Climate of change https://climateofchange.info The human face of Climate Change Fri, 04 Nov 2022 07:45:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://climateofchange.info/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/favicon-1.png Climate of change https://climateofchange.info 32 32 What Egypt’s COP27 means for climate and human rights https://climateofchange.info/what-egypts-cop27-means-for-climate-and-human-rights/ Thu, 03 Nov 2022 15:13:37 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=2361 The post What Egypt’s COP27 means for climate and human rights appeared first on Climate of change.

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What Egypt’s COP27 means for climate and human rights

As the world grapples with escalating environmental and social crises, the UN Conference of the Parties (COP27) stands as a crucial forum for a coordinated and socially just global response. Yet the significance of this landmark conference is being tarnished by the attempt to greenwash its host, Egypt, a police state holding a dismal record on human rights.

Climate crises need to be addressed as social crises. Likewise, defending human rights is an inherent part of defending a liveable planet.

We can’t separate the climate and social struggles. They are interlinked and must be tackled together. As the world becomes more geopolitically volatile, socially unfair and environmentally vulnerable, addressing these issues together emerges as the only way forward to unlock a just and sustainable future for everyone.

Under this premise, the #ClimateOfChange campaign has been pushing through different activities to raise awareness about the social dimension of climate-induced crises, its unequal effects in different parts of the world and the need to demand urgent and holistic action. Almost 60.000 people have already signed our petition demanding climate justice and systemic change.

This year’s UN Conference of the Parties (COP 27) in Egypt provides a unique scenario to urge world decision-makers to move from words to action on climate and social justice. However, although it was foreseen as a landmark COP for the Global South, as the first one taking place in Africa after a long time, this summit poses a series of shady issues that cannot be overlooked.

Greenwashing a police state

While thousands of activists will be raising their voices in Egypt during the second week of November, around 60.000 imprisoned Egyptian political activists will remain silenced in the dark of their cells —not far from the COP27 venue.

Since the president Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi took office in 2014, Egypt has seen how protesters were massacred in the streets, while thousands of activists and journalists were imprisoned and tortured in police stations and jails all across the country.

Activists, NGO observers and journalists who will legitimately follow COP27 discussions on climate ‘loss and damage’, the main focus of this summit, cannot ignore what el-Sisi’s regime is doing to Egyptians in terms of human and fundamental rights. “Without political freedom, there is no meaningful climate action”, wrote Naomi Klein in The Guardian a week ago.

From the #ClimateOfChange consortium, we would like to highlight our unequivocal support to the Egyptian civil society and our call to the international community not to turn a blind eye to the human rights violations committed by el-Sisi’s police state. We also condemn the unjustified restrictions on the participation of civil society in this convention and the astonishing fact that the world’s top plastic polluter, Coca-cola, will be the official sponsor of COP27. The whole picture behind this COP organisation is truly scandalous.

Climate reparations

Despite the grave circumstances surrounding this COP27, it is set to be one of the most important summits to unlock financial support for those experiencing climate loss and damage.

As Pakistan’s climate minister stressed after the historic flooding in August that submerged a third of its country and affected 33 million people, there  is “a new generation of climate migrants” that deserves climate reparations from industrialised, wealthy, polluting countries.

Climate change is the here and the now for 20 million people forced to leave their homes every year and become internally displaced or migrate towards neighbouring countries. Communities and populations in the Global South are already bearing the burden of the worst impacts of climate change (droughts, floods, food crises, water scarcity, climate disasters, etc.) even though when they have contributed the least to greenhouse gas emissions and climate change.

Beyond panic: the reality behind climate migration

The failure of the international community, and in particular the rich Western countries, to assume responsibility for the crisis has led to a global paralysis in terms of climate action. The EU and other rich countries must deliver on their commitments to mobilise $100 billion per year to the Green Fund for those communities and countries most affected by climate change. Such funding must be shared equitably between mitigation and adaptation and must not contribute to increasing the debt of countries in the global south.

While the EU has committed to allocate at least 0.7% of Gross National Income to Official Development Assistance by 2030, it must increase its financial efforts on change adaptation and mitigation for low and middle-income countries. It is crucial that a new funding mechanism to address loss and damage comes out of COP27, to mobilise additional funds from rich countries and polluting companies to help communities exposed beyond their capacity to adapt.

Climate justice: a matter of rights

Climate-induced migrants and young people are the human faces of climate change, as they are the ones who will face its worst effects.

