This report is on the BBC web site and seems to me to show a significant change in attitude to global climate change. The following is an extract from the news report.
Last Updated: Monday, 11 December 2006, 01:58 GMT
Rights focus sought over climate
Poor nations are said to be most at threat from climate change
More attention to human rights is needed in tackling climate change, former Irish President Mary Robinson will say in a lecture.
Her speech at Chatham House, a think-tank in London, will argue that climate change is now an issue of global injustice.
The ex-UN high commissioner for human rights will urge policymakers to adopt "a radically different approach".
She will also urge rich nations to meet their climate change obligations.
"We can no longer think of climate change as an issue where we the rich give charity to the poor to help them cope," she is expected to say.
"Climate change has already begun to affect the fulfilment of human rights and our shared human rights framework entitles and empowers developing countries and impoverished communities to claim protection of these rights."
Ms Robinson will argue for the revival of multilateral efforts that led to the global eradication of smallpox and the phasing out of CFC gases.