Global Day of Action DECEMBER 2010

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Global Day of Action DECEMBER 2010 GLOBAL CLIMATE CAMPAIGN Building a global movement to confront the ultimate global crisis. www.globalclimatecampaign.org 4TH Global Day of Action DECEMBER 2010 On the Saturday midway through the UN Climate Talks on Climate Change in Cancun, Mexico The science is increasingly clear that we have only a few years to stop and reverse the global growth in emissions to prevent the catastrophic destabilisation of global There has been a Global Day of Action at the climate. Since it is the poorest who will suffer most and soonest while the rich have time of the annual UN Climate talks since the highest emissions, bear the greatest responsibility and have the greatest power 2005, with demonstrations and events all to act, climate change has become the biggest issue of global social justice of our around the world up to 90,000 strong. Last times. The Copenhagen talks showed the failure of world leaders to address the year during the Copenhagen talks there crisis and the need for people all around the world to come together to push for were thousands of events including just internationally coordinated action on climate that is immediate, radical and fair. As about every country in the world with governments come together to address the issue once again in Cancun, Mexico, 100,000 demonstrating in Copenhagen itself, we need the most powerful expression possible of the global will for action on and 100,000 marching in Australia, 50,000 in climate and justice for those who will otherwise be its countless victims. the UK etc…. You can find out who is involved in your country at www.globalclimatecampaign.org, and Global Climate Campaign 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 9DX, UK you can contact them or you can organise something yourselves. +442078339311 | [email protected].
Recommended publications
  • Sustainable Development Goals
    SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT GOALS SUSTAINABLE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS | TRANSFORMING OUR WORLD Transforming our world CONTRIBUTORS INCLUDE María Fernanda Espinosa Achim Steiner | Henrietta Fore Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Michelle Bachelet | Mark Lowcock Mukhisa Kituyi | Devi Sridhar Louis Charbonneau | Liu Zhenmin Ellen MacArthur | Edward Barbier Jonathan Glennie | Lysa John HERMES SDG ENGAGEMENT Aiming to generate outcomes that benefi t people, the planet and investors, through investments aligned with the UN SDGs We are committed to supporting the UN SDGs and engage with businesses to encourage their adoption. It is our belief that the enduring success of companies is intertwined with that of the economies, communities and environments in which they operate. Visit www.hermes-investment.com The value of investments and the income from them can fall as well as rise and you may not get back the original amount invested. For Professional Investors only. Issued and approved by Hermes Investment Management Limited which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Registered address: Sixth fl oor, 150 Cheapside, London EC2V 6ET. Telephone calls will be recorded for training and monitoring purposes. Hermes.indd0005957_SDG_Engagement_Fund_Press_276x210.indd 1 1 03/06/201910/04/2019 22:0113:58 CONTENTS 3 Contents FOREWORDS 20 What to expect from the new champions Where action by national governments on SDG 8 The 2030 Agenda: our answer to the naysayers implementation is lacking, can others fill the void? By María Fernanda Espinosa, By Adriana Erthal Abdenur President, 73rd session, United Nations General Assembly 24 Human development and the SDGs 10 Cooperation can change everything UNDP’s Human Development Report turns 30 next year.
    [Show full text]
  • The Time to Act Is
    The Time to Act is Now Grassroots Multi-Faith Action for the Earth Introduction Religious communities are at a crossroads with our response to climate change and other imminent threats to the environment. For much of the past 15 years, religious communities’ primary focus has been education and awareness raising on climate change, teaching that our faiths and their central teachings apply not only between people and to the Sacred, but person to planet. That education, while still vital, is not enough. We must take bold public action. We’ve seen the magnitude of the crisis. We know that public action at scale is absolutely essential. On 11 March, 2021, diverse religious and spiritual communities in 49 countries carried out 420 actions to draw attention to the climate crisis. The Sacred People, Sacred Earth day of action was organized by a grassroots, global, multi-faith alliance called the GreenFaith International Network. You can experience the energy and passion of these actions by watching this short video on Sacred People, Sacred Earth. Around Earth Day in April and World Environment Day in June, religious and spiritual leaders around the world often offer a sermon, khutbah, dharma teaching, dvar torah, or other spoken message on the climate crisis. The religious or spiritual gatherings around these days, and every gathering of its kind, offers an opportunity to convey how our different faiths compel us to take bold action on climate change. The actions organized by grassroots people of diverse faiths worldwide, a few of which are featured in this document, offer powerful instructional examples of religious belief in action, examples which can help pastors, imams, gurus, priests, rabbis, and other spiritual leaders bring to life the importance of public, morally-rooted action on climate change.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate Change, Development and Energy Problems in South Africa: Another World Is Possible
