Connie Hedegaard was president of the conference until 16 December 2009, handing over the chair to Danish Prime Minister
Lars Løkke Rasmussen in the final stretch of the conference, during negotiations between heads of state and government.
Activism Some small protests occurred during the first week of the conference. A much larger march was held in Copenhagen on 12 December calling for a global agreement on climate. Between 40,000 and 100,000 people attended. 968 protesters were detained at the event, including 19 who were arrested for carrying pocket knives and wearing masks during the demonstration. Of these all but 13 were released without charge. One police officer was injured by a rock and a protester was injured by fireworks. before being arrested and taken to a holding facility on coaches. Activists claimed that the police used wire-taps, undercover officers and
pepper spray on people who had been detained. The police said the measures were necessary to deal with organisations such as Never Trust A COP which stated on its website that it would "consciously attack the structures supporting the COP15". Per Larsen, the chief coordinating officer for the Copenhagen police force told
The New York Times that it was "surely the biggest police action we have ever had in Danish history." The
Climate Justice Action network organised several mass
direct actions during the conference, including the 'Reclaim Power' action on 16 December.
The Yes Men made a false statement purporting to be from the Canadian environment minister
Jim Prentice, which pledged to cut carbon emissions by 40% below 1990 levels by 2020. The statement was followed by another faked statement from the Ugandan delegation, praising the original pledge and The Yes Men also released a spoof press conference on a fake form of the official website. The statement was written about by
The Wall Street Journal before being revealed as a hoax. Jim Prentice described the hoax as "undesirable". Four Greenpeace activists gatecrashed a dinner that heads of states were attending on 18 December. They unfurled banners saying "Politicians talk, leaders act" before being arrested. They were held without charge for almost three weeks and were not questioned by police until two weeks after their arrest. Eventually
Greenpeace Nordic was fined 75,000
DKK and activists that participated, including those that planned it, received a
suspended sentence (14 days in prison if convicted of a crime again) for falsely representing themselves as police and representatives of state, forging documents and violating the domestic peace. They were acquitted of charges of
Lèse-majesté.
International activism An estimated 20,000 people took part in a march held in London, one week before the conference started. They called on British leaders to force developed nations to cut their emissions by 40% by 2020 and to provide $150 billion a year by 2020 to assist the world's poorest countries in adapting to climate change. As many as 50,000 people took part in a number of marches in Australia, during the conference, calling for world leaders to create a strong and binding agreement. The largest march took place in
Melbourne.
Klimaforum09 – People's Climate Summit An alternative conference,
Klimaforum09, was attended by about 50,000 people during the conference. Environmental activists from regions of the world most affected by climate change convened at Klimaforum09 with leaders such as
Vandana Shiva, founder of
Navdanya, and author
Naomi Klein. A People's Declaration was formulated before and during the People's Climate Summit calling for "System change – not climate change" and handed over to the 15th Conference of the Parties at 18 December.
SevenMeters, a series of art installations made by Danish sculptor
Jens Galschiot, was displayed during the
COP15 summit.
Danish Text A leaked document known as "The Danish Text" has started an argument between developed and developing nations. The document was subtitled as "The Copenhagen Agreement" and proposes measures to
keep average global temperature rises to two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
Developing countries reacted to the document by saying that the
developed countries had worked behind closed doors and made an agreement according to their wish without the consent of the developing nations.
Lumumba Stanislaus Di-Aping, chairman of the
G77, said, "It's an incredibly imbalanced text intended to subvert, absolutely and completely, two years of negotiations. It does not recognize the proposals and the voice of developing countries". Tuvalu's position was supported by, among others,
East Timor, the
Dominican Republic,
Jamaica and
Vanuatu, and by Papua New Guinean chief negotiator
Kevin Conrad. Tuvalu and its representative Ian Fry "were the toast of the thousands of environmentalists at the conference, who held a noisy demonstration in support of the island state's position". In an article entitled "You caused it, you fix it: Tuvalu takes off the gloves",
The Sydney Morning Herald noted that, by asking for a protocol that would legally bind developing countries, Tuvalu had "cracked a diplomatic axiom that has prevailed since the UN climate convention came into being in 1992: rich countries caused global warming, and it was their responsibility to fix it".
