2007年VOA标准英语-Global Warming Activists Run Sahara, North Pole(在线收听) |
By Cathrine Drew
The race is held to raise money and awareness for the Saharawi people, refugees who were forced from their land in western Sahara 30 years ago. They continue to live in refugee camps This year, South African Ed Stumpf and his British colleague Sean Cornwell were there in a bid to kick-start what they have called the EarthFireIce campaign against global warming. "There's a very common perception that only governments and businesses can make any difference in the climate change arena,” Cornwell says. “If an individual wants to make a difference, they [think they] have to make these huge enormous sacrifices in their life – like I'm never going to fly again, I'm going to live in a hippie commune or something [like that]. And we're trying to show exactly the opposite: actually you don't have to make these huge sacrifices, and yet you can still have a significant impact." While Cornwell and Stumpf have put around $20,000 of their own money into the campaign, they have attracted some sponsorship and hope more companies will support them. "Seventy five percent of the world's CO2 [carbon dioxide] emissions come from the first world, and yet the affects are far and away the most severe in the developing world,” he says. “And a short trip, even our trip to the Sahara, really pushed home that point. It's quite obvious: what would these people do if global climate changed?" The EarthFireIce founders hope as many as one million people will join the campaign – which they believe is the first to target individuals. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/4/38092.html |