Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore's global warming documentary
will be sent to every secondary school in England as part of
a campaign to tackle climate change, the government said Friday.
Environment Secretary David Miliband and Education Secretary
Alan Johnson announced plans to distribute Gore's film, "An
Inconvenient Truth," on the day the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change report was published in Paris. The report
by leading scientists, said global warming has started and is
"very likely" caused by humans.
"The debate over the science of climate change is well
and truly over, as demonstrated by the publication of today's
report by the IPCC," Miliband said. "Our energies
should now be channeled into how we respond in an innovative
and positive way in moving to a low-carbon future."
In the film, Gore warns that unless action is taken to reduce
carbon emissions soon, global warming will have disastrous implications
for the environment.
"Children are the key to changing society's long-term
attitudes to the environment," Johnson said. "Not
only are they passionate about saving the planet, but children
also have a big influence over their own families' lifestyles
and behavior."
The DVD will go to 3,385 secondary schools in England as part
of a year-long environmental education campaign.