The world’s poorest and most vulnerable are already suffering the impacts of climate change. They are being hit first and worst because we, and other rich countries, created this mess and are making it worse.
There is no justice in this.
Nasta Vanuyto, a young Nenet girl who lives on the Yamal peninsula.
If you live in a developed country, you're pretty well insulated from climate change. Shifts in weather patterns, heavier rainfall, gradually rising sea levels and temperature increases - at the moment western society absorbs these changes without us really noticing much difference. But for the indigenous peoples of the arctic who live on one of the front lines of climate change, such shifts in the planet's behaviour are much more obvious.
More than 100 MPs have so far signed an early day motion calling on the UK government to urge the EU to take a stronger stand in tackling climate change.
With less than a month to go to the crucial UN climate change summit in Copenhagen, the motion says industrialised countries bear the greatest responsibility for global warming.
It calls on EU governments to commit to 40 per cent cuts in carbon emissions by 2020. The present target is 20 per cent, rising to 30 per cent if a global deal is reached at Copenhagen.

16–22 November 2009
Speakers include:
The climate crisis has been caused by the rich industrialised countries, but it is the world’s poorer majority who are paying the highest price, as extreme weather events become more common, freshwater glaciers melt, and droughts increase.
Today, as part of Blog Action Day, thousands of people are blogging about climate change. For Concern Worldwide’s entry, I’ve decided to write about how climate change is affecting world hunger.
Doncaster played host to a successful Climate Change Rally last Saturday (11th July), organised by members of the coalition including CAFOD, Tearfund, Christian Aid, Operation Noah and Doncaster Minster.
Over 400 people joined the climate change march. Donny the Dog, Doncaster Rover's lucky mascot, clowns, school children, factory workers and local groups of social justice organisations made a spectacle parading through the town centre on Saturday morning.
MPs grill bailed-out banks chief over RBS climate chaos funding
People & Planet
9 March
‘Growing the Future’: Trust launches its general election manifesto
Woodland Trust
4 March
New Report - RBS is UK's biggest tar sands funder
People & Planet
4 March
Energy in developing countries
Practical Action
3 March
Will Britain's biggest funders drop tar sands?
People & Planet
2 March
Why Greenpeace supports a Marine Reserve in the Chagos
Greenpeace
2 March
Tories’ ‘new age of agriculture’ includes native woods and trees.
Woodland Trust
2 March
New report sets tar sands in a global context
Greenpeace
1 March
Fears over carbon emissions as IPC opens for business
Friends of the Earth
28 February
Heroes and villains as historic rebellion in Parliament fails to secure a block on dirty coal
Greenpeace
26 February