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Transport Intervention in High-level Round Table
Written by Michael Davidson   
Thursday, 13 May 2010 23:38
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Statements from member countries and major groups (UN-speak for civil society) are called "interventions" when delivered in the plenary or other UN sessions. The Youth Caucus has successfully given over seven interventions since the start of CSD on the thematic topics of transport, mining, waste, chemicals and sustainable consumption and production (SCP). Today, SustainUS Agent Michael Davidson delivered the statement on behalf of youth and children on sustainable transport at the round table discussion of the "high-level segment". He, along with Dewi Anggraini of Singapore, represented the Youth Caucus in this final event on transport before the closing session that begins tomorrow.

They stressed that youth and children are disproportionately affected by inadequate transportation services. Achieving Millennium Development Goals, including the second Goal regarding universal primary education, requires reliable and sustainable transport systems. They called on delegates to recognize this fact and to respond to two questions:

  1. What are you doing to promote awareness and affordability of cleaner and more efficient modes of transportation, especially to the underrepresented youth and children?
  2. What are the ways in which you are increasing youth participation in the planning and decision-making processes of the transport sector?

They maintained: Youth, as current innovators, and children, as future users, have a critical role to play in advancing sustainable transport.

A video of the speech is available in the UN Webcast Archives. Click here to begin streaming. Davidson’s address starts at 2:16:50.

Tomorrow, the Youth Caucus will have the opportunity to present a closing statement before the plenary on all the topics of the CSD.

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What are you doing to promote awareness and affordability of cleaner and more efficient modes of transportation, especially to the underrepresented youth and children?

Last Updated on Saturday, 22 May 2010 19:28
 
CSD - Relentless Youth
Written by John Doyle   
Wednesday, 12 May 2010 10:40
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CSD is in a review year and the conference is moving slowly.  As usual, the ambition and sense of urgency energizing youth and civil society far outpaces the constrained governing framework.  Nevertheless, youth have been making substantial contributions. 

I’ll give a few updates on what we’ve been working on, but as usual the real story and cause for optimism is how we’re working.

 * The chair’s text summarizing the meetings on the different thematic groups was released Monday.  The youth caucus divided itself into the different themes, read through the text and then submitted general critiques and specific amendment suggestions to the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

* A major group statement (on behalf of all of civil society groups – young and old) was approved and will be delivered by a representative from the youth caucus at the High Level Meeting today.  The statement emphasizes the unique role that civil society can play in developing and implementing solutions to sustainable development issues.

* The Chair of CSD 18, Luis Alberto Ferrate (also Guatemala’s Minister of the Environment), met with civil society Tuesday morning and took some questions.  His answers were encouragingly progressive and he emphasized the sinful 40+% of food wasted in the supply chain in the developed world and the undervalued role of women around the world.  He also called on civil society to always be ready to make interventions when sessions end early since views need to be on the record for the Chair to get them in the text.

This is my first conference with SustainUS since COP-14, and while the scale is smaller, the work ethic and model of cooperation and understanding amongst youth is just as refreshing.  The same respect for the gravity of the issues we are working on is ever-present - youth footsteps echo the empty hallways at 8AM when the gates open and their jackets are strawn across chairs in the cafeteria long after food has stopped being served.  And while at times it feels like our interventions in the official meetings are only symbolic, participation is not symbolic amongst each other – voices are listened to, concerns are taken serious, and suggestions are incorporated.

As Jeffrey Sachs calls for an end to the “pathetic deprivation of imagination in investment” of spending 10x Afghanistan’s GDP on our military operations there; as Jane Goodall’s beautiful smile is tainted by eyes filled with concern; and as a Nigerien shepherd relays the devastating effects of uranium mining on his village – despite stagnation at the conference, their messages are not lost on all; we still have our eyes on the prize and are holding fast to our values of how we will get there.

 
Copenhagen Outcomes
Written by Ellie Johnston   
Sunday, 07 February 2010 22:38
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Sitting in a cavernous reception hall dimly lit by Christmas lights and a projector screen broadcasting President Obama’s announcement of the Copenhagen Accord was not the end to the UN Climate Change Conference that I had anticipated—but really what had I anticipated? It was very late Friday, December 18th, 2009 and around me sat members of the International Youth Climate Movement, environmental organizations, and representatives of non-governmental organizations from across the world who had come to Copenhagen to bear witness to the UN climate negotiations but who had been shut out of the Bella Center, where the negotiations were held, in the final days of the two-week conference. As President Obama’s press conference concluded, there were resounding boos in the audience and blank stares as we sat aghast at the agreement that had just been described

