Are we at the tipping point for climate action?
In 2016, when we started our
campaign
calling on the Australian parliament to declare a climate emergency, we
had no idea how far and how fast the idea would spread. Within a year
we had the
support of 20,000 individuals and 55 groups. Scientists, journalists and politicians from across the political spectrum had
spoken out.
In 2017,
Darebin Council
became the first council in the world to declare a climate emergency.
They wrote a Climate Emergency Plan and in 2018 held a Climate Emergency
Conference.
The Climate Mobilization in the United States and the
Extinction Rebellion campaign in the United Kingdom have been putting pressure on local municipalities to
follow in Darebin's footsteps and they
are making fast progress.
Recently,
London
became the third city in the UK to declare a Climate Emergency, after
Bristol and Manchester, with Totnes and Stroud following soon after. The
London emergency transition program will include retrofitting
buildings, creating a national electricity system that runs without
creating greenhouse gas emissions, and electrifying the transportation
system.
There are now
21 councils and cities
that have declared a climate emergency and eight of these declarations
were in the last two weeks! In the United States, The Climate
Mobilization succeeded in having emergency climate action and a World
War two-scale mobilisation written into the
platform of the Democratic Party. Newly elected Democrats including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (in the picture) are pushing hard for a
Green New Deal.
Please donate
In mid 2018, we launched a booklet, '
Don't mention the emergency?'
and we have now distributed over 1000 copies to politicians,
scientists, journalists and community campaigners. It explains how to
talk about the climate science and the need for emergency action in ways
that move people to take action.
Campaigns all around the world are using the
online
version and we are starting to hear more use of emergency language from
leaders and commentators. The picture below shows school students
delivering a copy to local Labor candidate Kate Thwaites.
We
need your help to print more booklets in time to distribute them to
politicians and opinion leaders before the federal election in 2019.
Please donate
here
to help the emergency message reach more of those who need to hear it.
We need $3000 to print another 700 copies. Listen to the author of the
booklet, Jane Morton, explain our need for your help
here.
School Strike for Climate
One person can make a difference. In August 2018, 15 year old Greta Thunberg (pictured below) began a
school strike calling on the Swedish Parliament for emergency climate action. She
says,
"I have Asperger's syndrome, and to me, almost everything is black or
white. I think in many ways that we autistic are the normal ones and the
rest of the people are pretty strange. They keep saying that climate
change is an existential threat and the most important issue of all. And
yet they just carry on like before. If the emissions have to stop then
we must stop the emissions. To me, that is black or white. There are no
grey areas when it comes to survival. Either we go on as a civilization
or we don’t. We have to change."
Within
months school students in many countries around the world were
following Greta's example. In Australia, tens of thousands of school
students took to the streets on
30 November, defying Prime Minister
Scott Morrison's call for
"more learning in schools and less activism".
What an amazing and uplifting sight it was to see students out in
force. Students fully understand how serious the problem is and that
time is running out to preserve a safe climate. The students' strike,
and its widespread media coverage, has been a great morale boost for
climate activists. It has put the climate emergency front and centre of
the coming Australian federal election.
The Extinction Rebellion is spreading
While school students are striking, their parents and grandparents
are signing up to risk arrest as part of the Extinction Rebellion (XR).
This movement recognises the climate emergency as an
existential threat
to humans as well as vulnerable ecosystems. Even if all nations honour
their Paris emissions reduction commitments, we are still on track for
three to five degrees Celsius
of warming by the end of the century, and at those temperatures, most
people on earth would die. That's why we need to "rebel for life".
On 31 October,
Greta Thunberg
and journalist, George Monbiot were in London with thousands of
campaigners calling on the UK parliament to declare a climate emergency.
When the government failed to act by the deadline, the Extinction
Rebellion began a series of escalating
acts
of disruptive civil disobedience, commencing with a protest that closed
down much of the centre of London for several hours on
17 November. They have also staged sit-ins at
the BBC and government offices and
glued their hands to office windows to put pressure on the government to act. They have the support of
hundreds of eminent people including a former archbishop.
There are over 35 countries working on launching their own rebellions
in mid-April 2019. If you would like updates from the international
campaign, sign up
here. If you are interested in being part of the Australian rebellion, sign up
here.
New data base
We hope you like our new format newsletter and are happy to continue
receiving occasional updates from the Australian campaign to declare a
climate emergency. If you received this after unsubscribing, our very
sincere apologies. We have recently consolidated a number of Excel
spreadsheets into this Action Network data base. From now on we will be
able to keep better track of those who subscribe and unsubscribe.
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