The Economic Times in India noted that the Tuvaluan proposal had " take[n] centre stage", holding up proceedings for two consecutive days until it was rejected due to opposition from larger nations. Australian Senator
Christine Milne described Tuvalu as "the mouse that roared" at the Conference. after delivering a final plea in a speech with tears in his eyes, concluding "The fate of my country rests in your hands". His "tear-jerking performance [...] prompted wild applause among the crowded Copenhagen conference floor".
Indigenous rights Indigenous rights organization
Survival International has raised concerns that some measures to mitigate the problem of climate change affect the survival of tribal people as much as climate change. The
United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues has expressed similar concerns.
Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, explains that "projects that victimise the people and harm the environment cannot be promoted or marketed as green projects". Survival International calls attention to the fact that these people, who least contribute to the problem of climate change, are already the most affected by it; and that we must seek solutions that involve indigenous people. Andrew E. Miller, human rights campaigner at
Amazon Watch, said, "Many indigenous peoples, understandably, are skeptical that the latest silver bullet is really in their interest. In fact, serious concerns have arisen that implementation of REDD [Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation] could counteract fundamental indigenous rights, in the same way that countless conservation schemes have limited local subsistence activities and led to displacement around the world." Similar criticism came out of the
climate justice network
Climate Justice Now!. In March 2010, Executive Secretary, Estebancio Castro, of the International Alliance of Indigenous Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forests suggested that "indigenous people need recognition of their rights at the local and national level, to be reflected in the negotiating process."
Negotiating problems On 16 December,
The Guardian reported that the summit in Copenhagen was in jeopardy. "We have made no progress" said a source close to the talks. "What people don't realise is that we are now not really ready for the leaders. These talks are now 17 hours late." Negotiators were openly talking of the best possible outcome being a "weak political agreement that would leave no clear way forward to tackle rising greenhouse gas emissions". This would mean that negotiations would continue into 2010 increasing the damage done by emissions. On 18 December, the head of the
United Nations Environmental Program told the BBC that "the summit as of this morning is a summit in crisis" and that only the arrival of heads of state could bring the summit to a successful conclusion. Head of climate change for
WWF in Britain, said that the proposals made so far, especially those from industrialised countries "all far short of what the world needs".
Hopenhagen Hopenhagen was a climate change campaign conceived and initiated by the International Advertising Association's Executive Director Michael Lee in September 2008, for the United Nations to support
COP15, – the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009. Lee orchestrated a meeting with UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon at the United Nations on September 22nd 2008 and invited all the CEO's of the Holding Co agencies and other well known ad industry figures. The Secretary General asked the assembled gathering for assistance to create a climate change awareness initiative. The project was run by the International Advertising Association and their member chapters around the world. The creative council was chaired by
Bob Isherwood and the ad agencies that created the campaign included
Ogilvy & Mather,
Euro RSCG,
McCann Worldgroup,
Draftfcb,
Saatchi & Saatchi, Interbrand,
Tribal DDB and
Digitas. The campaign ran from the web site https://web.archive.org/web/20090718030312/http://www.hopenhagen.org/ where users could sign a petition. Together with
The Huffington Post it also included sponsoring of a "Hopenhagen Ambassador", – a
citizen journalist selected in a contest. It was estimated that the pro-bono open source campaign ran US$500M worth of media in 45 countries under the guidance of the IAA's worldwide network of chapters. The IAA and WEF also ran a "Shaping the climate change message" workspace session at the 2010 World Economic Forum Meeting in Davos. Photographer
John Clang was also involved in the campaign. ==Outcome==