India on Tuesday advocated a ‘paradigm shift’ in finding a solution to global warming, days after UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that current trends in carbon emissions will lead to ‘disaster’.
Environment minister Prakash Javadekar, however, maintained that developed nations have a ‘historical responsibility’ to address climate change issues which should be tackled ‘scientifically’.
The minister’s statement assumes significance in the backdrop of upcoming UN-sponsored conferences- Montreal Protocol meet in Paris and UNFCCC in Peruvian capital Lima.
‘On Monday, IPCC has given a report on environment and has said human actions have damaged it and human action only can change it and repair it. I believe yes we can. But we have to do it scientifically. There is an issue of historical responsibility and that must be addressed,’ Javadekar said.
He said that climate change cannot be addressed through governments, negotiations or world order but through community action in which both government and non-government’s efforts should come together in changing consumption patterns.
‘To mitigate this climate change, we need to think in a new paradigm. There needs to be a paradigm shift in our thinking as how we can do this. There are discourses,’ he said during a Royal Bank of Scotland Earth Heroes Awards 2014 function here.
Javadekar said that the report released in Copenhagen has said human actions have damaged climate and it was human action which will change and repair it.
‘I believe yes we can. But we have to do it scientifically. There is an issue of historical responsibility and that must be addressed. There is also a responsibility which is different for different countries,’ the Minister said.
Environment minister Prakash Javadekar, however, maintained that developed nations have a ‘historical responsibility’ to address climate change issues which should be tackled ‘scientifically’.
The minister’s statement assumes significance in the backdrop of upcoming UN-sponsored conferences- Montreal Protocol meet in Paris and UNFCCC in Peruvian capital Lima.
‘On Monday, IPCC has given a report on environment and has said human actions have damaged it and human action only can change it and repair it. I believe yes we can. But we have to do it scientifically. There is an issue of historical responsibility and that must be addressed,’ Javadekar said.
He said that climate change cannot be addressed through governments, negotiations or world order but through community action in which both government and non-government’s efforts should come together in changing consumption patterns.
‘To mitigate this climate change, we need to think in a new paradigm. There needs to be a paradigm shift in our thinking as how we can do this. There are discourses,’ he said during a Royal Bank of Scotland Earth Heroes Awards 2014 function here.
Javadekar said that the report released in Copenhagen has said human actions have damaged climate and it was human action which will change and repair it.
‘I believe yes we can. But we have to do it scientifically. There is an issue of historical responsibility and that must be addressed. There is also a responsibility which is different for different countries,’ the Minister said.