Calling For The Security Of Our Future

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Chris, Natalie and I joined YOUNGO youth and intergenerational equity advocates who came together yesterday to display two demands: a 0% social discount rate that would ensure equal valuation of future generations, and 0% fossil fuel emissions by 2050.

The group stood in silence for most of the action, we held signs that read “Born in 2100, Don’t Discount My Future”. We wore tape over our mouths to represent the way future generations are unable to defend their right to a liveable future, and are not guaranteed one because their lives are currently not worth as much as current generations’ thanks to social discounting.

The most exciting thing for me was several taking part in the action by removing the tape from my mouth and stepping forward to speak. We pointed directly at members of the large crowd and said, “You are my grandparent, don’t discount my future” as a way to bring delegates’ attention to their families and loved ones in hopes of driving them to action on climate.

“Youth have a strong moral voice to call for justice for our generation. The decisions made now will profoundly affect the security of our future, so we are advocating for bold action to meet that challenge,” said Aly Johnson-Kurts, an organizer of the event and U.S. youth delegate with the organization SustainUS.

It was a proud feeling to stand in solidarity with people who share the same worries and concerns as myself and show negotiators that we won’t relieve pressure on them. They need to start counting our future as equal to their lives now, not when it’s already too late.

Fasting For The Climate

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Hanger (hungry anger) was brewing amongst the NZYD team today as we all took part in the #fastfortheclimate campaign. Fast For Climate is a growing movement of youth, environmentalists and people of faith who are showing their strength of commitment by going without food. They do this once a month to call for world leaders to do more to solve the climate crisis. Today was that day and we all got behind it for the first time.

Following the vigil held in Parque la Floresta last night, I felt both humbled and empowered to take control of my actions and make this particular one count. At lunch we gathered in the main eating area and set up tables to sit down and not eat at. The demonstration attracted great attention from COP attendees as well as media and was crucial in raising awareness about the plight.

Adding to my own hanger though is the fact that I’m hungry and complaining about it, when it’s millions of people’s reality as a result of climate change. Many around the world are forced to fast because climate change has caused drought, flooding, natural disasters and crop failure in their region. Often these people are those who contribute the least to CO2 emissions.

It’s time for us in New Zealand and other privileged countries to step up and take responsibility for the carbon footprint we are making. We need to stand in solidarity with victims of climate change consequences and show we not only understand our plight, but will pressure our governments to make change and have greater ambition to solve the climate crisis.

For more information or to get involved:

http://fastfortheclimate.org/en/

https://www.facebook.com/fastfortheclimate

The big If.

nzydFive days in Lima and all I seem to be asking myself is what if? Today was the first day of the Conference Of Youth (COY), but work started on Tuesday after a massive fourteen hour sleep.

I think the first question I asked myself was, what if my brain explodes from receiving and reading too many emails? As comms manager I’ve been trying to network and build relationships for a decent amount of time now, but upon arrival it has been taken to another level. The people I have been in contact with already (prepare for name dropping) include Helen Clark, Andrew Teem Advisor to the president – Republic of Kiribati,and Joseph Robertson from the Citizens Climate Lobby. Needless to say this gets me wildly excited, watch this space for how the meetings go!

Besides communication prep, we have finalised our policy document, to be published soon, and tried to familiarise ourselves with the city. My version of this has been testing my broken Spanish on locals, walks around the beautiful Mira Flores and paragliding, that ended with an emergency landing on the beach. I’m falling in love with the relaxed Peruvian culture already.

I’m still working on the early mornings, so COY began with a skipped shower and breakfast in the taxi for me. It didn’t bother me much though because I was too excited about the unknown I was facing and the hectic taxi ride only added to the suspense.

What if COY isn’t a source of motivation for me?

There were mixed emotions from the team surrounding what they expected and how the first day measured up in reality. I often have very little expectations for life events and so found the whole thing really interesting. One thing I couldn’t believe was the lack of European delegates attending. Obviously the attendance is primarily South American, but there were people from India, Taiwan, Japan, Belgium, Finland, Australia, USA, UK, Italy, France and I’m sure many more. However I had been told European countries generally brought large delegations, but there was only one or two from each. The buzz of being in such a multicultural auditorium though was enough to tell me that I was where I’m meant to be.

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One of the best parts of today for me was getting to experience a translator talking in to my ear during a speech made by Christiana Figueres, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. As fun as I found it, I’m thankful the entire day wasn’t spent in the same way. COY consists of several seminars and workshops everyday that each individual chooses to attend themself. I decided on oceans this morning, a micro hydro sustainable energy workshop and YOUNGO meeting in the afternoon.

One thing that I was a little surprised at was the disagreement amongst youth at the YOUNGO meeting in the afternoon. YOUNGO is an international youth movement with constituency status, basically the most powerful youth group at COP. Before our workshops could even begin there was a dispute between the official meeting and the working groups who are trying to pass a youth declaration to submit at COP. I’m still in two minds over whether it disappointed me or excited me. It was good to see youth speaking their minds, but at the same time sad that we were disagreeing right from the get go. I think I came with a naive preconception that youth across the world have the exact same ideals and share the same motives for fighting climate change, when in reality that isn’t the case at all.

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What if we don’t all agree?

