Paris, here we come! A blog from COP21
Monday, 6:00, Le Bourget, the COP21 site: Queuing in line with the truckers at porte K bis, the delivery entrance of the conference, waiting for permission to enter. There are armed police everywhere. On foot, on wheels, on horses. It is pitch dark and a cold wind is blowing. Only the huge tents that have been erected for security checks are flooded with light. The papers are finally signed, the passport scanned, the car and all it carries checked, first by dogs and then by a huge X-ray machine that passes over the entire car.
We brought the model of the ITER machine and although our stand is small in terms of square metres, we are determined to compete with tidal wave power, the solar and wind world, food produced by micro-organisms—yes, the food chain plays an essential part in the climate equation—or a sustainable Morocco. And the visitors love us. By the end of the second day Krista Dulon from the ITER Communication team has answered all the questions possible and handed out all the swag we brought with us. Also, the pile of brochures is melting fast.
Tuesday, 8:30, Paris, Hotel Potocki: It is part of our mission to also participate in the conference "Energy for Tomorrow," hosted by the International New York Times. We were far too late to sign in for this event and to join the impressive line-up of speakers on stage such as US Head of State John Kerry, the CEOs of Unilever, Ikea, Patagonia, RWE, ABB, Ericsson, or the Kellogg Company. However, ITER Head of Communication Laban Coblentz and Science Engineering Officer Akko Maas chair a session called "Ask the Expert" and they are doing well. By the end of the day many more people, influential people, know what ITER stands for. We made new friends. Mission accomplished.