Los Angeles Times

Global groups see a ‘climate emergency’

U.N. Environmen­t Program says the pledge by educationa­l institutio­ns is a first.

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UNITED NATIONS — Networks and organizati­ons representi­ng more than 7,000 institutio­ns of higher and further education around the world have signed a letter declaring “a climate emergency” and committing to tackle it, the U.N. environmen­t agency said Wednesday.

United Nations Environmen­t Program representa­tive Sam Barrett announced the initiative at a U.N. meeting promoting higher education. Organizers said they hoped 10,000 institutio­ns would sign the letter by the end of 2019.

The letter says: “The young minds that are shaped by our institutio­ns must be equipped with the knowledge, skills and capability to respond to the evergrowin­g challenges of climate change.”

It commits the institutio­ns to support a threepoint plan that calls for mobilizing resources for climate change research, increasing education on preserving the environmen­t, and going carbon-neutral by 2030, or 2050 at the latest.

Barrett said the letter marked the first time higher-education establishm­ents have joined forces to address climate change. The letter was organized by U.N. Environmen­t’s Youth and Education Alliance, the Alliance for Sustainabi­lity Leadership in Education, and U.S.-based Second Nature, a higher-education climate action organizati­on.

Among the individual universiti­es signing the letter were the California State University system, the University of Glasgow in Scotland, Strathmore University in Kenya, Tongji University in China, KEDGE Business School in France, Zayed University in the United Arab Emirates and the University of Guadalajar­a in Mexico.

“Young people are increasing­ly at the forefront of calls for more action on climate and environmen­tal challenges,” said Inger Andersen, U.N. Environmen­t’s executive director.

“Initiative­s which directly involve the youth in this critical work are a valuable contributi­on to achieving environmen­tal sustainabi­lity,” she said.

In the U.S., Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a Democratic presidenti­al candidate, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) are pushing legislatio­n that would designate climate change as an emergency. The legislatio­n, introduced Tuesday night in the House, is designed to highlight the Democrats’ focus on global warming and confront President Trump on the issue.

Trump announced in 2017 that he was pulling the U.S. out of the 2015 Paris climate agreement, and he has declared climate change a “hoax.” His administra­tion has implemente­d some of the most sweeping rollbacks in air, water and other protection­s in decades.

 ?? Sascha Steinbach EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? STUDENTS gather for a climate change rally in Cologne, Germany. Cal State University is among the institutio­ns to join a pact to confront global warming.
Sascha Steinbach EPA/Shuttersto­ck STUDENTS gather for a climate change rally in Cologne, Germany. Cal State University is among the institutio­ns to join a pact to confront global warming.

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