ABU DHABI // Bill Clinton, the former US president, has urged delegates at the Eye on Earth Summit to improve the way energy, resources and food are produced.
"We are brought here because of our shared imperative to build a more sustainable world, a world that finds solutions for developed and developing nations alike," Mr Clinton told about 1,100 people.
"In some ways this is an incredible venue," he said of the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre where the summit runs until tomorrow.
"Not so many years ago it would have been unimaginable to have a conference focused on the need for data and measurements and action to reduce carbon emissions in the Gulf. A generation ago, it would not have happened.
"It is happening today because we recognise we live in an interconnected world that is on a path that is not sustainable."
Mr Clinton, the president from 1993 to 2001, yesterday spoke of the challenges facing the world, including inequality between countries and within societies, and instability from the global economic crisis.
"A certain amount of instability is necessary for the creative process to work in economics and society, but too much of it freezes people up and shuts them down and it is complicating America's efforts today to deal with climate change," Mr Clinton said.
"But most important of all, the economic model we have been following is simply not sustainable because of the way we produce and consume energy, and because of the rapid depletion of local resources undermining the future's access to adequate levels of water and food and forests."
If it continues at the current rate, the melting of ice caps over Greenland could cause vast amounts of water to flow into the North Atlantic, disrupting the Gulf Stream and recreating in northern Europe "climate conditions that existed 700 years ago in the little Ice Age", he said.
Records show that during this period, Europe and North America suffered long, bitter winters that disrupted agriculture and caused crop failures and famine.
Mr Clinton also touched on the fate of small island states such as the Maldives, which scientists predict will be among those hit hardest by rising sea levels.
"We have to decide whether we are going to share the future in a positive way, or through inaction or short-term attention to our own interests at the expense of others, share the future in a highly competitive but highly negative way," Mr Clinton said.
"I believe we should choose a path of shared responsibility and shared opportunity."
Mr Clinton outlined some solutions to ensure a sustainable future: green buildings, renewable energy, recycling and reducing landfill, and sustainable agriculture.
"The most important thing to me is proving that changing the way we produce and consume energy, changing the way we produce and consume resources … is far better economics than the current course," he said. "We have to prove that this can work … there is still a lot of denial out there.
"The fact that we are meeting here in Abu Dhabi is encouraging to me and I want to thank the leaders of the UAE and indeed people all over the Gulf who are looking at this. We have come a long way, but in all the important ways we have barely begun."
In the audience were influential conservationists and UAE dignitaries including: Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak, the Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research; Sultan Al Mansouri, the Minister of Economy; Mariam Al Roumi, the Minister of Social Affairs; Humaid Al Qatami, the Minister of Education; Dr Rashid bin Fahad, the Minister of Environment and Water; and Dr Maitha Al Shamsi, the Minister of State.
vtodorova@thenational.ae
How to get there
Emirates (www.emirates.com) flies directly to Hanoi, Vietnam, with fares starting from around Dh2,725 return, while Etihad (www.etihad.com) fares cost about Dh2,213 return with a stop. Chuong is 25 kilometres south of Hanoi.
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MATCH INFO
Manchester City 4 (Gundogan 8' (P), Bernardo Silva 19', Jesus 72', 75')
Fulham 0
Red cards: Tim Ream (Fulham)
Man of the Match: Gabriel Jesus (Manchester City)
Korean Film Festival 2019 line-up
Innocent Witness, June 26 at 7pm
On Your Wedding Day, June 27 at 7pm
The Great Battle, June 27 at 9pm
The Witch: Part 1. The Subversion, June 28 at 4pm
Romang, June 28 at 6pm
Mal Mo E: The Secret Mission, June 28 at 8pm
Underdog, June 29 at 2pm
Nearby Sky, June 29 at 4pm
A Resistance, June 29 at 6pm
How Apple's credit card works
The Apple Card looks different from a traditional credit card — there's no number on the front and the users' name is etched in metal. The card expands the company's digital Apple Pay services, marrying the physical card to a virtual one and integrating both with the iPhone. Its attributes include quick sign-up, elimination of most fees, strong security protections and cash back.
What does it cost?
Apple says there are no fees associated with the card. That means no late fee, no annual fee, no international fee and no over-the-limit fees. It also said it aims to have among the lowest interest rates in the industry. Users must have an iPhone to use the card, which comes at a cost. But they will earn cash back on their purchases — 3 per cent on Apple purchases, 2 per cent on those with the virtual card and 1 per cent with the physical card. Apple says it is the only card to provide those rewards in real time, so that cash earned can be used immediately.
What will the interest rate be?
The card doesn't come out until summer but Apple has said that as of March, the variable annual percentage rate on the card could be anywhere from 13.24 per cent to 24.24 per cent based on creditworthiness. That's in line with the rest of the market, according to analysts
What about security?
The physical card has no numbers so purchases are made with the embedded chip and the digital version lives in your Apple Wallet on your phone, where it's protected by fingerprints or facial recognition. That means that even if someone steals your phone, they won't be able to use the card to buy things.
Is it easy to use?
Apple says users will be able to sign up for the card in the Wallet app on their iPhone and begin using it almost immediately. It also tracks spending on the phone in a more user-friendly format, eliminating some of the gibberish that fills a traditional credit card statement. Plus it includes some budgeting tools, such as tracking spending and providing estimates of how much interest could be charged on a purchase to help people make an informed decision.
* Associated Press
MATCH INFO
Barcelona 5 (Lenglet 2', Vidal 29', Messi 34', 75', Suarez 77')
Valladolid 1 (Kiko 15')
KILLING OF QASSEM SULEIMANI
Farage on Muslim Brotherhood
Nigel Farage told Reform's annual conference that the party will proscribe the Muslim Brotherhood if he becomes Prime Minister.
"We will stop dangerous organisations with links to terrorism operating in our country," he said. "Quite why we've been so gutless about this – both Labour and Conservative – I don't know.
“All across the Middle East, countries have banned and proscribed the Muslim Brotherhood as a dangerous organisation. We will do the very same.”
It is 10 years since a ground-breaking report into the Muslim Brotherhood by Sir John Jenkins.
Among the former diplomat's findings was an assessment that “the use of extreme violence in the pursuit of the perfect Islamic society” has “never been institutionally disowned” by the movement.
The prime minister at the time, David Cameron, who commissioned the report, said membership or association with the Muslim Brotherhood was a "possible indicator of extremism" but it would not be banned.