We’re hosting a special conference call tomorrow at 8pm EST to recap last week’s Pittsburgh Summit and we want you to be on it.
RSVP here to save your spot (we’ll send you a reminder email.)
What: ONE member conference call to recap the G20 summit
When: Thursday, October 1st at 8:00pm
Call in number: 1-800-214-0694
Password: 787225
On the call, we’ll be talking about our campaign to convince the G20 to go to Africa for a future summit, our presence on the ground in Pittsburgh, including the ONE mural (check out the slide show below), and what the summit means for the world’s poorest people.
We’ll also have the latest on our “Upgrade Aid” campaign and will be taking your questions.
Your hosts for the call are:
Hope to talk to you on the call tomorrow. Remember to RSVP here.
-Aaron Banks
This summit of G20 leaders in Pittsburgh last week, a year after the Lehman shock, was always going to be about economic recovery and on whether we need to regulate banker’s bonuses. So, did they talk development, at all? The short answer is yes. First, they reaffirmed previous commitments that they have made to the poor. Second, the leaders called on the World Bank to develop a new trust fund to support the new Food Security Initiative agreed at L’Aquila G8 Summit in July. Third, they agreed to review the capital needs of the multilateral development banks, especially the World Bank’s soft loan arm, the International Development Association (IDA), and the African Development Bank (AfDB).
But, there were some clear omissions too. On climate change, even though some G20 leaders committed to scaling up its assistance at the UN High Level Summit on Climate Change just a few days ago, the G20 as a group failed to call for resources to help the poorest countries adapt to the harmful impacts of climate change, and tackle its causes.
This Summit was another opportunity to recognise Africa as part of the solution to the global economic recovery. We thought that the best way to underscore the important role that the continent plays in today’s world is for the G20 to agree to hold an upcoming G20 Summit in Africa. With the G20 becoming the new G8 and the next several hosts already queued up (Canada in June 2010, South Korea in November 2010, and France in 2011), unfortunately, there will be no “G20 Africa Summit” any time soon. One thing is sure though – regardless, ONE will urge these leaders to keep the challenges of Africa and the world’s poor as an important issue on their table.
Read ONE’s analysis of the G20 here.
-Mikiko Imai
Overall, the Pittsburgh G20 Summit appears to have made some progress towards reshaping global power structures to make them more representative, but it still has some way to go before it becomes a truly representative global decision making body.
I spent the summit with our US Government Relations Director Tom Hart, who said:
“Moving from the G8 to the G20 is a seismic shift: it brings many more of the world’s people to the table, but the new expanded world body must now start addressing the needs of the poorest countries, especially in Africa. For nearly a decade now, Africa has been squarely on the G8’s agenda, even if delivery on their commitments has been mixed. During this transition time, African development must not fall through the cracks. One way to show the world will not forget Africa would be to hold an upcoming G20 summit on the African continent.”
As I posted earlier here, we passed our petition, in which 75,000 ONE members worldwide call for a G20 Summit to be held in Africa, to the US delegation at the summit.
Below are some key points in the summit’s communique that are relevant to Africa:
You can watch him live here:
The text of the communique is below.
Leaders’ Statement: The Pittsburgh Summit
September 24 – 25, 2009
Tom Hart and I just delivered ONE’s G20 petition to the US delegation here at the Pittsburgh summit. The petition, now signed by more than 75,000 ONE members from around the globe, asks the G20 leaders to host an upcoming G20 summit on the African continent.
We expect the official summit communique to come out just before President Obama’s remarks, slated for 4:45pm EST today. We’ll keep you posted.
-Ginny Simmons
The G20 has a lot to do tomorrow in Pittsburgh. But, I hope they take a moment to look north. Next June, some, maybe all of the members of the G20 will be about 300 miles north in Huntsville, Ontario for the next G8 Summit.
Development advocates have watched cautiously as the political center of global discussions has moved between the G8, the G20 and the United Nations. Which of these is the best forum to move the development agenda forward? No one has a definite answer on that; certainly all are important. But, no development advocate should doubt the importance of Canada’s G8. Canada’s G8 Summit in 2002 in Kananaskis really launched the G8’s focus on Africa that eventually led to the Gleneagles set of commitments that have since framed the discussion on development assistance to Africa. It is at Canada’s Summit when these commitments come due. How Prime Minister Harper and the Canadian government approaches that will be the subject of much of ONE’s work for the next 9 months.