A group of #ClimateOfChange youth ambassadors will be in Egypt to bring our petition demands to EU decision-makers. They will engage with African and Latin American youth representatives on climate adaptation and climate-induced migration challenges, with stress on regional disparities and environmental injustice.

 

Our call on world leaders is not just to mitigate the social effects of this crisis, but to ensure a better future in which all can thrive. We must accelerate the transition towards a socially and ecologically just well-being economy, abandoning the destructive fixation on constant economic and productivity growth. Instead, it must become regenerative, sustainable, democratic, fair, caring and just from a global and international approach. 

Getting the COP27 right is a chance that can’t be missed. Not only do we must define what our new system should look like, but also how we will get there. A just transition is needed to ensure that the process towards change guarantees basic needs are met and social well-being is provided, for everyone, from Egypt to the EU.

The future we envision is regenerative, democratic and caring. It is fair and just in every way and truly sustainable over the long term, instead of being fabricated in the made-to-look-good videos.

Unless we directly tackle the issues fuelling the fire and stand for what is right, we risk making COP27 a historical failure for humanity. Instead of exercising moral flexibility, international leaders should use the event to amplify the voices of those who have been silenced.

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International Open Tender for “Service of a pan – european tour performance” https://climateofchange.info/international-open-tender-for-service-of-apan-european-tour-performance/ Tue, 11 Aug 2020 14:00:00 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1069 The post International Open Tender for “Service of a pan – european tour performance” appeared first on Climate of change.

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The procedure is concluded and the winning tenderer is Circo MagdaClan with Flic – Scuola di circo – Reale Società Ginnastica di Torino.
We thank all candidates for their participation and congratulate the winning tenderer!

Below the steps of the procedure:

From 11 August to 30 September there is time to participate in the call for tenders that we have launched as part of #ClimateofChange, the initiative funded by the European Commission under the DEAR programme (Development Education and Awareness Raising), to engage youth in understanding the complex relationships between climate change and migration.

Tender Procedure Clarifications Concept Proposal

To reach young people, the winning tenderer will be involved in the production and execution of a contemporary circus performance and the organization of a European Tour in 10 countries (Greece, Bulgaria, Hungary, Slovenia, Poland, Germany, Italy, Portugal, France, Belgium), to raise awareness on the nexus between migration and climate change.

Instructions to bid for the concept proposal are comprehensively explained in the Tender Dossier that will be available only via email and on request to the following email address: [email protected] and [email protected].

Click here for more details

SHORTLISTED CANDIDATES THROUGH TO THE FULL PROPOSAL (in random order)

  • CIRCO ZOÉ
  • CONSORTIUM LED BY MAGDA CLAN
  • CONSORTIUM LED BY DINAMICA APS
  • CONSORTIUM LED BY CIRCO ALL’INCIRCA

We would like to thank all candidates for submitting a concept proposal.

All candidates participating in the tender may request an evaluation report from WeWorld-GVC by writing to [email protected] and [email protected]

Shortlisted candidates will receive the full tender dossier by email by October 9th 2020.

Tender Procedure Clarifications Full Proposal

Source: WeWorld

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European Parliament must show greater ambition on climate migration, civil society groups urge https://climateofchange.info/european-parliament-must-show-greater-ambition-on-climate-migration-civil-society-groups-urge/ Fri, 25 Sep 2020 22:00:00 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1075 The post European Parliament must show greater ambition on climate migration, civil society groups urge appeared first on Climate of change.

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A resolution being drafted by the European Parliament’s Development Committee must raise the bar on EU action to mitigate the impact of climate change on vulnerable populations.

On Friday 2 October, the European Parliament’s Development Committee (DEVE) will be voting on a motion for a resolution on the impact of climate change on vulnerable populations in developing countries.

Noting that the world is badly off track to reach the agreed climate-related objectives, the draft motion calls on the European Commission to prepare a comprehensive strategy for the EU’s contribution to limiting the impact of global warming. It also recognises that migration is becoming ever more necessary as part of the response and proposes international arrangements for managing climate migration.

Eva Izquierdo, #ClimateOfChange Advocacy Coordinator at the European Environmental Bureau, said:

“We welcome that DEVE has put together a text that reflects the fact that the climate crisis multiplies the threats that push people to migrate. The report urges the EU to do more to become climate neutral as soon as possible, echoing the voices of young people in the streets.

However, the EU must also become a more welcoming destination for migrants and refugees and needs to develop specific protection schemes for climate change-induced migrants.”

In acknowledging the lack of sufficient funding for the most-affected communities in the Global South, especially in adaptation measures, we commend the rapporteur Mónica Silvana González for including recognition that “The EU, its member states and other developed and emerging countries must radically scale up their actions, given that the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere that are causing climate change were emitted almost exclusively by them.”

