Posts Tagged ‘feature’

Follow the Canadian Youth Delegation in Durban, South Africa

Saturday, November 19th, 2011

The Canadian Youth Delegation is a project of the CYCC, and acts as the voice of the Canadian youth climate movement at international United Nations climate conferences. Made up of twenty dedicated and inspiring young people from across the country, the delegation represents the demands of an entire generation working to create a just, safe, and livable future for all.

We are going to COP17 in Durban, South Africa for several reasons: to represent the youth climate movement in Canada, to hold our leaders accountable for their actions, to seek justice for those suffering the effects of climate change, and to seek solutions to one of the biggest challenges humanity has ever faced.  Not only are we a group traveling to South Africa for two weeks, but we are active community organizers working to empower our communities to fight for climate justice, to give more strength to the existing climate movement, and to act in solidarity with frontline communities in Canada and across the globe.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJE3FklFAzE&w=640&h=480]

The CYD is made up of three teams: Media and Communications, Action and Strategy, and Policy and Research. The media and communications team is in charge of connecting with existing media outlets, creating the CYDaily newsletter throughout the negotiations in Durban, producing the CYD podcast, and helping other CYD members deal with media interactions. The Action and Strategy team plans CYD actions focused around various climate issues, create strategic plans for the CYD, and help everyone stay aligned with this strategy.  The Policy team works to follow different policy streams in the negotiations, translate them into terms non-policy buffs can understand, and help the CYD create an official policy stance.

Click here to sign up for the CYDaily – the CYD’s newsletter produced daily in Durban throughout the negotiations, November 28-December 9.

Find out more about the roles of each team here.

All members of the CYD are also working to create a public discourse about climate change and climate justice. This includes delivering workshops about climate science, climate justice and real solutions to grade 5-12 classes across Canada, organizing community discussion groups around climate justice, and partnering with other climate-related organizations. The goal of these activities is to spur debate about what climate change means for Canadians, to broaden the diversity of the youth climate movement, and to increase the capacity of the CYCC.

It is crucial to acknowledge that we will not be able to stop climate change in the halls of any international meeting until we create a mass, self-empowering, grassroots movement that is demanding and creating a more just world. We need as many people as possible organizing and taking action at home; find out how you can get involved here.

Join Operation Oil Change

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Hold Canada and Other Big Polluters Accountable in Durban and Back Home in Canada

Over the past three years, it has become increasingly clear that the government of Canada has placed the interests of polluters ahead of those of the people. It is time for a change. Our leaders must stop acting as lobbyists for Canada’s dirty energy industry and instead become champions for a just and sustainable future.

This is why youth across Canada have joined together to launch Operation Oil Change, a campaign to call on our government to put people ahead of big polluters. We will deploy Oil Change Agents, in Canada and in South Africa to push Canada at the next round of the UN Climate Negotiations.

Our Domestic Task Force and our Oil Change Agents in Durban will use a variety of tactics combining our skills in policy, communication and non-violent action to put pressure on Canada’s representatives in Durban to commit to a fair, ambitious and binding international climate treaty.

If you are interested in becoming a member of our domestic task force, sign up below.


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YOUTH TAKE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA TO SCHOOL ON CLIMATE CHANGE EDUCATION

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Hoax highlights climate inaction, launches youth led education project

Ottawa, Ont. – September 14 2011 — A group of concerned youth successfully impersonated representatives of Environment Canada this morning by announcing the relaunch of a discontinued climate change education program. What a Difference a Degree Makes, a module delivered to elementary school students during the 1990′s, focused on topics of climate change science and human impacts. Through this hoax the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition has highlighted the Canadian Government’s deliberate neglect of its responsibility to educate Canadians about climate change.

“Our government does not take climate change and its consequences on our generation seriously,” said Malkolm Boothroyd of the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition. “Programs like What a Difference a Degree Makes show that the Government of Canada used to take the climate crisis seriously, but shifting priorities have placed the interests of polluters above those of current and future generations.”

The Canadian Youth Climate Coalition created a look-a-like Environment Canada website which announced the reintroduction of What a Difference a Degree Makes, which was accompanied by press releases distributed to thousands of Canadian journalists. Following this announcement, a number of prominent environmental organizations publicly congratulated Environment Canada on this unexpected yet welcomed change of heart. Eventually, Environment Canada was forced to deny responsibility for re-releasing the desperately needed climate change curriculum. Organizers were deeply concerned that the Government of Canada considered the release of a climate change education program “erroneous information”.

