COP26: Daily briefing from UN summit on climate change for Monday, November 8
We do love a good old fashioned queue
With problems surrounding queueing, online access, and Covid-19 protocols, the UNFCCC, the agency responsible for overseeing COP26, has not exactly had its problems to seek.
But the agency was dealt another headache yesterday after falling victim to a prank by the Yes Men, the activist group which rails against overbearing corporate influence.
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Hide AdIt set up a fake firm known as Yasava, billed as “the world’s leading designer of bespoke couture interiors for private jets.” In other words, hardly the most climate friendly enterprise.
To their surprise, their application to have the company included in two official COP26 initiatives - the Race to Zero campaign and the Science-Based Targets initiative - was rubber stamped.
You’ve got unintended mail
Spare a thought for flustered UN officials who had to try their best to uphold the diplomatic reputation of their employer in the face of adversity.
The reason? Barack Obama was in town yesterday, and multiple observer organisations had received emails inviting them to attempt the keynote event.
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Hide AdWhen a large queue formed outside the UNFCCC’s offices, there was disappointing news. The emails had been sent in error, and there were only around 20 spaces. A bit of a squeeze given the number of registered observers stands at around 1,500 strong.
Strength in uniformity
Word on the mean streets of Glasgow is that some of those who volunteered to give up their own time and with little reward other than a ‘thank you’ from the organisers have been flogging their special one-off uniforms on the internet.
Branded jackets, polo shirts, backpacks, face masks and bobble hats produced by Lion Safety in Falkirk for the summit have been listed by sellers in Clydebank and Edinburgh.
More than 10,000 people applied for the unpaid helper roles and unfortunately some of those selected for participation have failed to turn up on the day.
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Hide AdSpare a thought for those indigenous tribespeople who travelled many thousands of miles to highlight the threats they face from climate change.
Some have seen forests clear-felled, soil washed away during monsoons, freak floods, habitat loss for wildlife and encroachment on their tribal lands by greedy businesses with the tacit approval of corrupt officials at local and national level.
A dram fine idea
Glenfiddich has created a limited-edition 26-year-old Scotch – in partnership with Stop Climate Chaos Scotland – to commemorate COP26.Individuals will have the opportunity to bid on one of 100 bottles via a charity auction (from Nov 22 – 29) through Royal Mile Whiskies, with proceeds going to Stop Climate Chaos Scotland to further its mission in tackling climate change.
Ghoulish encounters
They were invited to COP26 to present their case on the understanding that accommodation would be organised.
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Hide AdAnd when none materialised they bedded down in Glasgow, in Autumn, on the city’s streets.
Now a charitable group has stepped in and prepared some rough and ready rooms for them at a former homeless emergency night shelter, from which they are likely to be evicted by Glasgow City Council.
But in the meantime they may have to endure the occasional encounter with a ghostly spirit which is said to have wandered the corridors of the Hamish Allan Centre in the city’s Tradeston for decades.
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