Lots more to come on this topic, but for now check out this article from Tuesday’s Global and Mail discussing Canada’s G8.
-Josh Lozman
Climate change is more firmly on the global agenda now more than ever, not just because the final round of the UN Climate Change Conference is taking place this December in Copenhagen, but because we are increasingly seeing the effects of climate change. ONE is also calling for the G20 to address climate change this weekend at the Pittsburgh G20 summit, but we’re keeping with our theme looking at it from the perspective that ‘Africa can be a part of the solution.’
Despite contributing only 3.6% of total global carbon emissions, sub-Saharan Africa will feel these effects—through droughts, floods, erratic rains that disrupt growing seasons—both first and worst. Any deal brokered in Copenhagen later this year must include the impact that climate change will have on the world’s poorest—and take into account the potential that developing countries hold to address climate change. The G20 meeting in Pittsburgh is the perfect place to get ahead start by working to do the following:
Not only will Africa bear the brunt of the climate change impact, but sub-Saharan African countries have the potential to help reduce global carbon emissions. The development of robust carbon markets, the adoption of low-carbon and leap-frog technologies, and the institution of carbon-offsetting programs like re-forestation projects can all flourish in the developing world—without sacrificing development, and maybe even encourage it.
ONE’s message at Pittsburgh is that no global recovery can be constructed in a stable manner if it excludes Africa, and the same goes for any discussion on climate change. We’ll be bringing you the latest from Pittsburgh as the week progresses, so keep an eye out here on the blog.
-Beth Adler
Today’s Pittsburgh Post-Gazette devoted almost a full page to ONE, CGD and the University of Pittsburgh’s panel yesterday.
Below are some excerpts:
“It shouldn’t be a summit to address only the completion of a global economic stimulus. It should also be about some of the issues that have caused us a lot of disappointment and frustration in Africa,” said Donald Kaberuka, president of the African Development Bank.
For David Lane, the president of the international advocacy group the ONE Campaign, which is committed to fighting extreme global poverty and disease, tackling the problems of Africa should start with the premise that Africa can be part of the solution to the global financial crisis.
“There are pragmatic reasons for the leaders of the world gathered here to include Africa in the dialogue,” said Mr. Lane.For example, Africa can be a key economic player because it has almost 1 billion producers and consumers of goods and services, he said. “People are so used to seeing the hardships of Africa that they often don’t consider the positive things happening there,” said Mr. Lane.
His organization, which was co-founded by U2 lead singer Bono in 2004, is calling on the G-20 to hold an upcoming summit in Africa as “a first step in showing that Africa is part of the solution to our global problems.”
You can read the full article here.
The morning, Tom Hart, Helen Palmer and I headed into the official media room for the Pittsburgh G20. Much like my trip into the media room for the April G20 in London, we had to pass through quite a bit of security, this time including laptop bag sniffing dogs.
The best part was that all the thousands of credentialed journalists, from all the most read publications from around the world, were loaded into buses and driven directly passed ONE’s giant downtown mural. I jumped up and shot some photos with my small digital camera.
Below are just a couple of photos of the media room and TV news crews setting up.
Yesterday afternoon, I attended the unveiling of a giant 200-foot mural created by the “Moving the Lives of Kids” (MLK) Community Project in downtown Pittsburgh.
ONE’s petition asking the G20 to hold a future meeting in Africa covers 100 feet of the wall. The MLK team, including nearly 20 local artists and 30 kids from the community, painted the wall in less than five days. When we arrived for the unveiling and press conferences (and as it started to pour down rain) they were putting on the final finishing touches.
Right now I’m working on downloading and then uploading some video from the short press conference, but until then here are some more photos of the giant wall and the truly uplifting event.
(If you’re in Pittsburgh, the mural is on Ross Street between 3rd and 4th.)
The ONE Blog is a daily log of the anti-poverty movement. The site is operated by ONE staff, with frequent contributions from volunteers, members and partner organizations.
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TAGS: 2009 Pittsburgh G20, ONE Members