WWF-UK: Back from Bali: The 2007 UN climate change conference

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One Planet Future
WWF work on climate change in the UK

Back from Bali: The 2007 UN climate change conference

In this film Keith Allott, Head of Climate Change at WWF-UK and Kit Vaughan, Climate Change Adaptation Adviser at WWF-UK talk about how climate change is already impacting on vulnerable people, ecosystems and species.
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WWF and other NGOs were instrumental in convincing governments at last December's UN meeting in Bali to create a roadmap to address the threat of climate change.

At this critical UN meeting, ministers and delegates from more than 190 countries met to discuss plans for a new global agreement to come into force after 2012, when the first phase of the Kyoto Protocol comes to an end.

Considerable progress was made at Bali, but some countries such as the US and Canada continued to block consensus on important targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions from industrialised countries, recommended by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

During the final hours of the 15-day meeting, the US delegation, under intense pressure from NGOs such as WWF, the media and other delegates, finally agreed to a compromise.

In this film Keith Allott, Head of Climate Change at WWF-UK and Kit Vaughan, Climate Change Adaptation Adviser at WWF-UK talk about how climate change is already impacting on vulnerable people, ecosystems and species.

If the world warms by just two degrees Celsius (2 degrees C), it will lose perhaps 20-30% of all species of plants and animals.

But everyone can help reduce the worst impacts of climate change – support renewable energy schemes, fly less, buy only the most efficient products and consume less and challenge political leaders to do more.

This film shows how we need to create a global solution and that the UN framework discussed in Bali is the best means we have to do so.
Fight climate change © WWF / Saipul Siagian
Fight climate change event at the Bali summit

Snail's pace stunt © WWF / Saipul Siagian
WWF urging governments not to go at snail's pace


Related links
  • Read our Bali conference diary
  • Support our call for a stronger Climate Change Bill
  • Measure your footprint
  • Visit our One Planet Future website
  • Read David Nussbaum's summary in the run-up to the Bali summit.


  • Beginner's Guide to the UN Climate Change Negotiations
    WWF is hoping world leaders at the UN Climate Change Summit will agree to a series of negotiations that will lead to legally binding international agreements beyond the Kyoto Protocol.

    Read the Beginner's Guide to the UN Climate Change Negotiations for more information including:
    • the various meetings at the UN Climate Summit;
    • key topics;
    • emissions reduction targets;
    • purpose and outcomes of the Summit;
    • issues for developed and developing countries and
    • timetable and process.