CYDaily Paris - The Home Stretch - Highlights from Day 11
- Details
- Published on Sunday, 13 December 2015 20:30
- Written by editor
Highlights from Thursday, December 10 - COP21 in Paris
• New Text Released!
• Atiya f*%king lays it down in
the Canadian Stakeholder Meeting
• Loss & Damage Media
Availability
• “Canada Is Back!” … winning Fossil
Awards
New Text = Same as the Old Text, Except
Weaker
New versions of the text continue to drop on the daily, and as bracketed options turn into finalized language, the level of ambition plummets. The new version of the text contains no specific emissions reduction goal, and mentions human rights in the operative text only in a general sense. Governments have committed to “pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 °C,” but this rings hollow as the agreement delays a goal of “reaching greenhouse gas emissions neutrality” to the “second half of the century.” Overall, there is a high level of rhetoric, but a low level of specific commitments to get there. That means that it is up to us, to our movements, to define what these hollow words mean.
Laying it down in the Canadian Stakeholder Meeting
This afternoon, when the CYD walked into the daily Canadian stakeholder’s meeting, we did so not knowing that it would be the last of COP21. CYD member Atiya stepped up to the plate and made it clear to the negotiators that as representatives of the youth movement - a generation inextricably tied to the climate crisis - we will keep fighting once back in Canada:
“These negotiations have been going on since I was a toddler. In that time, I have watched climate disaster after climate disaster. Just this year I have watched people in my hometown, where I was born, falling to the streets dead because of heat strokes in Pakistan. We watched wildfires burn through Canada [...]”
“We really think that the time to wait is over,” she continued. “We want to see ambition, we want to see it here in Paris. We are going to fight for justice in Paris, and we want you to know we’re going to continue to fight when we go home. We are going to be fighting in solidarity with indigenous peoples, in solidarity with those on the frontlines of the climate crisis.”
“Our expectations are high, but we know power comes from the people and we’re ready.”
Climate Justice Mobilizations Continue
Voices from the Global South and marginalized communities
continued to lead mobilizations today at a rally in the civil society
space. Their power continues to inspire us.
Canada
wins our SECOND Fossil of the Day
Canada’s running with a dangerous crowd these days. They
won a Fossil of the Day for the second day running because of their
bad behaviour alongside the EU and the rest of the Umbrella
Group.
While our first fossil was
won for derailing conversations on Loss and Damage (L+D), Canada won
its “Gold Medal” fossil on Thursday for our lack of leadership on
pre-2020 ambition. We know Canada’s nowhere near on track to meet our
2020 emissions reductions targets. We also know that Canada and the
world’s current pledged emission reductions through 2030 don’t get us
anywhere close to 2C, let alone 1.5.
We need Canada to step up its game - we’ve waiting for 21
years of these negotiations for real action, and we absolutely can’t
afford to stall for another 5 years.
In fact, we’ve been
negotiating since these guys:
looked like this:
The Fight to Save Loss and Damage
Loss and Damage is a mechanism
established at COP19 in Warsaw that would commit some parties to the
UNFCCC to provide funds for the costs of losses and damages incurred
from climate change such as natural disasters. The US and Canada have
acted to weaken L+D in the Paris Outcome, which means diminishing
support for those who are most vulnerable to climate change.
Canada has justified
their position on L+D saying that it would create new liabilities to
the Global South. Including L+D in the text will not do this and we
believe Canada should not fabricate legal arguments to oppose
including it when so many lives are on the line.
Today, the CYD
sprung into action, pulling together a coalition of experts and allies
who want L+D in the Paris Outcome. You
can read about it here. We are continuing to push the government
to support L+D in the negotiation's final crucial hours.
D12
Our team has been preparing
for D12 “Redlines”, a day of mobilization in Paris and beyond, that is
taking place tomorrow. If you’d like to learn more about the day of
action, or want to look through some very helpful resources on
preparing for civil disobedience and mass mobilizations, visit their
website here.
Media
Round-Up
-
Planet S Mag: “The Tongue That Roared”
-
National Observer: “Canada Wins ‘Fossil of the Day’ Award at COP21”