The political outcome that came out of the conference, the Copenhagen Accord, realizes none of our demands and is characterized by a weak pledge and review framework for key mitigation targets that was left empty of commitments as leaders flew home. As news of the Copenhagen Accord spread in Copenhagen, stories on how it was brokered emerged to provide tinder for a wild fire of political drama and finger pointing. Reports suggest that the Accord came out of an unscheduled meeting between President Obama and leaders of China, Brazil, South Africa, and India. President Obama then announced the Copenhagen Accord as a “meaningful outcome,” before it went to the entire body of nations at the conference for acceptance. Then, after an all-night negotiating session, and lacking consensus on its approval, the UNFCCC decided to merely “take note of the Copenhagen Accord.” So, countries may sign onto it as they like, but there is no mandate to do so. The end of January 2010 was the deadline for countries to sign on to the Copenhagen Accord (though countries will not be turned away if they want to sign on later). As of January 31st, 55 countries have signed on, including the U.S, China, and other large greenhouse gas emitting nations, which currently account for 78% of global emissions. While accounting for global emissions is one thing, reducing those emissions is quite another. Under the Copenhagen Accord there is an aim to limit warming to 2 degrees C (an increase that will still leave many island nations uninhabitable), analyses indicate that current proposed targets, if implemented, will still leave us with drastic warming of 3.9 degrees C by the end of the century. Absent from the Accord are details about how deforestation will be reduced, how and how much money will be provided for climate adaptation and how exactly emission reductions will be monitored and verified. The Accord is not fair, ambitious, or binding. An incomplete political outcome was anticipated going into the negotiations, but for most there was still a harsh sting as we watched the results unfold that evening.

The UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen was one of the largest events ever held to address climate change politically. Though it was by no means the first effort; these negotiations have been occurring regularly since the early 1990’s. Copenhagen however, saw an unprecedented level of attention as the UN was overwhelmed with people, like me, interested in taking part in advocating for real solutions and witnessing the process that was to lead to a binding agreement. In total, 120 heads of states attended, and brought a previously unseen level of engagement to the issue. All this could have set the conference up for success, though unfortunately that was not the case. Fingers have pointed the blame in different directions. Though for us here in the US, we cannot look much further than our own inactions. In the US Senate energy and climate legislation is moving through at a snail’s pace, despite it being a way to create jobs, spark economic growth, and improve our energy independence.

The disappointing politics is the story most often told, but on the ground Copenhagen was much more than a political chess game. As President Obama’s press conference concluded on that Friday night and the force of the moment set in, a member of the International Youth Climate Movement brought us back. Standing up on a chair he announced that this was unacceptable and issued a call to action—a rally outside the Bella Center. More than eleven million people supported a fair, ambitious, and legally binding treaty, and there we were in Copenhagen watching those demands be sidelined. What else were we to do? Traveling by taxi and train, and dogged by police inquisitive of our plans as midnight passed, we arrived at the Bella Center, a place that had over the weeks become a familiar refuge from temperamental hostel owners, expensive Danish restaurants, and frigid winds. With our photo badges no longer allowing us access, hundreds of us stood chanting and holding signs outside in a last ditch effort to make our voices heard. Despite 2009 being one of the warmest years on record, the frigid Danish air threatened to drive us away, though we stayed warm as we stood close and lifted our voices for the world. As the negotiations continued inside, a Bolivian delegate who heard of our response came outside to offer support and reminded us that, “while it hadn’t been a success on the inside, it had been one on the outside.”

The days and weeks preceding had seen a climate march of100,000 people, a 7-hour sit-in inside the Bella Conference Center, 1,000’s of candlelight climate vigils globally, and a handful of people who had refused food for over 40 days being joined by thousands for a day of fasting for climate justice. The Bolivian delegate was right, Copenhagen was a magnificent coalescence of people whose demands for action are not unheard. People came from around the world and left with new friends and allies to support their work in the years to come.  More than a means to a political agreement, Copenhagen served as a catalyst for an emerging global community of people committed to ensuring our relationships with each other and the planet are sustainable.

I spent almost three weeks in Copenhagen, arriving days in advance of the conference and leaving several days after it concluded. It was intoxicating to be in a place where the pace and energy levels were so high and where everyone was operating at full capacity–pushing our limits intellectually, physically, and emotionally. There were dozens of times when I paused and looked around me, only to be silenced by what I saw–unable to put words to the scene unfolding.

I see a growing need for our global society to collectively dig deeper into what it means to be a citizen of this planet. Our individual spheres of influence wrap around the world, and yet it is so easy to forget this. In Copenhagen I met hundreds of people from around the world, many whose lives are being affected by climate change in very real ways, right now. Hearing people talk about droughts and rising sea levels back home, it is hard not to think about my own home and wonder if we can change our ways here. Returning home, I at once want to lapse back into the main stream of complacency and to continue escalating my activism, calling out all the atrocities of the world. A middle path will probably result from this, more deliberate and sustainable than if I realized the extremes of either. Like everything though, it is all part of a process and I’m learning, like many of my peers, that lasting change does not come in the form of legislation and treatises, but in the building momentum of people who dare to pursue solutions in the world.

 
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