Virtual Bali to give people a low-carbon way to attend the United Nations Climate Change Conference
OneWorld's own social networking space, OneClimate.net, is opening a virtual window on the UN's forthcoming climate conference in Bali, allowing people around the world to participate in the event without emitting carbon through flying to Indonesia.
The Virtual Bali conference will take place in Second Life on December 3-14, parallel to the UN summit, and people around the world are being encouraged to attend. All participants need to take part is access to a computer and a broadband internet connection.
"OneClimate.net is a mass collaboration space dedicated to global citizens gathering and distributing solutions to climate change," said Anuradha Vittachi, co-founder of OneWorld and instigator of its climate initiative.
"It will come into its own during the UN climate summit, when we will open a virtual window on events in Bali for anyone in the world who can access Second Life. But unlike its real life equivalent - and appropriately for a climate change conference - Virtual Bali will enable its participants to avoid flight generated carbon emissions."
Vittachi said climate change is set to be the greatest creator of poverty and suffering the world has ever known, undermining the good work done by development workers for decades. "There can be no global justice," she commented, "without climate justice. Do we really want to be the generation that ended life as we know it for hundreds of millions of people?"
OneClimate.net is supported by Cisco Systems. Adrian Godfrey, director of corporate affairs at Cisco, said: "We are delighted to be supporting Virtual Bali as a global initiative that brings together Cisco's commitment to tackle climate change and to utilising the power of the human network to make a difference."
OneClimate.net links directly through to OneClimate Island, built by OneWorld within the 3D virtual world of Second Life. Since opening to the public in June 2003, Second Life has grown rapidly and today includes 100 universities, including Harvard and Edinburgh.
OneClimate Island was soft-launched by OneWorld on 16 September 2006.
To find out more about Virtual Bali and the link to the OneClimate Island, visit www.oneclimate.net
* Also on OneWorld:
Climate Change Guide - the subject from the perspective of developing countries; recently updated;
Carbon Fallout: the impact of climate change on individual developing countries (extracts from country guides)
And if the debate about "avoided deforestation" warms up, you might find the Tropical Forests Guide useful .
There are also climate change sections in the Guides for Food Security and Water and Sanitation.