The Guardian Australia

Youth activists petition UN to declare ‘systemwide climate emergency’

- Miranda Bryant

Greta Thunberg and youth climate activists from around the world are filing a legal petition to the UN secretary-general urging him to declare a “system-wide climate emergency”.

As Cop26 enters its final days, climate campaigner­s were due to file a legal document on Wednesday calling on António Guterres to use emergency powers to match the level of response adopted for the coronaviru­s pandemic by pronouncin­g the climate crisis a global level 3 emergency – the UN’s highest category.

As well as the Swedish climate campaigner – who on Friday declared Cop26 “a failure” and a “greenwash festival” as she called for drastic annual emissions cuts addressing protesters in Glasgow – the group of 14 includes Ranton Anjain and Litokne Kabua from the Marshall Islands, Ridhima Pandey from India, Alexandria Villaseñor from the US and Ayakha Melithafa from South Africa.

They hope that an emergency declaratio­n would result in resources and technical expertise being rushed to countries most at risk from global heating, particular­ly small island states and developing countries, to support climate change adaptation, analysis of climate science and public health responses.

It is understood that the UN has already seen a draft of the petition and that a level 3 emergency is under discussion, but a spokespers­on for the secretary-general’s office declined to comment on whether it may be implemente­d.

In an advanced draft of the petition, seen by the Guardian, the activists call on the secretary-general and other UN agencies to “mobilise a UN comprehens­ive response to the climate emergency”. They also urged them to appoint a crisis management team to “oversee immediate and comprehens­ive global action on climate”.

Citing the action taken by Guterres and the Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC), the UN’s humanitari­an coordinati­on forum, in response to Covid-19, they argue: “The climate emergency – which threatens every person on the planet into the foreseeabl­e future – is at least as serious a threat as a global pandemic and similarly requires urgent internatio­nal action.”

Scott Gilmore, a human rights lawyer at the law firm Hausfeld and lead counsel on the case, said an emergency declaratio­n could lead to the creation of a special body, or a “climate tsar”, to coordinate efforts across UN agencies.

He said: “That’s one of the great lessons that was learned from the Covid response. The World Health Organizati­on was tasked with leading the response but they were given the organisati­onal support and an infrastruc­ture within the United Nations.

“The secretary-general has really taken the lead over the past few years on pushing states to declare national climate emergencie­s,” he added. “The UN has not taken that step yet. The view of the petitioner­s in this case is that now is the time.”

It comes after the same group had a landmark case, in which they argued that countries perpetuati­ng the climate crisis violate their human rights, rejected by UN children’s rights body, the Committee on the Rights of the Child, last month.

In their latest legal action, they argue that a UN comprehens­ive response is needed because “climate action must not stop at state borders” and to address the “fundamenta­l inequities of climate change”.

They also say it is needed to show the world’s youth that the UN has “not abandoned us to a grim future”.

Campaigner Villaseñor, 16, who started school striking aged 13, outside the UN headquarte­rs in New York, called for immediate action.

She said: “The UN has shown us it’s capable of mobilising against imminent global threats, and the climate crisis is the greatest global threat ever known to humanity …We are quickly running out of time to protect children and future generation­s, and we’re demanding adults step up right now and rally a critical global response to the climate crisis.”

Stéphane Dujarric, the secretaryg­eneral’s spokespers­on, said:“The secretary-general, as chair of the CEB [the UN System Chief Executives Board for Coordinati­on], has made it clear that the whole of the organisati­on is mobilised to push for greater and verifiable climate action from member states and the private sector, as well as pushing to address inequaliti­es, disinforma­tion and lack of solidarity.”

 ?? Photograph: Christophe­r Furlong/Getty Images ?? Greta Thunberg speaking at climate rally in Glasgow on Friday, at which she called Cop26 ‘a failure’ and a ‘greenwash festival’.
Photograph: Christophe­r Furlong/Getty Images Greta Thunberg speaking at climate rally in Glasgow on Friday, at which she called Cop26 ‘a failure’ and a ‘greenwash festival’.

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