The motion refers to gender inequality when it comes to vulnerability to the effects of climate change and foresees specific funding and measures to reverse it, as well as supporting young people and recognising their valuable contribution in raising global awareness on climate change and the need to empower younger generations.

Raising the bar

These key points are the cornerstones of the EU-funded #ClimateOfChange project, led by WeWorld-GVC with 15 partners across the European Union, including the European Environmental Bureau (EEB). It seeks to engage and mobilise youth around the nexus between climate change and migration.  As part of our campaign and advocacy actions, we call on the MEPs on the Development Committee to go one step further and be even more ambitious.

The reduction of emissions demanded by MEPs must be of the magnitude needed to help keep the rise in global temperatures below the critical level of 1.5⁰C. This involves cuts in greenhouse gas emissions of 65% by 2030. In addition, #ClimateOfChange urges MEPs to call for the eradication of poverty and the narrowing of inequalities.

In enunciating the policies and funding needed for this strategy, we propose to include all sectors, and in particular industrial, commercial, agriculture, investments and migration policies. This is because our climate strategy needs to permeate and be transversal in all areas and we need to build a redistributive and regenerative economy.

The #ClimateOfChange consortium is researching this very topic in a research led by Oxfam Deutschland: a human economy that both respects the right of all people to satisfy their basic needs and the boundaries of our planet’s natural systems.

Ecological economics

A final request from #ClimateOfChange is the recognition not only of natural disasters but also the slow-onset effects of climate change as a driver of migration requiring protection and support measures for people who are compelled to move within and between countries.

Margherita Romanelli, #ClimateOfChange Advocacy Coordinator at WeWorld-GVC, said:

Climate Change is mostly the result of an unsustainable production and consumption model of development. As civil society and citizens, we ask the European Union and its member states to act now with courage to lead the transition towards an ecological economy which respects human and environmental rights.

Europe should step up to the challenge and lead the global process towards a new ecological humanism and defeat inequalities.

We call on all the MEPs of the committee to take into consideration the amendments that the #ClimateOfChange Consortium has put forward and vote because we are running out of time and this motion is an important step towards the recognition of the people who suffer the consequences the most, the human face of climate change.

Source: EEB.org

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UNESCO Master Class: Colonial Continuities and Climate Activism https://climateofchange.info/unesco-master-class-colonial-continuities-and-climate-activism/ Thu, 05 Nov 2020 10:00:32 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1034 The post UNESCO Master Class: Colonial Continuities and Climate Activism appeared first on Climate of change.

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On November 1, the Office for Equal Opportunities at the City of Heidelberg together with the European Coalition of Cities against Racism hosted the UNESCO Master Class: Colonial Continuities and Climate Activism in Heidelberg.

The Master Class “Reflecting the Privilege of white Climate Activism” on November 1, hosted more than 100 participants from all over Germany and abroad. Climate activists, scientists and artists, highlighted the role of intersectionality as a key component of climate justice activism and showed the relationships between colonial exploitation, its modern continuation and climate change and activism, which structure the climate movement.

Throughout the day, the participants were invited to take different perspectives on climate activism, reflect their own racial perceptions and engage with colonial thought patterns.

After opening the conference with musical and poetic contributions by Celina Bostic and Shofie Bahlawan, activists and scientists, addressed racism within their movement and demanded a reflection of the structures and aims of climate organizations. Kenyan activist, Anita Soina, asked: “If we are discriminating ourselves, yet we have a common goal– will we achieve the common goal? Will we win the war against climate change?” This was picked up by degrowth scientist and activist Tonny Nowshin, who demanded that “ this movement has to change, if we say that this is the fight of our time”. Shayli Kartal, explained ways in which BIPoC perspectives are erased and demanded support and safer spaces for BIPoC within their organizations. In the end of the first session Leonie Baumgarten-Egemole und Line Niedeggen gave examples how intersectional could be realized in practice and stressed that “BIPoC in the climate justice movement have to network and connect, to empower themselves”.

The following workshop sessions “Reflecting own privileges and narratives” and “Inclusive organizational strategies”, facillitated by the Antirassismus vor Acht lecturers Se McCarthy, Aaron Müller, with the suport of Evein Obulor,  addressed racial discrimination on different societal dimensions and subsequent barriers to participation in German climate movements. The participants engaged with their own thought patterns and reflected their positioning within global power relations. In small groups the participants of the workshop discussed strategies to actively confront racism and reduce barriers to participation and representation in their movements.