“We are excited to take matters into our own hands and launch our own climate change education program, Wings of Change,” added Amara Possian of the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition. “We’ve been preparing for over a year and over the next eight months, we will be visiting classrooms across Canada, taking on the task of educating thousands of youth about the causes, impacts and solutions to climate change.”

Wings of Change will encourage young people to engage politically and provide them with the opportunity to be part of the larger climate movement. This project combines principles of pageantry, theatre and collective artistic expression to deliver messages directly from young people to the halls of political power. Learn more at www.cyd-djc.org

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For Comment:

Amara Possian
613-850-7584

647-825-8804 (alternate number)

amara@ourclimate.ca

The Wings of Change

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

Climate change is not just an environmental issue. When farmers’ crops fail from unnatural droughts, this is a livelihood issue. When our grandparents die from heat waves, this is a health issue. When the animals people traditionally hunt are no longer there, this is a survival issue. When children can no longer play hockey on outdoor rinks, this is a cultural issue. When job opportunities disappear because industry refused to adapt to a changing world, this is an economic issue. It is our future at stake.

It is astounding that while climate change is disrupting the way we live our lives and will only continue to become worse, the government is doing next to nothing to educate students in public school about the causes, impacts, and solutions to climate change. As a result of this gap in Canada’s public school curriculum, we’re taking matters into our own hands. We have created a workshop called The Wings of Change to help tie climate change and climate justice into classroom discussions across the country.

This interactive, skills-based workshop links the hard science of climate change to practical, community based alternatives and strategies for collective action.  At the end of the workshops, participants will be asked to use words and pictures to represent the kind of Canada that they want to be living in 20 years from now.  Their plans for a more sustainable Canada will be recorded on pieces of cloth that will become the feathers of giant bird puppets who will converge on Parliament Hill carrying messages from thousands of young people across the country.

The workshop is unique in that it moves beyond simply informing young people about the issues by encouraging participants to find their political voices and providing them with the opportunity to be part of a larger movement.  It combines principles of pageantry, theatre and collective artistic expression to deliver messages directly from young people to decision makers.  Importantly, the project itself models the type of action that young people can take to challenge existing paradigms.

This project combines principles of pageantry, theatre and collective artistic expression to deliver messages directly from young people to the halls of political power.

Our Demands – Nos Demandes

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

Our Demands

We are young people from across Canada, asking you to listen.

As the arctic is melting before our eyes andas small island nations disappear beneath rising sea levels, we see our government failing to act on the greatest crisis of our time. We are crossing the tipping point, knowing that this is the world that we are inheriting, but we refuse to pass this crisis on to our children.

This is a call to action.

We know that the enormous challenges we currently face are also powerful opportunities, and that the solutions to the climate and energy crisis can also pave the way to recovery from our current economic crisis, through the creation of jobs, a renewed investment in arts, culture and education, and a shift towards an economic and political system that reflects the needs of our generation. Our country must take this chance, protecting all Mother Earth and getting to work on building healthy, fair and sustainable communities.

Our demands are simple:

1. Justice across generations
Young people today, and future generations, have the right to live on a healthy planet that is free from the dangerous impacts of climate change.

2. Justice between people of the same generation
Climate change is disproportionately harming the health and livelihoods of those least able to influence decisions made at national and international levels. Efforts to tackle climate change must take into account the needs of those at greatest risk, such as Indigenous peoples, women, people of colour, workers and communities across the Global South, and to do this effectively, decision-makers need to start listening to their voices. Such efforts must  address the injustices we see across the world today, not enhance existing inequalities.  Everyone deserves a healthy community and environment in which they can live safely.

3. Youth participation and deliberation in government decision-making
As youth, we are inheriting the legacies of past generations. The impacts of climate change and the responsibility for mitigating them will fall squarely on our shoulders. Policies on climate change mitigation and adaptation will have long-lasting impacts on the lives of young people and we must be actively involved in shaping them.

4. Just transition to a Green Economy
Communities – urban and rural, Indigenous peoples, and workers must not be forced to choose between making a living and preserving the planet. As more and more youth struggle to find meaningful employment and pay down mounting debt, we expect an immediate strategy for a just and timely transition towards meaningful, green jobs for all.

5. Energy for today, tomorrow and the future
Fossil fuel extraction is feeding the system of production and consumption that in turn fuels climate change. Justice across and between generations, on the other hand, requires an immediate plan to transition to a zero carbon economy.  As a nation with a large supply of oil and gas reserves, it is our responsibility to become a leader in transitioning away from fossil fuels in order to become a leader in renewable energy production.

