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CLIMATE SCIENCE
'People are dying': Teen activist urges new climate action at UN
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Sep 23, 2019

After protests, Greta Thunberg and others file UN complaint
United Nations (AFP) Sept 23, 2019 - After global street protests demanding action on climate change, Greta Thunberg and 15 other young activists on Monday filed a complaint at the UN against five countries for not doing enough to ward off global warming.

The complaint accused Germany, France, Brazil, Argentina and Turkey of failing to uphold their obligations under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, signed 30 years ago.

The complaint, filed by the 16-year-old Swedish activist and 15 other petitioners from 12 different countries and aged between eight and 17, accused the five countries of violating children's rights by failing to take adequate and timely action against climate change.

It was filed after Thunberg delivered a searing attack on world leaders for their slow response to climate change at a special session kicking off the UN General Assembly in New York.

Every member of the United Nations except the United States has ratified the convention to protect the health and rights of children.

Monday's complaint focuses on a little-known "optional protocol" that came into effect in 2014 that allows children to file a complaint to the Committee on the Rights of the Child if they feel their rights are being denied.

The committee is then meant to investigate the charges before making recommendations to the countries concerned on how they can fix the issue.

The 16 young people were backed by the legal firm Hausfeld LLP and Earthjustice, an environmental law group.

Lawyer Michael Hausfeld said that while the committee's recommendations are not legally binding, the 44 countries that ratified the protocol pledged to respect them. He said he hoped the recommendations would be made in the coming 12 months.

The five countries named in the complaint are among the 44 that ratified the protocol and are also among the top global polluters, as well as being members of the G20 group of leading global economies.

The largest polluters in the world -- the United States, China and India -- did not ratify the protocol.

Countries like France and Germany may have recently begun working to tackle greenhouse gas emissions, but have also played a large role historically in polluting the atmosphere, the law firm argued.

World leaders and environmental policy makers laid out the details of more ambitious carbon reduction plans at Monday's Climate Action Summit in New York City.

The leaders were implored to act -- and chastised for not acting sooner -- in a speech by 16-year-old climate activist Greta Thunberg.

"You are failing us," Thunberg told the politicians and policy makers assembled at UN headquarters. "But the young people are starting to understand your betrayal. The eyes of all future generations are upon you. And if you choose to fail us I say we will never forgive you."

"We will not let you get away with this," Thunberg said. "Right here, right now is where we draw the line. The world is waking up. And change is coming, whether you like it or not."

At least partially motivated by the uprising of youth activists around the world, leaders at Monday's summit agreed that more must be done, and quickly, to address the climate crisis.

Increasingly grave threat

At least 59 countries pledged to submit an enhanced climate action plan, according to a press release touting a more ambitious version of the Nationally Determined Contributions agreed to at the Paris climate agreement. At least 11 nations have already begun internal reviews to find ways to strengthen their plans.

Climate scientists claim the world's governments must work to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius to avoid the worst of climate change's impacts. But several studies suggest current efforts to curb emissions and slow warming are insufficient.

"The best science, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, tells us that any temperature rise above 1.5 degrees will lead to major and irreversible damage to the ecosystems that support us," United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said in a press release on Monday. "Science tells us that on our current path, we face at least 3-degrees Celsius of global heating by the end of the century. The climate emergency is a race we are losing, but it is a race we can win."

According to researchers at the United Nations, carbon emissions must be cut 45 percent by 2030 and the global economy needs to be carbon neutral by 2050 in order to limit warming.

New proposals to curb emissions

At Monday's summit, Chile's president Sebastián Piñera announced the Climate Ambition Alliance, which calls on member states to solidify carbon reduction plans by 2020 and detail steps each can take to collectively reduce emissions on par with UN recommendations.

French president Emmanuel Macron said France would not negotiate new trade deals with countries that don't abide by the Paris climate agreement.

New Zealand's prime minister Jacinda Ardern echoed Macron's call for the use of trade negotiations for encouraging emissions reductions. During her keynote speech, she called on nations to institute carbon taxes or emissions trading schemes in order to reduce CO2 emissions and encourage investment in renewable energy.

Several of the attendees at the Climate Action Summit detailed their nation's commitment to the Powering Past Coal Alliance, which calls on members to end the construction of new coal plants by 2020 and begin the transition to renewable energy sources.

One way to stop fossil fuel production, Guterres suggested, would be to stop subsidizing it.

"Is it common sense to give trillions in hard-earned taxpayers' money to the fossil fuel industry to boost hurricanes, spread tropical diseases, and heighten conflict?" he said in his speech. "Is it common sense to build ever more coal plants that are choking our future?"

Summit participants also discussed plans for financing the development of renewable energy technologies.

"The International Development Finance Club -- a leading group of 24 national and regional development banks from all over the world, with a majority active in emerging and developing countries -- is to announce for the first time a quantitative target of mobilizing $1 trillion by 2025, with at least $100 million for adaptation," according to the UN.

Nations at the summit also discussed efforts for conservation. Several studies, including one published by the UN, have highlighted the need to altering land use trends. Currently, too many forests are being cleared for agriculture and other types of human development.

Even if nations can come together to drastically reduce global emissions and slow climate change, global warming is likely to continue to impact many communities. Several of Monday's meetings involved discussions on how to build sustainable infrastructure and pool financial resources to protect vulnerable communities from the effects of global warming.

Greta implores leaders to act

In her speech, Thunberg reminded world leaders that the victims of global warming will be young people, especially women.

"You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words, and yet I'm one of the lucky ones," the 16-year-old activist from Sweden said. "People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing."

Thunberg also called on attendees not to assume her generation will be able to suck excess CO2 out of the air with "technologies that barely exist," and to commit to emissions reductions beyond 2030.

Cutting emissions in half over the next decade would only offer the world a 50 percent chance of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees, she said.

"A 50 percent risk is simply not acceptable to us -- we who have to live with the consequences," Thunberg said.

Greta and 15 other youth climate activists filed a lawsuit over the climate chance crisis against five countries on Monday. The lawsuit alleges the five countries -- Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, and Turkey -- violated their human rights by not acting address climate change. The lawsuit would force the countries to work toward more aggressive carbon emissions reduction goals.

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CLIMATE SCIENCE
From the streets to the summit: young climate leaders mobilize at UN
United Nations, United States (AFP) Sept 21, 2019
A day after youth-led global climate strikes, several hundred young activists including Greta Thunberg gathered for a climate summit at the United Nations on Saturday, chiding older generations for doing too little to curb carbon emissions. The UN has invited 500 young activists and entrepreneurs to take part in the New York meeting, the first of its kind, though some were unable to attend after being denied US visas, a point raised by the organizers. It comes days before a climate action summit ... read more

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