Polish school children call
for climate action
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| School children staged a"climate strike" on Dec.4, 2018, during the COP24 UN Climate Change Conference 2018 in Katowice, Poland. |
As the close of the UN’s COP24 summit on climate change in Katowice,
Poland, was extended by 2 more days until Sunday, more than 30 school students
staged a "climate strike" near the venue on Dec. 14 to pressure
politicians into greater action in fighting climate change.
By Robin Gomes
Polish teenagers staged an event on Friday at the venue of
United Nations climate conference urging the negotiators on the last day of the
talks to reach an agreement on ways of fighting global warming.
More than 30 school students from Katowice, the Polish city
where the COP24 talks are being held, December 2-14, responded to a call by
15-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg for a "climate
strike" to pressure politicians into greater action in fighting climate
change.
COP24 is the informal name for the 24th Conference of the
Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC). Negotiators from almost 200 countries at the Katowice summit
were trying to finalize the rules that parties to the 2015 Paris climate accord
need to follow, including how they transparently report their emissions of
greenhouse gases and efforts to reduce them.
The school students sang Michael Jackson's "Earth
Song" and "They Don't Care About Us" near the venue where
negotiators were holding talks for almost two weeks, aware that the clock was
ticking to reach a deal.
Hopeful deal in sight
Preparing for more lengthy debate, organizers extended the
close of the meeting by two days, until Sunday. Some of the key issues at the
talks remain unresolved, but European diplomats and campaigners expressed hope
that an agreement was in sight.
"We are heading for the final stretch," said
Germany's environment minister, Svenja Schulze. "There's still some
dissatisfaction. It's not the case that we can say everything is concluded. But
it looks good. I believe that we will be successful in the end."
Scientists say emissions need to drop dramatically by 2030
and reach near-zero by 2050 in order to prevent average global temperatures
from rising above 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) by the end of the
century compared to pre-industrial times.
The current draft text presented overnight by the Polish
diplomat chairing the talks avoids "welcoming" the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change's report on the 1.5-degree target — a possible concession
to United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, who had blocked the
endorsement of the study Saturday, angering other countries and
environmentalists.
A recent scientific report found that capping global warming
at that level would prevent many potentially catastrophic consequences for life
on Earth.
UN chief warns
Earlier on Wednesday, UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres
challenged the COP24 negotiators to find consensus and “finish the job,”
warning that climate change was running faster than the negotiators to reverse
the trend.
“To waste this opportunity in Katowice would compromise our
last best chance to stop runaway climate change. It would not only be
immoral, it would be suicidal,” Guterres warned.
He acknowledged that making some tough political decisions
was not easy but urged a compromise saying sacrifices will “benefit us all
collectively”.

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