To finish the Master Class, a panel of climate activists of different organizations in Germany discussed strategies for an inclusive climate movement. Moderated by Ali Can, Imeh Ituen (Black Earth), Dante Davis (Locals United), Asuka Kähler (Fridays for Future Frankfurt) and Jane (Extinction Rebellion Heidelberg) shared their experiences in climate organizations with each other and the participants. The debate addressed white and european centered understandings of climate activism and the erasure of BIPoC perspectives within the movement. Imeh Ituen stressed that “we can’t get stuck in a debate of BIPoC representation, because the demands and contents of climate organizations also need to be decolonized”. Jane highlighted the importance of a thorough and shared understanding of colonialism and authentic use of the concept climate justice. She appealed to the participants to “get educated about decolonization”.

In the light of rising Covid19 cases across Europe and in Heidelberg, the City Walk “Colonial Traces and Continuities in the City”, on October 31, had to be postponed.

Download the Program UNESCO Master Class, November 1

Image © ECCAR

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Online Panel Discussion on Climate Change and Public Health https://climateofchange.info/online-panel-discussion-on-climate-change-and-public-health/ Sun, 15 Nov 2020 15:10:00 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1058 The post Online Panel Discussion on Climate Change and Public Health appeared first on Climate of change.

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On the 12th November, YEE co-hosted second webinar of the  #ClimateofChange series, together with the European Environmental Bureau and Youth4Nature, this time on climate change and public health. What is the concept of planetary health and how is the climate change affecting our health? 

The Climate of Change project is a pan-European campaign to build a better future for climate-induced migrants, the human face of climate change. The event provided fascinating insight into the important intersections between the health of the planet and our own physical and mental health – in case you weren’t able to make it, you can watch it here or read the following summary, and if you did manage to join us and want to learn more about the topic, then we have assembled some additional resources for you below!

Chloé ten Brink, our Youth Advocacy Coordinator, moderated the webinar and guided participants through the discussion as our wonderful range of speakers called upon their experiences and knowledge to provide incredibly thought-provoking insight into the relations between climate change and gender, economic inequality, and mental health, among many others.

Our first speaker was Vijoleta Gordeljevic, the current Health and Climate Change Coordinator at the Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL). She managed to give an incredibly clear but densely informative overview of the health impacts of climate change, pointing out that although it may not be the most obvious danger to health, its indirect effects include the increased risk of many diseases, cardiovascular failure, and malnutrition, both from subtle changes like higher temperatures and severe weather events like floods. Even in Europe, we have 790 000 excess deaths due to ambient air pollution annually! However, she also stressed that there is so much to win for public health by tackling climate change. Phasing out fossil fuels or reducing the amount of meat we consume will both reduce our GHG emissions as well as greatly improve human health.

Our second speaker was Dr Kathleen Mar, the leader of ClimAct at IASS Potsdam and a Senior Associate at Women Leaders for Planetary Health. She explained that the effects of climate change are gendered, with women and girls being disproportionately impacted. Events such as floods or droughts exacerbate women’s poverty and increase the burden of unpaid domestic and care work, which tends to mostly fall upon women. However, similarly to Vijoleta, Kathleen strove to emphasise the positive flip-side to this – although women are currently excluded from economic activity and decision-making, if we correct this then we only have incredible resources to gain in the fight against climate change. Hence, climate change solutions must also be gender-just, seeking to provide equal access and benefits to women and to alleviate or compensate their work burden.

Next up, we heard from Pearl Anne Ante-Testard, co-founder of PlaHNet and PhD Candidate at the Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers. She began by summing up the fundamental concept of planetary health by explaining beautifully that “we won’t have healthy humans if we don’t have a healthy planet – so in this way we are treating the planet like a patient”. This holistic approach is all about realising that human health is completely dependent on the health of the natural systems around us. Planetary health involves a convergence of numerous academic fields and encourages the medical profession in particular to pro-actively look to areas like ecology in order to prepare in advance for climate-change induced health problems – as they say, prevention is better than cure!

Finally, we listened to Ruby and Christabel Reed, co-founders and co-directors of Advaya, a global platform for transformative experiences and alternative education.

Ruby talked us through the fact that in order to combat climate change, we have to completely transform the systems of domination over the environment that are causing it in the first place. In doing so, we must return to a partnership paradigm, which centres on the fact that the more we nourish our communities and environments the more they can nourish us in return. Christabel then presented the positive points for engaging in this type of activism, from building community and eco-system well-being, to that of individuals. Among her many suggestions were participatory democracy and supporting local initiatives, as well as nine tips for improving mental health in the face of eco-anxiety, which can affect young people in particular, such as being present in nature and meditative practice.

