UN climate summit
COP29: Speakers emphasize urgent need for inclusive and gender-equitable climate solutions
Speakers at a side event during the UN Climate Summit COP29 highlighted the importance of engaging men and boys alongside women, girls, and gender-diverse individuals to address the climate crisis.
The event, organized by Women Organizing for Change in Agriculture and Natural Resource Management (WOCAN), was held in Baku, Azerbaijan on Thursday.
During the event, speakers emphasized the urgent need for climate solutions that are inclusive and gender-equitable, advocating for systemic changes that challenge patriarchal systems.
Representing YouthNet Global, Jimran Mohammad Saiak presented the COP29 Sign-On Statement, titled “Achieving Climate Justice by Challenging Patriarchy.”
Developed by the MenEngage Alliance's Global Working Group on Climate Justice, this statement advocates for a transformative approach to climate action, challenging entrenched patriarchal norms and championing feminist climate justice.
The statement calls for the active involvement of men and boys as allies in supporting feminist climate goals and emphasizes the central role of women in leading sustainable climate efforts.
“We cannot achieve climate justice without dismantling the structures that uphold inequality,” Saiak said on behalf of YouthNet Global. “Engaging men as allies is crucial in building a just and equitable future for all.”
Sohanur Rahman, executive coordinator, YouthNet Global said, “Achieving a just transition to a sustainable future requires dismantling patriarchal structures. Engaging men and boys as partners in climate justice is vital to achieving gender equality in climate solutions.”
The statement was endorsed by a coalition of global organizations, including YouthNet for Climate Justice (Bangladesh), MenEngage Alliance (Global), MÄN (Sweden), RoSa vzw (Belgium), and Unako Organisation (Africa).
CSOs demand a clear and meaningful framework on NCQG based on equity and justice
The COP29 Sign-On Statement, which YouthNet Global supported at the event, calls for comprehensive action on several fronts: transforming patriarchal norms that contribute to gender inequality and environmental degradation; integrating gender-responsive policies into climate action; ensuring accountability in climate decision-making; equitable climate financing from Global North countries to support vulnerable regions; protection for environmental and human rights defenders; and a transition to a caring, people-centered economy that prioritizes well-being over profit.
Activists and academics, such as Dr. Stephen Burrell from the University of Melbourne and Martin Hultman from Chalmers University of Technology, have also backed the statement.
210 minutes ago
‘Last, best hope:’ Leaders launch crucial UN climate summit
A crucial U.N. climate summit opened Sunday amid papal appeals for prayers and activists’ demands for action, kicking off two weeks of intense diplomatic negotiations by almost 200 countries aimed at slowing intensifying global warming and adapting to the climate damage already underway.
As U.N. officials gaveled the climate summit to its formal opening in Glasgow, the heads of the world’s leading economies at the close of their own separate talks in Italy made pledges including stopping international financing of dirty-burning coal-fired power plants by next year. But much of the agreement was vague and not the major push some had been hoping for to give momentum to the climate summit.
Government leaders face two choices in Glasgow, Patricia Espinosa, head of the U.N. climate office, declared at the summit’s opening: They can sharply cut greenhouse gas emissions and help communities and countries survive what is becoming a hotter, harsher world, Espinosa said. “Or we accept that humanity faces a bleak future on this planet.”
“It is for these reasons and more that we must make progress here in Glasgow,” Espinosa said. “We must make it a success.”
India Logan-Riley, an Indigenous climate activist from New Zealand, had a more blunt message for negotiators and world leaders at the summit’s opening ceremony.
Read: G20 leaders to tackle energy prices, other economic woes
“Get in line, or get out of the way,” Logan-Riley said.
But G-20 leaders offered more vague pledges than commitments of firm action, saying they would seek carbon neutrality “by or around mid-century.” They also agreed to end public financing for coal-fired power generation abroad, but set no target for phasing out coal domestically — a clear nod to China and India
The G-20 countries represent more than three-quarters of the world’s climate-damaging emissions and G-20 host Italy and Britain, which is hosting the Glasgow conference, had looked for more ambitious targets coming out of Rome.
But major polluters including China and Russia had already made clear they had no immediate intention of following U.S. and European pledges to zero out all fossil-fuel pollution by 2050. Russia said on Sunday that it was sticking to its target of 2060.
Speaking to reporters before leaving Rome, U.S. President Joe Biden called it “disappointing’ that G-20 members Russia and China ’basically didn’t show up” with commitments to address the scourge of climate change ahead of the U.N. climate summit.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson struck a grim tone, saying G-20 leaders “inched forward” on curbing global warming, but the goal of limiting temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) -- struck in a landmark deal at the end of the 2015 Paris climate accord -- was in danger of slipping out of reach.
Read: No pathway to reach the Paris Agreement’s 1.5˚C goal without the G20: UN chief
“If Glasgow fails then the whole thing fails,” Johnson told reporters in Rome. Before leaving Rome, U.S.
Some observers said the G-20 pledges were far from enough.
“This weak statement from the G-20 is what happens when developing countries who are bearing the full force of the climate crisis are shut out of the room,” said Mohamed Adow, director of Power Shift Africa. “The world’s biggest economies comprehensively failed to put climate change on the top of the agenda ahead of COP26 in Glasgow.”
While the opening ceremony in Glasgow formally kicked off the talks, known as COP26, the more anticipated launch comes Monday, when leaders from around the world will gather to lay out their countries’ efforts to curb emissions from burning coal, gas and oil and deal with the mounting damage from climate change.
The leaders of two of the top climate-polluting nations - China and Russia — were not expected to attend the summit, though seniors officials from those countries planned to participate. Biden, whose country is the world’s biggest climate polluter after China, the summit comes at a time when division within his own Democratic party is forcing him to scale back ambitious climate efforts.
At the Vatican Sunday, Pope Francis urged the crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square: “Let us pray so that the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor” is heard by summit participants.
Negotiators will push nations to ratchet up their efforts to keep global temperatures from rising by more than 1.5 degrees Celsius this century compared with pre-industrial times.
The climate summit remains “our last, best hope to keep 1.5 in reach,” said Alok Sharma, the British government minister chairing climate talks.
Scientists say the chances of meeting that goal are slowly slipping away. The world has already warmed by more than 1.1C and current projections based on planned emissions cuts over the next decade are for it to hit 2.7C by the year 2100.
The amount of energy unleashed by such planetary warming would melt much of the planet’s ice, raise global sea levels and greatly increase the likelihood and intensity of extreme weather, experts say.
U.S. climate envoy John Kerry warned last week of the dramatic impacts that exceeding the 2015 Paris accord’s goal will have on nature and people, but expressed optimism that the world is heading in the right direction.
Sharma noted that China, the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, had just raised its climate targets somewhat.
“But of course we expected more,” Sharma told the BBC earlier Sunday.
India, the world’s third biggest emitter, has yet to follow China, the U.S. and the European Union in setting a target for reaching ‘net zero’ emissions. Negotiators are hoping India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi will announce such a goal in Glasgow.
Some of the issues being discussed during the talks have been on the agenda for decades, including how rich countries can help poor nations tackle emissions and adapt to a hotter world. The slow pace of action has angered many environmental campaigners, who are expected to stage loud and creative protests during the summit.
3 years ago