Youth in Canada are already building the solutions we need, from local food production and sustainable transportation, to a green and just economy that provides stable employment for people of all generations while addressing the moral and legal obligations to reduce our emissions, reduce waste, limit our consumption of energy and work together to create real solutions to the climate crisis.

What’s missing? Your support.

Join us.

Download a copy of the demands

Sign onto the demands!

Part of an organization that wants to sign on? Email us at info@ourclimate.ca

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Nous sommes des jeunes de partout au Canada, qui vous demandent de nous écouter.

Avec l’Arctique qui fond devant nos yeux et les petits pays insulaires qui disparaissent avec la hausse du niveau de la mer, nous voyons que notre gouvernement tarde à agir pour lutter contre la crise la plus importante de notre temps: les changements climatiques. Nous traversons un point de non non-retour et nous savons que ceci est le monde dont nous hériterons. Nous refusons de transmettre cette crise à nos enfants.
Ceci est un appel à l’action véritable.

Nous savons que les énormes défis auxquels nous sommes confrontés représentent aussi des opportunités. Les solutions aux crises climatiques et énergétiques peuvent ouvrir une voie vers la reprise de notre économie à travers la création d’emplois, le réinvestissement dans les arts, la culture et l’éducation, l’évolution vers un système économique et politique qui reflète les besoins de notre jeune génération et l’édification de collectivités saines, équitables et durables.

Nos demandes sont simples :

1. La justice intergénérationnelle :
Les jeunes d’aujourd’hui et ceux des générations futures ont le droit de vivre sur une planète saine et qui ne nous expose à des conditions aussi néfastes.

2. La justice pour les gens d’une même génération :
Les changements climatiques affectent énormément la santé et le niveau de vie des personnes qui sont le moins en mesure d’influencer les décisions prises au niveau national et international. Les efforts qui visent à lutter contre les impacts des changements climatiques doivent tenir compte des besoins des personnes les plus affectées qui font face aux risques directement comme les peuples autochtones, les femmes, les minorités visibles, les travailleurs et travailleuses et leurs communautés des pays en voie de développement. Les personnes les mieux placées pour prendre des décisions doivent commencer à écouter les voix de ceux dans le besoin afin d’agir de façon efficace.  Ces efforts doivent contribuer à lutter contre les injustices qui sévissent aujourd’hui à travers le monde plutôt que de renforcer ces inégalités. Toutes les communautés devraient avoir droit à un environnement sain et viable.

3. La participation et la consultation des jeunes dans les prises de décisions au sein du gouvernement :
En tant que jeunes, nous héritons des erreurs commises par les générations précédentes.  La responsabilité d’atténuer les impacts des changements climatiques sera directement remise entre nos mains. Les politiques sur la mitigation et l’adaptation aux changements climatiques auront des impacts à long-terme sur la vie des jeunes. Nous devrions donc être impliqués activement dans les décisions et l’implantation de ces politiques.

4. Une transition juste vers une économie verte :
Toutes communautés et tous travailleurs ne devraient pas être contraints à choisir entre gagner sa vie et sacrifier la planète. Puisque de plus en plus de jeunes ont de la difficulté à se trouver des emplois significatifs tout en essayant de rembourser d’importantes dettes, nous nous attendons à ce qu’il y ait une stratégie immédiate pour une transition juste vers des opportunités d’emplois verts pour tous.

5. De l’énergie pour aujourd’hui, demain et le futur :
L’extraction des combustibles fossiles alimente les systèmes de production et de consommation d’énergies qui à leur tour sont responsables des changements climatiques. Une justice maintenant et pour tous, demande cependant un plan de transition immédiat vers une économie neutre en émissions de carbone. En tant que nation avec de grandes quantités de réserves de pétrole et gaz naturel, il est de notre devoir de devenir un leader dans la transition des fossiles combustibles et d’être un leader dans la production d’énergies renouvelables.

Les jeunes du Canada ont déjà commencé à élaborer des solutions dont nous avons besoin : une production alimentaire locale, des transports durables, une économie verte et juste qui offre des emplois stables pour les personnes de toutes les générations et ce, tout en répondant aux obligations morales et juridiques de réduire nos émissions de gaz à effets de serre et en s’adressant à la crise climatique.

Alors, qu’est-ce qu’il nous manque? Votre support.

Joignez-vous à nous.