrics that
illustrates how implementing Indonesia’s current net zero strategies could:

 * Boost Indonesia’s mid-term GDP by as much as 5% by 2032;
 * Create up to two million new jobs by 2039; and
 * Improve Indonesia’s trade balance by $48 billion.

Moreover, by aiming for net zero emissions by 2050 instead of 2060 while
prioritizing solar and wind energy, Indonesia could reduce its net zero
investment needs by $3.8 trillion and peak its carbon emissions as early as
2027. The report also provides a roadmap for how Indonesia could realize these
and other benefits by prioritizing climate policies that concurrently address
development challenges, reforming the energy market structure to favor solar and
wind, and leveraging green industries to advance a just transition

 

READ THE REPORT

Posted by The EarthAction Team at 05:57 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

| | | | Digg This | Save to del.icio.us


MARCH 16, 2023


ANTI-DAM GROUPS TROOP TO NCIP OVER FPIC INCONSISTENCIES, CONDUCT DAM EXPOSURE
TOUR

Filing of petition and complaints at the regional office of the National
Commission on Indigenous Peoples-Cordillera (NCIP-CAR)

Dam-threatened Kalinga tribes along with advocates trooped to the regional
office of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples- Cordillera (NCIP-CAR)
to petition the dams proposed along the Saltan river in Kalinga.
 
Indigenous peoples from the municipalities of Pinukpuk, Balbalan and Tabuk in
Kalinga mark this year's International Day of Action Against Dams and for Rivers
(IDAAD) with a petition filed against JBD Water Power Incorporated's (JWPI)
hydroelectric power projects at the NCIP regional office in Baguio City today,
March 14, 2023. Said petition seeks the nullification of the result of the Free
Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) among the Limos tribe last February 9, 2023,
whatever the results may be, on basis of inconsistencies in the process.
 

 
According to Elma Tuazon, representative from the Limos tribe and lead convenor
of the Sumkad ti Umili para ti Matagoan, Karbengan, Aglawlaw, Daga ken Dayaw
(SUMKADD), the petition submitted is nullifying "the decision-making
process/meeting for the Limos Ancestral Domain activity on February 9, 2023
related to the Saltan Hydroelectric Power Project", proposed by the JWPI along
the Saltan River in Kalinga. "We have sinced petitioned against these dam
projects along the Saltan River since 2022, we are reiterating our opposition to
these proposed dam projects."
 
Resolutions against the JWPI dams were adopted by several barangays in Balbalan
and the municipality of Pinukpuk as early as February of 2022.
 
A dialogue with NCIP CAR Regional Director Atty. Atanacio Addog was also
conducted, where the demands for NCIP's accountability and strict monitoring of
the FPIC process were floated. Continuing talks between the petitioners and NCIP
will soon determine the outcomes, but petitioners remain wary of NCIP's expected
actions considering that Addog is one of the accused in the administrative
charges including 158 counts of estafa, falsification, and use of falsified
documents filed by the dam-threatened Isnag indigenous peoples of Kabugao on
December 2022 and January 2023.
 

 
Dialogue with NCIP Regional Director Atanacio Addog at the NCIP Regional Office
in Baguio City.
 
Dams Learning Exchange
 
Prior to the petition filing, the petitioners from Kalinga were accompanied by
delegates coming from dam-threatened communities in Kabugao, Apayao for a
two-days Dam Learning Exchange. The Indigenous peoples delegation conducted an
educational tour at the Ambuklao Dam site in Bokod, Benguet.
 

 
Ocular visit of delegates to the Ambuklao Dam. Ptr. Virgil Aniceto of the
Regional Ecumenical Council of the Cordillera (RECCORD), who spent a long time
of service in Bokod, explained the parts of the dam and the resulting damages at
the time of its construction and beyond.
 
Bokod town Mayor, Honorable Thomas Wales, in his message to the delegates during
their courtesy call said, "Think of the next generation, not only the now.
Consider them when you make your decision regarding those projects. Our decision
should not limit the future generations' options for development as they see fit
for them. This is for the sake of us all."
 
In the community exchange, Ambuklao Barangay Captain Monroe Galasgas related the
experience of their community during the building of the then government-owned
75MW Ambuklao Dam through the National Power Corporation (NAPOCOR). "We had to
leave our community. Some of our families were relocated to Nueva Vizcaya and
Palawan however, our families eventually returned to Ambuklao because the
relocation site was undeveloped," he said.
 
The dam was decommissioned in 1999 due to silt accumulation. It resumed
operation in 2011 after it was rehabilitated by SN Aboitiz. It was since then
upgraded to 105MW capacity. SN Aboitiz now owns and manages the facility, but
last January this year, it was reported that Bokod indigenous peoples rejected
the company’s bid to continue the said dam’s operation through a resolution of
non-consent submitted to the provincial office of NCIP Benguet.
 
According to the community, a large portion of the lands covered by the dam
compound are part of their ancestral domain. "We are still reclaiming some of
our lands until now," Galasgas added.
 
"A lot of our questions have been answered regarding the long-term impacts of
dam on the lives and livelihood of people," said Eusebia Luban, an Isnag woman
from Kabugao, Apayao who attended the dam expo and tour.
 
"Balunen me dagitoy nga adal tapno ibingay mi met kadagiti kakailian mi," she
added.
 