The rest of the webinar saw our panellists responding to each other, and then questions from our many attendees, and delving further into each of these topics. One of the most fascinating aspects of this was how many of our speakers independently came back to the same themes again and again. They all argued that the impacts of climate change, including on health, affect the most vulnerable the most, and Pearl emphasised how this occurs both nationally and globally. Another point stressed continually was the intersectional nature of climate change and public health – but also gender, youth etc. – and so how we need to recognise that the solutions must also reflect this by being fully inclusive at all stages. Ultimately, all of our speakers always returned in this way to the consequences that the hard information they were presenting had on concrete action, creating an event that was at once enlightening and empowering.

Did this summary or the webinar leave you hungry for more? Why not start with these amazing resources on climate change and health!

Want more hard-boiled facts about what climate change really means for health? There’s no greater authority than the WHO itself!

Kathleen reminded us that when it comes to climate change, women are not just victims but leaders too! Listen to their experiences first-hand in this podcast

Pearl’s group PlaHNet have been running webinars lately all about these issues – watch them back for a more in-depth look at planetary health.

In her tips on individual well-being, Christabel also mentioned learning to sit with and enjoy nature and gave a shout-out to Jon Young’s TED talk!

Young people are becoming increasingly overwhelmed with ‘eco-anxiety’ – read expert Caroline Hickman’s article on what you can do about it.

Are you a policy nerd like us? Multiple UN bodies created this influential document on the “one world, one health” approach – similar to planetary health.

 

Source: Yeenet

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European Climate Migrants Also Exist https://climateofchange.info/european-climate-migrants-also-exist/ Wed, 18 Nov 2020 13:00:00 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1064 The post European Climate Migrants Also Exist appeared first on Climate of change.

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Although the popular image of climate migrants involves poor people in poor countries, Europeans are increasingly being pushed out of their homes and forced to move by the consequences of global warming.

This was one of the messages of a recent webinar on the climate emergency and migration.

The EEB, in collaboration with Youth and Environment Europe (YEE), recently held, in the context of the EU-backed #ClimateOfChange project, a webinar on climate change and migration.

The online panel debate, which was moderated by YEE’s Elisha Winckel, brought together experts in the field to paint a clear picture of the reality of this complex and multifaceted issue, as well as to dispel some common and damaging fallacies.

Caroline Zickgraf, the co-founder of the Hugo Observatory at the University of Liège, spoke about the politics of migration-related terminology and the scaremongering and mythmaking that has led to restrictive immigration policies that are hurting people affected by global warming.

Mariam Traore Chazalnoel, a senior expert at the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), found it encouraging that climate migration was receiving more attention from the international community but this has not yet translated into action. She believes, however, that young people’s involvement could “transform the narrative into one that is more hopeful and aspirational”.

Vanishing worlds

One area of confusion relates to where climate migration occurs. It is true that societies that did the least to create the climate emergency are often on the frontline of global warming and are most vulnerable to the consequences of climate change.

This was highlighted by Lucie Pélissier, the co-president of CliMates International, an organisation that strives to raise awareness about climate-induced migration. She developed a documentary on climate-driven migration that focused on the factors behind this phenomenon and how it affects youth.

“When we started this project, we realised that there were not a lot of stories on environmental migration,” Pélissier claimed. “Most of the time, when we were talking about the phenomenon it remained a bit abstract.” She and her colleagues decided that they needed to show and understand the human story by letting migrants on the climate change frontline in Bangladesh and Senegal speak for themselves.

In Bangladesh, a low-lying and populous country threatened by rising sea levels, Kutubdia island, which has one of the fastest recorded sea level rises has lost half its territory to the ocean over the past half century, is a harbinger of what is to come. Although the villagers, proud fisherfolk, have a negligible carbon footprint, they have been forced to abandon their way of life and to migrate inland.

Spreading like wildfire

However, that does not mean that wealthy societies are somehow immune. Although they have more resources to deal with the fallout, many rich, industrialised nations are also being ravaged by global warming.

This can be seen in the devastation that was wrought by wildfires in America this year, including the rare sight of autumn blazes so intense that they blocked visibility.

That is not to mention the ‘Black Summer’ of 2019/20 in Australia. The Australian bushfires alone not only caused the death of hundreds of millions of creatures, including the (near) extinction of many species, it also destroyed thousands of homes and displaced many people.

