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Nations urged to prioritise quality climate education
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SME Times News Bureau | 03 Jun, 2021
Education ministers from across the globe are being
urged to prioritise quality climate education as a major outcome at the
next UN Climate Conference when they meet in Italy as part of the Group
of 20 (G20) round of meetings.
An international alliance of
labour and teachers' unions, green groups, youth and parents'
organisations, research institutes, and international organisations
issued a statement on Thursday underlining the importance of climate
literate citizens in combating climate change.
The groups
involved, representing millions of people across the globe, also see
quality climate education linked to strong civic engagement as key to
better decision-making by governments, green jobs, and building a new,
stronger, and more sustainable 21st century economy.
The Joint
Civil Society Statement on Climate Education Ambition, focusing on the
G20 meeting in Sicily on June 22, argues technological shifts and
innovations in areas such as clean energy and electric mobility will be
crucial towards achieving the goals of the landmark Paris Climate
Change Agreement.
But it also states that without the behavioral
change made possible through climate and environmental literacy, the
long-term goal of 'net zero' by 2050, to which increasing numbers of
nations aspire as the safety line, will be tough to realise, if not
impossible.
Research suggests that individual behavior changes
around food and waste, agriculture, transport, and heating can reduce
20-37 per cent of emissions -- this is vital for the world to keep
climate change in check and within science-based safety limits, the
statement argues.
Rebecca Winthrop, Co-Director of the Center for
Universal Education at the Brookings Institution, said: "Early studies
also suggest that students who learn about climate action influence not
just their own choices, but their families' and communities' as well.
Education systems should urgently empower young people with the
knowledge, skills, and mindset to act on climate in their families and
communities."
Kathleen Rogers, President of EARTHDAY.ORG, said:
"We wanted to issue this collective statement to let the Italian G20
Presidency and the G20 Education Ministers know that a strong outcome on
climate education would have strong backing worldwide -- citizens,
labour, teachers, youth, parents, development organizations, academics,
and green groups are right behind them."
Since its official
launch in September 2020, EARTHDAY.ORG's Climate and Environmental
Literacy Campaign now has over 550 signatories from organizations in
over 100 countries representing hundreds of millions of professionals
from the environmental, education, faith, justice, and labour sectors.
David
Edwards, General Secretary of Education International, which represents
nearly 33 million unionised teachers in close to 180 countries, said:
"2021 needs to be the year where climate education moves from being a
nice to have to being a core in every child's educational life. It also
needs to be the year when governments agree that teachers are supported
to deliver this."
"It is fitting that the crucial meeting of G20
Education ministers is happening under the presidency of Italy, one
country that has already announced its commitment and its understanding
of the urgent need for quality, compulsory, climate education," he
added.
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