    CLIMATE CHANGE, DEVELOPMENT AND ENERGY PROBLEMS IN SOUTH AFRICA: ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE. Earthlife Africa Jhb Earthlife Africa Jhb 20 CONTENTS Abbreviations 1 Foreword 2 Executive summary 4 Introduction 8 The long road to realising change 10 South Africa’s dilemma 14 Climate change in South Africa 17 The face of climate change 24 Is government response to climate change adequate? 29 The obstacles 34 Another world is possible 37 Conclusion 45 Afterword 47 Bibliography 48 ABBREVIATIONS Asgisa Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative for South Africa BCLMP Benguela Current Large Marine Ecosystem Programme CDM Clean Development Mechanism CDP Carbon Disclosure Project CO2 Carbon Dioxide CTL Coal to Liquid DEAT Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism GDP Gross Domestic Product GEAR Growth, Employment and Redistribution Strategy GHG Greenhouse gases GWC Growth Without Constraints GWh Gigawatt hour HLG High Level Group IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change JSE Johannesburg Securities Exchange KWh Kilowatt hour LTMS Long Term Mitigation Scenarios NCCS National Climate Change Strategy NEMA National Environmental Management Act NGO Non-governmental Organisation OCGT Open-Cycle Gas Turbines RBS Required By Science RDP Reconstruction and Development Programme TAC Treatment Action Campaign UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 1 FOREWORD The scientific verdict is in; our planet is heating up and human activity is the cause. We already see indications of a dire future, with the Arctic ice sheet melting at rates faster than scientists predicted, and methane already bubbling up from the ocean floor. In South Africa, we already see changes in species distribution patterns, and indications of changes to wind and rainfall patterns.
    [Show full text]
  • Children and Youth in the Climate Crisis Ann Sanson,1 Marco Bellemo2
    EDITORIAL Children and youth in the climate crisis Ann Sanson,1 Marco Bellemo2 BJPsych Bulletin (2021) 45, 205–209, doi:10.1192/bjb.2021.16 1Department of Paediatrics, University of Summary This editorial is co-written by a developmental psychologist and a young 2 Melbourne, Australia; School Strike For climate activist. We start by showing how the climate crisis is imposing a heavy Climate, Australia psychological burden on children and youth, both from experiencing climate-related Correspondence to Ann Sanson disasters and from the knowledge that worse is to come. We then describe the global ([email protected]) movement of youth demanding urgent climate action. We conclude that health First received 23 Sep 2020, final revision 19 Jan 2021, accepted 28 Jan 2021 professionals can support young people in many ways, but particularly by supporting their capacity to take action, raising awareness about the impact of the climate crisis © The Authors 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of on youth mental and physical health, and taking action themselves to work for a the Royal College of Psychiatrists. This is secure climate future. an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Keywords Post-traumatic stress disorder; anxiety disorders; climate change; Commons Attribution licence (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4. childhood experience; developmental disorders. 0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The climate crisis poses an existential threat by the Global North, also referred to as high-income coun- tries, the minority world or the WEIRD nations (Western, Climate change is well underway and poses a critical threat educated, industrialised, rich democracies), comprising 12% to the future.
    [Show full text]
  • Bill Mckibben
    Bill McKibben The US environmentalist and founder of 350.org interviewed by Huw Spanner over the internet 22 June 2016 2 Bill McKibben | High Profiles | 22 June 2016 Time We Started Counting! Bill McKibben made his name as an environmentalist in 1989 with his ground- breaking ‘righteous jeremiad’ The End of Nature. Nineteen years later, an ‘unlikely activist’, he founded the global pressure group 350.org with seven of his students. Huw Spanner spoke to him over the internet. PHOTOGRAPHY: WOLFGANG SCHMIDT/RIGHT LIVELIHOOD AwARD When did you first become interested in environmentalism? I certainly knew about environmental issues growing up, though they weren’t my main concern – I was more interested in things like homelessness. When I was a young man I was on the staff of the New Yorker and I wrote a long piece for the magazine – I must have been 24 or something – about where everything in my apartment in New York City came from. They sent me off for a year, all over the world, to follow everything back to its ultimate source. So, I was in the Brazilian jungle looking at oil wells and I was up in the Arctic looking at the huge hydro dams at the tip of Hudson Bay and I was out on the barges that carry the city’s sewage out to sea and so on. And this had for me the interesting intellectual effect of making me realise how physical 3 Bill McKibben | High Profiles | 22 June 2016 the world actually was. I’d grown up in a good American suburb and a suburb is kind of a device for hiding out of sight all the physical workings of the planet.