Europe, too, is growing increasingly prone to climate change. This was highlighted by Marta Rodríguez and Lillo Montalto, two journalists who produced a series of reports for Euronews on the impact of the climate crisis on people’s lives in Europe.

“There is a lot of talk about climate migrants, or climate refugees, coming to Europe, say, from Africa or Asia,” explained Rodríguez. “We wanted to know if there were already European climate migrants and, if that was the case, where could we find them.”

And find them the Euronews team did. “Almost 700,000 [Europeans] have been displaced in the last 10 years. That means 700,000 stories of loss in our continent,” described Lillo Montalto. “We didn’t want to make climate a far away story and Europe just the recipient of migrants. We wanted to change the perspective on that story.”

This number is a significant underestimation. It counts only people displaced by wildfires, storms and floods. Moreover, not only are statistics sparse on direct climate migration inside Europe, hardly any exist on people displaced by long-term environmental change, such as recurring droughts, or those who indirectly displaced by climate change, by losing their livelihoods or being plunged into poverty due to environmental changes.

Perfect storm

In the course of their investigation, Rodriguez and Montalto found that though climate change-induced extreme weather tended to hurt the poorest hardest, it could also devastate affluent communities too.

This occurred, for example, in La Faute-sur-Mer on France’s Atlantic coast. In 2010, the well-to-do coastal resort was hit by Xynthia, a powerful storm accompanied by surging seas. A century ago, a storm of this magnitude would not have caused devastation but rising sea levels meant that it resulted in widespread flooding, claiming the lives of 29 of the town’s residents.

Unlike victims of global warming in poor countries, the 1,000 people who lost their homes were offered compensation by the French state to rehouse. Around 400 decided to leave the town for good.

Nevertheless, the emotional trauma and scars of losing homes or loved ones are the same everywhere. Some survivors lost more than one member of their family. Elizabeth, who had retired in La Faute-Sur-Mer, watched her husband drown in the deluge before her eyes and her baby grandson died of hypothermia in her arms. Ahmed, an intensive care doctor who had recently bought a plot of land in the town, lost his mother, wife and sons, Ismaël and Camil. Only his daughter survived.

Watershed moments

One of those stories is that of Ion Sandu from Moldova. A decade ago, devastating flooding caused by global warming hit his village Cotul Morii, forcing the army to evacuate the residents. Deciding that the village had become too risky for human habitation, the government constructed a new settlement by the same name where it encouraged the residents to move.

However, Sandu, who is in his late 80s, and some other residents did not like the new purpose-built village and felt nostalgic for their homes, so they moved back, even though Cotul Morii had officially been wiped off the map and cut off from public services and infrastructure.

“How do you leave such a beautiful house?” Sandu asked, referring to the family home built of solid acacia wood in which he was born, raised, married and lived with his late wife. “This is my dad’s house. I was a child here. I was born here,” he told Euronews.

Moldova is not only one of the poorest places in Europe, its population is also among the most vulnerable to climate change. And it is not just extreme flooding the predominantly rural population must endure.

Droughts are also becoming more common and devastating. Between 1990 and 2015, Moldova suffered 11 droughts, according to the UN. In 2012 alone, drought caused the country’s tiny economy €1 billion in losses.

This is helping cause a major population drain. Moldova’s population was 4.5 million inhabitants in the early 1990s, it fell to 2.7 million in 2019. While a low fertility is one factor in this drop, the emigration of hundreds of thousands of Moldavians has also played a significant role.

No statistics exist on what role climate change plays in the decision of Moldavians to depart their homeland, with most citing poverty and low incomes as their motivator.

However, digging deeper, we can infer that the country’s increasingly inhospitable climate has an influence on migration decisions. This is reflected, for example, in the fact that nearly 70% of Moldavians who moved abroad migrated from rural areas, i.e. the regions devastated by flooding and drought.

Source: Eeb.org – Image: Euronews

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Help hold businesses accountable with just a click before 8 February 2021 https://climateofchange.info/help-hold-businesses-accountable-with-just-a-click-before-8-february-2021/ Wed, 03 Feb 2021 10:04:46 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1170 The post Help hold businesses accountable with just a click before 8 February 2021 appeared first on Climate of change.

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Join EU movements #ClimateOfChange and #OurFoodOurFuture, civil society and all who care for people and the environment to raise your voice. 

A UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY

The European Commission is finally ready to consider a new law to hold businesses accountable for their impact on society and the environment. These rules on mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence should require all companies, from fossil fuel giants and agribusinesses to fashion retailers and electronics makers, to establish effective policies to make sure human rights and the environment are not being harmed in their global operations and supply chains.

