TAKE A STAND!
Labor fights for ‘Just Transition’ at Paris climate conference
Here are links to his reports and photos from that conference:
► Battle for a ‘just transition’ engaged at Paris climate talks — (Dec. 4, 2015) — Today I leave to join the labor delegation to the 2015 Paris Climate Conference. The labor movement has a strong presence there and I look forward to learning a lot. I will summarize for you what I learn over the course of the next week. At the start, there is pitched battle over where in the document language on just transition, decent and quality jobs, and human rights will appear. Read more.
► In climate deal, banks must be accountable to civil society (Dec. 7, 2015) — At the Citizen’s Summit on Climate Change, speakers also put a vivid face on how the climate crisis is impacting people in the developing countries — the grinding poverty and migration to flee drought and starvation — particularly on women, children and the poor. But they also spoke of a strategy to leapfrog the fossil fuel economy in large parts of Africa and Asia, going directly to a renewable energy economy if we are successful in changing the funding priorities of the banks. Read more.
► “If the planet were a bank, they would have already saved it” (Dec. 9, 2015) — A rank-and-file member of a public sector union said this at an event I attended outside the COP 21 talks that featured Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn and author Naomi Klein. She couldn’t have been more on target. If there is any relevance to “too big to fail,” it ought to apply to our planet. Read more.
► [Ambiguity] on human rights, Just Transition in latest draft (Dec. 10, 2015) — As countries jockey for position over thorny issues, much of the text of the latest draft agreement remains ambiguous with many bracketed area around key areas of text [read: maybe it’s in there and maybe it isn’t]. This of course becomes a problem when the issues are human rights, gender equality, food security, Just Transition, and how do we measure and verify actual carbon reductions so that the planet doesn’t exceed temperature x. That’s right even that goal is [bracketed]. Read more.