By: Jhesset O. Enano - 07:17 AM
December 06, 2018
KATOWICE, Poland — Civil society
organizations from all around the world formally launched on Tuesday the “People’s
Demands for Climate Justice” to urge countries, governments and private
business to keep coal and other fossil fuels in the ground.
The various campaign groups gathered
on the sidelines of the 24th Conference of the Parties (COP24) to the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) as they race against time to lay down the
implementation rules of the 2015 Paris Agreement.
The climate talks are being held in
the Silesian coal mining region of Poland, whose government recently issued a
declaration for “just transition” for its workers who would be affected by the
shift away from fossil fuel industries, such as coal mining.
Filipino activist Lidy Nacpil of the
Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Development said government representatives
must keep in mind that the climate talks should not just be about
technicalities.
Not just numbers
“The 1.5 degrees Celsius is not just
a number. For us in the Philippines, it is a matter of life and death,” she
told the Inquirer. “Sometimes they forget these are not just numbers they are
negotiating, but peoples’ lives and the future of our children.”
Without radical commitments and
actions to reduce carbon emissions to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees C —
one of the key components of the 2015 accord—the world may face stronger
storms, harsher droughts and coastal flooding as early as 2030, according to a
recent report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The activist groups called on
governments to phase out subsidies to the fossil fuel industry and pledge to
divest fully from fossil fuels by 2020.
They also rejected “false solutions”
to the climate crisis and demanded that rich countries honor their
climate finance obligations to developing countries, many of which are the most
vulnerable to climate-related risks.
Not aid, but obligation
Harjeet Singh, who leads climate
advocacy for ActionAid, said developed nations should remember that climate
finance is “not an aid, but an obligation.”
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