This means demanding that companies which subcontract or purchase supplies from abroad ensure that their entire supply chain respects human and environmental rights. This involves eliminating all forms of exploitation, especially of vulnerable groups such as women and children in fragile countries, where the protection of rights is most at risk. 

This law would also eliminate unfair competition between companies that respect communities and those that gain a competitive edge because their practices are based on social and environmental injustice.  

WHAT YOU CAN DO

The European Commission has opened a citizen consultation to ask each one of us for our opinion on this new law by 8 February 2021: take this opportunity to participate and make a global impact on our future. Each voice counts towards the approval of the law. 

To facilitate your participation you can access a pre-compiled form with which you can express your support for the law by 8 February 2021. 

Or you can fill in the  form yourself on the European Commission’s website, also by 8 February 2021.

NOW IS THE TIME TO RAISE OUR VOICEs

This action is in the framework of all our rganizations’ global efforts to promote and protect human and environmental rights, in synergy with the project objectives of #ClimateOfChange.

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Fair and inclusive climate transition in open letter to the Portuguese Presidency of the European Council https://climateofchange.info/fair-and-inclusive-climate-transition-in-open-letter/ Fri, 05 Mar 2021 12:50:00 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=2201 The post Fair and inclusive climate transition in open letter to the Portuguese Presidency of the European Council appeared first on Climate of change.

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Fair and inclusive climate transition in open letter to the Portuguese Presidency of the European Council

IMVF together with 32 civil society organisations call for a fair and inclusive climate transition for all people, in an open letter to the Portuguese Presidency of the Council of the European Union, in a decisive semester to respond to the climate and COVID-19 challenges.

In a series of recommendations, they call for greater coherence of EU policies towards commitments to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, a Climate Law consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5°C, and an EU Climate Change Adaptation Strategy that prevents future crises.

Read the Open Letter here.

Photo: UN Photo/Tim McKulka

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MEPS call for law to hold companies accountable for human rights and the environment https://climateofchange.info/meps-call-for-law-to-hold-companies-accountable-for-human-rights-and-the-environment/ Thu, 11 Mar 2021 13:39:11 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1253 The post MEPS call for law to hold companies accountable for human rights and the environment appeared first on Climate of change.

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With forced labour and environmental destruction high on their minds, MEPs have endorsed proposed legislation on corporate due diligence.

The European Commission must now follow the European Parliament’s lead and set the legislative process in motion, activists demand.

In a landmark decision, the European Parliament came out yesterday in support of EU legislation to hold companies accountable for human rights abuses and environmental damage along the length of their entire supply chain.

With 504 votes for, 79 against and 112 abstentions, MEPs endorsed the report led by rapporteur Lara Wolters which calls for corporate due diligence and accountability to be embedded in law, rather than the current voluntary schemes.

The vote coincides with growing awareness and concern about abuses along the supply chain, including credible reports of mass forced labour in China which is part of what has been described by human rights groups as a genocidal campaign against the country’s Uighur minority.

This new law on corporate due diligence will set the standard for responsible business conduct in Europe and beyond. We refuse to accept that deforestation or forced labour are part of global supply chains,” Wolters said. “Companies will have to avoid and address harm done to people and planet in their supply chains.The new rules will give victims a legal right to access support and to seek reparations, and will ensure fairness, a level playing field and legal clarity for all businesses, workers and consumers.”

The binding rules proposed by the parliament would oblige companies operating in EU markets, whether they are based in Europe or elsewhere in the world, to safeguard that they and their suppliers do not violate human rights, do not harm the environment, and do not undermine good governance through such malpractices as enabling corruption or bribery.

On the rights track

Although the European Parliament does not possess the power to initiate legislation, civil society has also welcomed this symbolic milestone.

“The approval of this legislative initiative report sets the EU on the right track towards sustainability grounded in justice,” says Eva Izquierdo, the EEB’s Policy Officer for Global Climate Justice. “MEPs are responding to a profound change in mentality amongst voters who no longer want to selfishly prosper if this prosperity is based on the suffering of the world’s most vulnerable people and at the expense of nature.”

In light of the vital importance of ensuring the goods we consume in Europe are made to the highest ethical and environmental standards, the EEB and its partners in the Climate of Change project mobilised across the EU to urge MEPs to do the right thing and vote in favour of this law.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed the fragility of global value chains whilst also dramatically increasing human rights risks such as forced and child labour,” the letter stated. “Corporate due diligence will help ensure that the private sector does not cause or contribute to future crises and is better prepared for global shocks.”

