HOST: Greetings, eco-friendly viewers to today’s episode of Planet 
Earth: Our Loving Home featuring Finnish geophysicist and environmental 
advocate Veli Albert Kallio. Mr. Kallio has long dedicated himself to 
protecting marine and terrestrial ice in the Northern polar region.
 In
 2005 he launched the Frozen Isthmuses Protection Campaign of the Arctic
 and North Atlantic Oceans (FIPC) and led an international movement to 
regulate ice-reducing shipping practices. He is also a scientific 
ambassador of the Environmental Parliament, a UK-based community 
environmental action group.  
Recently subglacial volcanic 
eruptions, or those eruptions occurring below a glacier, have been 
occurring with increasing frequency with the acceleration of climate 
change. 
For example, on March 20, 2010 Iceland’s 
Eyjafjallajökull  volcano erupted, and on April 14, 2010 a second 
eruption occurred, scattering volcanic ash into the atmosphere and 
closing airspace across Europe. 
In Iceland, glaciers and ice 
caps cover 11.1% of the land mass, most of which is located above 
volcanoes.   From April 20 to 22, 2010, the World People’s Conference on
 Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth was held in Cochabamba, 
Bolivia. 
More than 35,000 people from 140 countries, 
representing indigenous peoples, various social and environmental 
organizations and concerned citizens gathered to discuss solutions to 
global warming. 
The final product of the discussions, “The 
People’s Agreement of Cochabamba” which outlines a new vision to address
 climate change was presented by Bolivia to the United Nations.