    [Show full text]
  • Fighting Inequalities Campaign TOOLKIT
    Fighting Inequalities Campaign TOOLKIT The future of Europe and the achievement of the SDGs will be possible only if we end extreme inequalities and leave no one behind. This is a public mobilization, communication, and advocacy campaign. In line with the universal and inclusive approach reflected in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the campaign will connect the inequalities experienced by people locally, in all sorts of communities, with the national, European, and, ultimately, the global inequalities faced by billions. We want societal change for everyone, everywhere by 2030! See the campaign video. See the ‘17 steps to equality’ game. Our Goals? 1. Public awareness and public pressure to reduce inequalities 2. Raising citizens’ and decision makers’ awareness 3. Campaigning for collective action on implementing and monitoring of SDG 10 4. Advocating that the EU and its Members take concrete measures 5. Strengthening civil society #FightInequalities Content What do we want to achieve? 2 Timeline of Campaign – Key moments 3 SDG Action Week & Global Day of Action - 25 September 2018 4 Actions – What can you do? 5 Individuals & inequalities – What are people’s challenges? 5 Raising awareness and influencing decision-makers 6 Media and Social media campaigns 10 Tools 11 Factsheets and Infographics 11 #FightInequalities Fight Inequalities Campaign Page 1 of 10 What do we want to achieve? The Fighting Inequalities Campaign seeks to create awareness and promote the SDGs among citizens AND to help you to hold our governments accountable. In the last years, countries around the world - including EU MemBer States - have shown significant gaps Between policy commitments and implementation, especially in the fields of economic justice, human rights, social protection, gender equality and environmental protection.
    [Show full text]
  • Next Global Action On
    FTT/Robin Hood Tax Proposal for Global Day of Action 17th February 2011 Introduction Over the last eighteen months, the Financial Transaction Tax (or Robin Hood Tax) has shifted from a radical idea to a realistic proposition that has been considered by the IMF, the European Commission, the G20 and a number of national governments. This is an extraordinary turn around, in no small part due to the campaigning efforts of civil society organisations around the world. 2011 is the crunch point for the campaign and there is a window of opportunity to see significant progress on achieving the FTT. The French government hold the Chair of the G8 and G20 and are championing the FTT for global public goods, whilst public anger towards the financial sector grows as austerity measures begin to bite. Various options for taxing the financial sector are on the table and agreement by a first-wave group of countries during the first half of 2011 is critical. The key to timely progress will be leadership by the French government, and for France to enlist support from Germany and, hopefully, Britain. Renewed pressure from civil society, particularly on these key governments, will be essential to success. A coordinated Global Day of Action in February will kick-start the campaign in 2011 and demonstrate the global movement of citizens supporting a Robin Hood Tax. Objectives and Success Criteria 1. Influence key governments (French, German and UK) through their embassies a) The UK, German and French embassies* are lobbied in at least 15 countries around the world. b) The UK, German and French finance ministries receive communications from all lobbied embassies (via respective foreign offices) *If countries have capacity, they can lobby more than the top three targets.
    [Show full text]
  • Quaker Council for European Affairs Response to the European Commission's Consultation Regarding the Europe 2020 Strategy
    Sustainable Energy Security Consultation Response October 2014 Quaker Council for European Affairs Response to the European Commission's Consultation regarding The Europe 2020 Strategy QCEA is registered on the European Commission’s transparency register. Identification number: 3960234639-24 The Quaker Council for European Affairs (QCEA) is an NGO representing the views and concerns of European members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) on issues of peace, human rights, economic justice, sustainability and democratic governance. We advocate non-violent approaches to conflict resolution, promote policies that respect the intrinsic equality of all people everywhere, and try to ensure that European policy sustains the planet’s resources and the lives of all those who share them. We have been active in these areas at the European level since 1979. For you, what does the Europe 2020 strategy mean? What are the main elements that you associate with the strategy? For the Quaker Council for European Affairs (QCEA), the Europe 2020 strategy is important as it recognises the flaws of our growth model and the importance of climate and environmental elements in changing that model. QCEA advocates that any economic system or energy framework must include consideration of human well-being, and the well-being of the planet, at its heart. The failure to consider human and planetary well-being is the central flaw in our current economic growth model. It is crucial that the European Union not evaluate success using indicators, like economic growth and job creation, which are based solely on quantity of production. Instead the EU should use indicators based on quality of life and production such as living sustainably on the earth and ensuring the well-being of all its citizens.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate Proof Our Work