“The vote is a strong signal from the Parliament to the European Commission that there is a groundswell of support for a due diligence law,” observes Francesca Carlsson, the EEB’s Legal Officer and lead on due diligence. “This should prod the Commission to include robust due diligence rules in its draft legislation on sustainable corporate governance, which is expected to be published in June.”

All of our business

Pushback and opposition are expected from some segments of the business community but this should not stop the EU from doing the right thing. “In a world where inequality is soaring, we cannot neglect other key aspects of sustainability like human rights and social justice,” notes EEB Circular Economy Policy Officer Jean-Pierre Schweitzer.

For the Commission’s proposal to be meaningful and robust, the draft legislation must apply to all businesses operating in the EU market, including SMEs, and it must not only be binding but also enforceable to ensure that it does not become another dead letter law.

In addition, there must be mechanisms for victims and affected communities to demand remedial action and access justice, Carlsson explains. More details of the EEB’s demands are available in this joint statement from civil society.

SourceEeb.org – Image: Eric Wilson, Flickr. Creative commons.

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Climate greater worry than COVID-19 for young Europeans, new poll finds https://climateofchange.info/climate-greater-worry-than-covid-19-for-young-europeans-new-poll-finds/ Wed, 21 Apr 2021 09:56:35 +0000 https://climateofchange.info/?p=1568 Despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, climate change and the environment beat infectious diseases on the list of priorities expressed in a pan-European youth survey. Despite years of populist scaremongering, migration comes close to the bottom of young people’s concerns.

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Despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, climate change and the environment beat infectious diseases on the list of priorities expressed in a pan-European youth survey. Despite years of populist scaremongering, migration comes close to the bottom of young people’s concerns.

The poll – conducted by the renowned public opinion research agency IPSOS on behalf of the Climate of Change project – canvassed more than 22,000 people aged 15-35 in 23 European countries. It gauged young people’s understanding of and attitudes towards climate change, migration and the current economic model.


This confirms that the worries of the activists in the youth climate movement are mainstream, not fringe, concerns for young people. This suggests that, despite the immediate coronavirus crisis and populist rhetoric, young people are generally clear sighted about the long-term challenges facing humanity.

Hot topics

On the question of what they believed to be the most serious problems facing humanity, climate change (46%) and environmental degradation (44%) were ranked the highest by respondents.

Climate ranks a full 10% above the spread of infectious diseases, despite the fact that we are in the midst of a global pandemic and COVID-19 tops the news agenda daily.

Moreover, many of those who did not rank climate amongst their top priorities were, nonetheless, concerned about it. This is reflected in the fact that 84% of respondents said they were worried about climate change and 65% believed it would affect them directly.

Fake news does not appear to have affected the perceptions of young Europeans, with only 8% of respondents believing there is no such thing. as climate change. The vast majority are convinced that climate change affects every ocean and continent (86%) and human activity is to blame for global warming (83%).

System change

The vast majority of respondents (77%) are convinced that our consumption habits are not sustainable and (71%) that the economy is rigged to the advantage of the rich and powerful.

Reflecting an apparent perceived need for systemic change, more than half (52%) believe that business and industry, followed by governments (49%), bear the greatest responsibility for tackling climate change.

On 22 April, Climate of Change will launch of a major new report which exposes the destructive social and environmental impact of the current economic system and proposes an alternative blueprint for a fairer wellbeing economy that operates within the natural boundaries of our planet.

The Climate of Change consortium has also launched a pan-European petition demanding policy changes that will safeguard a healthy and sustainable tomorrow for current and future generations.

Moving issues

In contrast, despite years of scaremongering about migration by populist politicians and sensationalist segments of the media, young people ranked large-scale migration as one of their lowest concerns, with only 13% placing it among their top three and 45% believing that migrants contribute to our societies.

Nevertheless, young people are not entirely immune to populist rhetoric. About half (51%) agree that most migrants who want to seek asylum in their country are not really refugees, while 38% agree that our borders must be entirely closed to migrants.

Although awareness of the term climate migrant was low (only 32% had heard of it), more than half (52%) were convinced that climate change would lead to more migration in the future.

The full survey can be downloaded here: https://eeb.org/library/pan-european-survey-climate-to-priority-for-youth/

Reuters news agency reported on the survey in this article: https://www.reuters.com/article/climate-change-europe/climate-not-covid-the-biggest-worry-among-young-europeans-poll-idUSL8N2MD2EW

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