ADB Launches Climate Change Video Tilt
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The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has announced a new video competition – 'My View: The Asia-Pacific Climate Change Video Contest' – to promote awareness of climate change, stimulate debate, and encourage climate change solutions in the lead-up to the 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen. There are no age restrictions for the contest. Citizens of any one of ADB's 67 member countries are eligible to participate. Over 10,000 U.S. dollars worth of prizes are being offered in three categories for the best videos about climate change in Asia and the Pacific. "Video has the power to open minds and inspire change, and I hope people across the region and the world will share their vision about how we can solve the climate crisis," said Pepe Diokno, the 22-year-old winner of the 2009 Venice International Film Festival 'Lion of the Future' award for his first feature film, Engkwentro (Clash). Diokno is one of My View's judges. Other judges include: Lynden Barber, an internationally regarded film critic and former Artistic Director of the Sydney Film Festival; Zhu Wen, an international award-winning film director and writer from the People's Republic of China; Brillante Mendoza, the internationally acclaimed Filipino filmmaker who won this year's Cannes Film Festival Best Director award; and Jabeen Merchant, a renowned Indian film editor who has edited major Bollywood feature films and many award winning documentaries. Registration for the contest is easy. Applicants need only complete a short online registration form, and upload their videos to YouTube.com or Youku.com. For more information, visit http://www.adb.org/Documents/Events/2009/Climate-Change-Video-Contest/. |








Aung Htun (not his real name) is one of the young video journalists featured in the award-winning feature documentary 'Burma VJ (Reporting from a Closed Country)'. 