    CLIMATE PROOF OUR WORK #CPOW #26June Campaign Guide Global Day of Workplace Action 26 June 2019 2 Campaign Guide: Climate-Proof Our Work Contents Introduction .................................................................................................................................................................................. 3 About the Global Day of Workplace Action ....................................................................................................................... 4 How to take part? ........................................................................................................................................................... 5 Who can take part? ........................................................................................................................................................ 5 Contacting your employer ....................................................................................................................................................... 6 Who should I send the letter to? ............................................................................................................................... 6 When should I send the letter? ................................................................................................................................. 6 Who is the letter from? ................................................................................................................................................ 6 What happens if my employer doesn’t
    [Show full text]
  • Global Day to #Act4sdgs Toolkit
    GLOBAL DAY TO #ACT4SDGS TOOLKIT 25 September 2018: 3rd Anniversary of the Agenda 2030 Are we on track to meet the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030? We are all part of the plan. JOIN THE GLOBAL MOVEMENT. MAKE EVERY ACTION COUNT! CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 3 OVERVIEW 3 Here’s how YOU can join 6 1. Take Individual Action 6 2. Become an Action Partner - Organize a Public Action or Event 6 How to become an Action Partner 7 Planning your Action 8 I. Awareness Actions 9 II. Accountability Actions 12 III. Impact Actions: 14 3. Become an Organizing Partner 14 Communicate your Action 15 1. Make an SDG Wheel 15 2. Amplify the Message on Social and Traditional Media 16 Register 16 Get active on Social Media 17 a. Share your Action 17 b. Join the Viral Campaign 17 c. Join the Thunderclap 17 3. Invite Local Media 17 About the Partners 19 Page 2 of 21 ​ INTRODUCTION On 25 September 2015, world leaders agreed to a definitive plan for the planet and the people on it by adopting 17 ​ Sustainable Development Goals. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure that all people enjoy peace and prosperity. The goals are interconnected, they apply to all countries and they aim to leave no one behind. 193 governments signed up - if they stick to the plan the results will be extraordinary. For the goals to be ​ ​ reached, everyone needs to do their part: the UN, national and local governments, youth groups, civil-society ​ ​ ​ organizations, the media, and the private sector, and people like you and us.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Global Day of Action
    GUIDE TO THE GLOBAL DAY OF ACTION FRIDAY 26TH JUNE 2015 Global Messages ↔ Local Actions This document is your step-by-step guide for taking part in the “Global Day of Action” on 26th June 2015. It has been designed to help you plan, promote, deliver and document a high-impact advocacy event in your city. For more information: [email protected] Guide for the Global Day of Action 2015 1. ABOUT THE CAMPAIGN Support. Don’t Punish is a global advocacy campaign to raise awareness of the harms being caused by the war on drugs. The campaign aims to promote drug policies that respect human rights and protect public health, to change laws and policies that impede access to harm reduction interventions and other evidence-based services, and to end the criminalisation of people who use drugs. The heightened risks created by the war on drugs can no longer be ignored. It is time to leave behind harmful politics, ideology and prejudice. It is time to prioritise the health and welfare of those affected. The Support. Don’t Punish campaign’s messages are aligned with those recently agreed by leading international drug policy reform organisations at a meeting in New York (January 2015): The drug control system is broken and in need of reform. People who use drugs should no longer be criminalised. People involved in the drug trade at low levels, especially those involved for reasons of subsistence or coercion, should not face harsh or disproportionate punishments. The death penalty should never be imposed for drug offences. Drug policy in the next decade should focus on health and harm reduction.
    [Show full text]
  • Submission to House Standing Committee on the Environment and Energy Inquiry Into the Climate Change (National Framework for Adaptation and Mitigation) Bill 2020
    Submission to House Standing Committee on the Environment and Energy Inquiry into the Climate Change (National Framework for Adaptation and Mitigation) Bill 2020 Contact: CAHA Executive Director Fiona Armstrong [email protected] 0438900005 www.caha.org.au About the Climate and Health Alliance The Climate anD Health Alliance (CAHA) is a national charity anD the peak boDy on climate change anD health in Australia. CAHA’s mission is the builD a powerful health sector movement for climate action anD sustainable healthcare. The membership of CAHA incluDes a broaD cross-section of health sector stakeholDers with 48 member organisations, representing healthcare professionals from a range of Disciplines, as well as healthcare service proviDers, institutions, acaDemics, researchers, anD consumers. Information about CAHA’s membership anD governance can be founD at www.caha.org.au. The Climate anD Health Alliance has proDuceD a significant number of reports anD publications to assist policymakers anD inform health stakeholDers anD the wiDer community unDerstanD the links between climate change anD health, anD to guiDe Decisions regarDing policy anD solutions. These incluDe the Healthy, Regenerative anD Just post COVID policy agenDa; Human Health anD Wellbeing ADaptation Plan for QueenslanD; Framework for a National Strategy on Climate, Health anD Well-being for Australia anD the preceDing Discussion Paper; a Review of Health anD Climate Change Literature for the City of Melbourne; a joint report on Divestment Healthy Investments (with Doctors for the Environment); the seminal report Coal anD Health in the Hunter: Lessons from One Valley for the WorlD; a multi-stakeholDer Joint Position Statement anD BackgrounD Paper on Health anD Energy Choices; a joint report ‘Our UncasheD DiviDenD’ (with The Climate Institute) on the health benefits of reDucing greenhouse gas emissions; Discussion Paper for the RounDtable on the Health Implications of Energy Policy and a subsequent Briefing Paper on the same topic.
    [Show full text]