Climate change fires young minds
By Jeff Coelho
NEW YORK (Reuters) – When politicians from around the world
meet next week to talk about climate change, young people who
will have to live with the consequences of their action or
inaction will be nearby, ready to speak out.
From as far afield as China, India and Brazil, young people
will travel to Montreal, Canada to take part in the Beyond
Kyoto – It’s us! International Youth Summit — being held just
down the road from the United Nations talks on climate change.
“There is no issue that I think more threatens the future
of our generation than global warming,” said Billy Parish, 24,
coordinator of Energy Action, a coalition of 30 environmental
and social justice organizations in North America.
Parish, who left university to dedicate his time to the
environment, will help the international youth team, made up of
around 100 young people from 26 countries, to draft a statement
to the UN conference.
“I think there will be a strong call for immediate action,”
he said. “It will make the point that we are the people who
will live with the consequences of the decisions that they
make.”
Energy Action has also set up a Web site,
www.itsgettinghotinhere.org, where young delegates will post
blogs, video and pictures from Montreal.
During the Cold War, worries about nuclear weapons often
drove young people into politics in Western nations. With the
collapse of the Soviet Union, climate change has replaced fears
about “the bomb” to become a major concern for young people.
He Gang, 24, a student at Peking University in China, does
not remember much about the anti-nuclear demonstrations during
the Cold War, but he will be in Montreal to act on what many of
his peers see as their generation’s big threat.
Unlike the danger of swift destruction from a nuclear bomb,
today’s risk is a slow-burning one.
“That doesn’t mean we can wait for action just as you
cannot wait to stop smoking when you already have cancer,” the
Chinese student said.
“I do get a sense of urgency that something needs to be
done,” he told Reuters via e-mail. “I hope I can become a
‘messenger’ on climate change for Chinese youth.”
CALL FOR ACTION
Many scientists say a buildup of greenhouse gases from
burning fossil fuels could have catastrophic effects on the
climate by raising temperatures, spurring more hurricanes,
spreading deserts and raising sea levels.
The delegates from around 190 countries meeting in Montreal
will be looking to expand a U.N.-led fight against global
warming to include developing nations such as China and India
and outsiders, led by the United States and Australia.
Under the UN’s Kyoto Protocol, about 40 rich nations have
agreed to curb emissions of heat-trapping gases released by
burning fossil fuels in power plants, factories and cars by 5.2
percent below 1990 levels by 2008-12.
Young campaigners say the big challenge is to get the
United States, the top consumer of emission-polluting energy,
to commit to binding targets while allowing poorer countries to
expand their economies without making initial sacrifices.
In 2001, President George W. Bush rejected the Kyoto pact,
saying it wrongly excluded developing countries before 2012 and
would harm the U.S. economy.
Bush, who prefers voluntary agreements, is working with
Australia and four Asian nations including China on ways to
curb greenhouse emissions without hurting economic development.
But environmental youth groups, and some U.S. city and
state governments, have distanced themselves from Bush’s plans,
saying the most effective way to cut emissions is to set hard
targets.
“Legally binding agreements are a more effective way to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” Kavita Singh, 25, who will
represent Indian youth in Montreal, said in an e-mail response
to Reuters’ questions.
Singh fears that without decisive political action, further
disruptions in the climate will cause “mass loss of human life,
the spread or exacerbation of diseases, dislocation of entire
populations, geopolitical instability and a disastrous decrease
in the quality of human life.”
PICTURE THIS
Nathan Wyeth, a 20-year-old student in New York, is not
waiting for politicians. He is acting himself.
On a recent sunny Saturday afternoon, Wyeth was indoors
explaining the benefits of clean energy to a classroom of
people who were mostly older than him.
Wyeth, who is the conservation director of the Sierra
Student Coalition, said politicians must set aside their
ideological differences and embrace existing technology like
wind power and solar energy to replace oil and coal.
Wyeth said that if countries delay in taking action on
climate change “the cost … is going to be far greater.”
Should the official delegates to Montreal be tempted to
forget the views of people like Wyeth, there will be a reminder
in the welcome packs they receive on arrival: a drawing by a
schoolchild showing ways to protect the planet.
“The delegates will have their own personalized drawing by
a child that obviously shows that the child is aware that
climate change is going on and that they are concerned,” said
Claire Stockwell, project coordinator for the youth summit who
also works for Quebec-based youth group Environment Jeunesse.
The 3,000 drawings were prepared by children in countries
like Burkina Faso, Mexico, Brazil and China.
“The dangers of not acting are becoming increasingly
apparent for our health, our environment, our security and our
prosperity,” said Wyeth.
