British ambassador issues call to action on climate change at
high-profile LRQA forum in Japan
The British Ambassador to Japan, Sir Graham Fry, has urged
governments, business and private citizens to take immediate steps
to combat global warming at a high-level forum on climate change
hosted by Lloyd's Register Quality Assurance (LRQA) in the shadow
of the G8 summit.
Sir Graham, speaking in Tokyo at one of his final official
appearances before retirement, said the G8 signatory countries and
key emerging economies had agreed in Hokkaido this week on the
importance of combating climate change, but that "the next step is
action".
"Yes, there was progress at the G8 summit, but the next step is
action, and there are various forms that can take," he told
delegates at the LRQA forum at the British Embassy in Tokyo. "I am
optimistic about several technologies such as electric vehicles and
new forms of solar power, as well as improved energy efficiency,
but we need policies to speed up their adoption. We require a sense
of urgency."
The G8 leaders and their "G5" counterparts - the emerging
economies of Brazil, Mexico, China, India and South Africa - agreed
in Hokkaido to reduce carbon emissions by 50% by 2050. But while
the agreement was applauded as starting point, consensus outside
the G8 was that it fell short of the required action, particularly
since it failed to include a start date against which reductions
could be measured.
"The European Union has set mid-term targets for 2020 and I am
hopeful that other countries will take that same step," said Sir
Graham. "Climate change is such a very important issue."
Sir Graham was joined at the forum by a high-profile panel of
climate change experts from Japan's Ministry of the Environment,
the Tokyo municipal government, the World Wildlife Fund, HSBC, the
private sector, academic institutions and LRQA's Dr Anne Marie
Warris, Director, Climate Change.
Dr Warris said independents such as LRQA had a vital role to
play in assuring the integrity of the carbon-measurement, reporting
and offset process, giving the carbon-reduction sector the
credibility it requires to sustain its momentum, ultimately to the
public benefit.
"The key to reducing carbon emissions is the credibility and
integrity of the reporting process and all those involved in it,
which is why it is critical to include independent third parties in
the verification process to give all stakeholders assurance," Dr
Warris told delegates. "Efforts to reduce or mitigate carbon
emissions through initiatives such as Kyoto's Clean Development
Mechanism will stall if the process is seen to lack integrity,
which is why our wider role outside our validation and verification
activities must be to act as the guardians of credibility."
Panellists from both the public and private sectors shared Sir
Graham's sense of urgency and the need for legislation to speed up
the creation of initiatives and the adoption of technology already
available in many industrialised nations.
Ends
Note to editors
1. LRQA is a member of the Lloyd's Register Group providing
verification and assessment services. The Lloyd's Register Group is
an independent risk management organisation that works to help
improve its clients' quality, safety, environmental and business
performance throughout the world, because life matters. Its
expertise and activities cover railways, shipping, oil and gas, and
other asset-based industries.
2. A photograph to accompany this release is available to download
click here (then right
click and save). Photo caption: LRQA's Dr Anne Marie Warris,
Director Climate Change (left), Sir Graham Fry, the British
Ambassador to Japan, and Mr Simon Batters (right), LRQA
Vice-President for Japan and Korea, share a moment after their
presentations on climate change at British Embassy in Tokyo.
For more information, contact:
Simon Batters, Vice-President LRQA Japan & Korea, on +81 45
682 5293 or
Dr Anne Marie Warris, LRQA Director Climate Change, on +44 (0) 24
7688 2399 or
Russell Barling, Corporate Communications Manager, Lloyd's Register
Asia, on
+852 2287 9375
Further information about Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and
LRQA's services can be found at
www.lrqa.com or by emailing
climate-change@lrqa.com.