I guess from today my biggest learning curve was that we’re all here for different reasons. That was really apparent to me sitting in a seminar talking about North Atlantic Ocean currents, something I have very little interest in, as opposed to the American to the left of me who looked as if he might burst from his chair with excitement. I perhaps didn’t give enough thought to how many avenues there are to take in the Climate Change fight, however the underpinning feeling that no matter our reason, we’re all working for climate justice overcame differences at the end of the day.

That’s something I love about being young. Before we grow up and become too set or comfortable in our ways, we’re prepared to listen, adapt and consider other opinions and values and move forward together. We’re generally prepared to have our own ideas critiqued and change them based on new information or world views.

If anything, I’ve grown even more excited for COP to start. Nothing gets me going more than the thought of experiencing new things, voicing my opinion and meeting Helen Clark.

New York, Bonn and on to Lima

On Tuesday 23rd September an emergency UN climate summit was held in New York, called by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon. 125 world leaders attended – more than have ever assembled before. The hope was that if leaders could come together in the spirit of cooperation outside of the high pressure environment of the COP meetings, we may finally see some progress towards achieving a global agreement in Paris next year. There were glimpses of progress at the summit, such as China signalling it’s intention to peak emissions as soon as possible, but the danger is that much of it may prove to be hot air and empty rhetoric.

Meanwhile people around the world are taking to the streets. On Sunday 21st September a People’s Climate March united hundreds of thousands of people in 188 countries, with over 300, 000 marching in NYC alone. On Tuesday thousands more flooded Wall Street. The scale and global coordination of this movement was unprecedented. Their message was clear: it is time to stop talking and start taking action. We have watched governments negotiate for over twenty years, while emissions have continued to rise. We no longer have the luxury of time on our side; our window for action is closing. Several speeches at the UN summit, including that of Barack Obama, mentionedSunday’s climate march. “Our citizens keep marching. We cannot pretend we do not hear them,” the president said.

Yet there were still few commitments seen at the summit, despite the congratulatory tone of the meeting. It seemed as if the representatives were happy enough with the turnout, rather than what was actually achieved as an outcome of the gathering. Real action on climate appeard to be left to business, cities and campaign groups

One person present who noticed the lack of commitment was the widow of Nelson Mandela, saying world leaders had failed to rise to the challenge of climate change. “There is a huge mismatch between the magnitude of the challenge and the response we heard here today,” Graça Machel told the closing moments of the summit. “The scale is much more than we have achieved.” Although it is good to see someone with a clear hear head, this won’t make much of a difference if leaders don’t react to Machel’s criticisms.

A six-day forum in Germany is currently underway. It must lay the foundations for the annual round of ministerial-level UN talks to be held in Lima [Peru] in December, Christiana Figueres told delegates as the meeting opened. “Today, dear delegates, the world’s eyes turn to you. It is up to you to chart the path of that solution.”

Negotiators face a difficult challenge of settling long-standing differences of opinion over how to share responsibility for curbing Earth-warming greenhouse gas emissions. The aim is to limit global warming to 2C above pre-Industrial Revolution levels, and save the planet from potentially catastrophic climate damage. The major question is whether the new agreement be an all inclusive international treaty, a loose voluntary pact or something in between. This question gets to the thorny issue of fairness, which has been a common theme at negotiations between rich and poor nations for decades.

As Figueres stressed, the new climate pact, due to enter into force in 2020, “must irreversibly bend the curb of emissions”, which have continued to rise. The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says that based on current trends, the planet could be up to 4.8C warmer by 2100 and sea levels up to 82 centimetres (32 inches) higher.

So where does New Zealand fit in to all of this?

“A representative from New Zealand did not speak summit in September due to issues arising from the recent election”, according to a Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson. However Minister of Foreign Affairs Hon. Murray McCully did participate in the summit and New Zealand’s Climate Change Ambassador Jo Tyndall gave an address on behalf of the Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases, highlighting the work of the Alliance.

In the recent past New Zealand has started to lean towards the thinking of the U.S.A, believing that developing countries such as China and India would have to agree to be held to the same legal standards in the next agreement. This suggests we would be looking to an international agreement, rather than a legally binding one solely for developed countries, much like the Kyoto Protocol.

A recent proposal issued by the New Zealand Government - “Submission to the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Durban Platform for Enhanced Action Work Stream” - calls for countries to set domestic emissions targets of their choosing, then face legal obligations to give the United Nations a schedule for when those cuts will happen and to submit to binding review measures. The big numbers, though, the tonnes of climate pollution each nation will slash, would not be internationally legally binding. It seems to be another of those ‘get out of jail free’ cards for NZ. As Michael Dorsey, interim director of the energy and environment programme at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington, D. C. says, “when countries are given a pass — and a pass is voluntarism — without being forced to sign on the dotted line on a legally binding agreement, more often than not, countries don’t deliver on those commitments.”

For a delegate travelling to the negotiations this year, I hope to see something stronger from New Zealand, as this proposal would not achieve the 2 degree target. We need greater pressure from the New Zealand public, especially youth, on the government to put our futures first. Our own climate march drew 300 protesters to Queen Street in Auckland, a good number, but I think our voice could be much stronger.

If you’re keen to learn more about the Bonn conference, click here: http://youthdelegation.org.nz/2014/10/28/2508/

 

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/oct/20/lima-climate-talks-un-climate-chief-paris

http://www.sciencemediacentre.co.nz/2014/09/26/climate-change-centre-stage-at-un-summit/

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/sep/23/un-climate-change-summit-partial-results-speeches-obama