#OurRiversOursToDefend
#LetOurRiversFlowFreely
#DefendCordilleraPH

 

Posted by The EarthAction Team at 01:01 PM in Action Alert, Blog Post, Civil
Liberties, Conservation, Culture, Current Affairs, EarthAction,
Environmentalism, Renewable Energy, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)

| | | | Digg This | Save to del.icio.us


FEBRUARY 24, 2023


UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY CALLS FOR AN END TO THE WAR IN UKRAINE

> The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution late last night (Feb 23), calling
> for an end to the war and demanding Russia’s withdrawal from Ukraine, in line
> with the UN Charter.
> 
> Coming just hours before the war entered its second year, the resolution was
> adopted under the Uniting for Peace mandate, which provides the possibility
> for the UN General Assembly to take action to address acts of aggression or
> other serious threats to international peace when the Security Council is
> blocked by the veto power of one of the Permanent Five Members.
> 
> The UNGA resolution, entitled Principles of the Charter of the United Nations
> underlying a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in Ukraine contains 11 key
> points including;
> 
>  * Deploring the dire human rights and humanitarian consequences of the war;
>  * Expressing deep concern about the adverse impact of the war on global food
>    security, energy, nuclear security and safety and the environment;
>  * Calling for full adherence by the parties to the armed conflict to their
>    obligations under international humanitarian law;
>  * Emphasizing the need to ensure accountability for the most serious crimes
>    under international law committed on the territory of Ukraine through
>    independent investigations and prosecutions at the national or
>    international level, and ensure justice for all victims and the prevention
>    of future crimes;
>  * Underscoring the need to reach, as soon as possible, a comprehensive, just
>    and lasting peace in Ukraine in line with the principles of the Charter of
>    the United Nations;
>  * Reaffirming that no territorial acquisition resulting from the threat or
>    use of force shall be recognized as legal;
>  * Demanding that the Russian Federation withdraw all of its military forces
>    from the territory of Ukraine within its internationally recognized border;
>  * Calling for a cessation of hostilities.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> TIME FOR RUSSIA TO END THE CONTINUING WAR AGAINST UKRAINE
> INDEPTHNEWS, FEBRUARY 23
> 
> 
> "Russia should end its invasion of Ukraine, withdraw its troops from Ukrainian
> territory and enter into negotiations with Ukraine to resolve historical
> disputes and establish a lasting and just peace that guarantees the security
> of both nations," says the World Future Council in an article Time for Russia
> to End Continuing War Against Ukraine published in InDepthNews yesterday.
> 
> “Regardless of any grievances and unresolved conflicts that Russia may have
> with Ukraine and the United States/NATO, the use of force to resolve such
> conflicts is prohibited under Article 2 of the UN Charter,” says Alyn Ware,
> Director of the World Future Council Peace and Disarmament program.
> 
> 
> 
> "War has no place in the 21st century when humanity already needs to address
> so many pressing issues such as climate change and implementing the
> Sustainable Development Goals” says Angelina Davydova, in the InDepthNews
> article. Ms Davydova is a Member of the Ukraine War Environmental Consequences
> Work Group and Council Member of World Future Council.
> 
> “We regret that better use is not made of diplomacy, mediation and Common
> Security mechanisms earlier in conflicts to address and resolve historical
> grievances." says international lawyer Neshan Gunasekera, Co-Chair of the
> World Future Council Peace and Disarmament Commission and a Director of the
> International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms. “We call on the
> United Nations and the international community to make better use of these
> common security mechanisms to address unresolved conflicts and prevent war." 
> 
> Such Common Security mechanisms include the UN Security Council, UN General
> Assembly, International Court of Justice, UN mediation services, UN Human
> Rights Council, Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and
> others.

Posted by The EarthAction Team at 07:01 PM in Blog Post, Civil Liberties,
Climate change, Conservation, Current Affairs, EarthAction, Environmentalism,
Military Spending, Nature Conservation, World Events | Permalink | Comments (0)

| | | | Digg This | Save to del.icio.us

Older »


OUR MISSION

EarthAction's mission is to inform and inspire people everywhere to turn their
concern, passion, and outrage into meaningful action for a more just, peaceful
and sustainable world.


PROJECTS OF EA

20/20 Action
The Elders Project




SEARCH




CAMPAIGN REPORT




RECENT POSTS

 * 266 solutions, 82 hubs, 5 areas of impact: the 2022 Sustainable Ocean
   Alliance Impact Report is here. 
 * Anti-dam groups troop to NCIP over FPIC inconsistencies, conduct dam exposure
   tour
 * UN General Assembly calls for an end to the war in Ukraine
 * The Global Futures Forum, New Agenda for Peace and UN Summit of the Future
 * UN Summit of the Future: Consultations on International Peace and Security
 * EarthAction has provided support to the Cordillera Peoples Alliance for many
   years and now we stand with Bestang
 * Vanuatu circulates draft UN resolution to take the climate crisis to the
   World Court
 * Calling for urgent action to protect children from escalating heatwaves ahead
   of COP27
 * Emergency Notice regarding Vulcan Materials from Aquatic Ecologist Ed Boles



ORGANIZATION GET INVOLVED LEARN CONNECT

 * Home
 * About Us
 * Employment

 * Join
 * Donate
 * Update Your Info

 * Blog
 * Campaign Center
 * Archives

 * Facebook
 * Twitter
 * RSS


P.O. Box 63, Amherst MA, 01004 ♦ Email: contact[at]earthaction.org ♦ Tel:
413.427.8827 ♦ Fax: 413.256.8871