鈥婰ess than a month after traveling to United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Scotland鈥攕tudents and 艾可直播who attended as part of the University鈥檚 first accredited delegation are sharing their experiences with the 艾可直播 College community.
They are also working on steps they can take, be it through their scholarship or personal lives, to work at reducing the environmental and climatological harm done by a range of human activities across the globe.
鈥淚t was electric and amazing,鈥 said Environmental Studies Program Director Tara Pisani Gareau of the atmosphere among the roughly 38,000 delegates attending COP26 (Congress of the Parties). 鈥淵ou were surrounded by people from so many different countries and cultures and striking up conversations with people from every part of the world.鈥
The granting of observer status, secured through efforts of 艾可直播led by BC Law School Professor David Wirth鈥攚ho did not travel to COP26 himself鈥攐ffered a unique opportunity to the delegation to attend events organized around the negotiations among parties to the United Nations climate pact. The selection also reflected BC鈥檚 academic and research strengths on the issue of climate science and policy.
Gareau, one of eight 艾可直播members in the BC delegation, attended the first week of the summit, where officials negotiated a global pact to fulfill carbon-cutting pledges that grew out of the Paris Agreement, reached at the 21st COP in 2015.
Since returning from Scotland, Gareau and the five students who attended as part of the delegation have participated in several speaking programs, including a virtual presentation to students at 艾可直播 Green Academy and a visit to a BC class titled Climate Storytelling.
Students will be part of a panel discussion on January 24 at noon in BC鈥檚 new integrated science building at 245 Beacon St., Gareau said. Delegation members are also working out a schedule for additional programs as part of an ongoing series of conversations about 艾可直播research on climate science, she said.
Gareau also hosted a visit by one of the many people she met at COP26, Gopal Patel, the founder of the nonprofit Bhumi Global, which works to encourage Hindus to take environmental action, and a co-chair of the UN鈥檚 multi-faith advisory council. There are plans to bring Patel back for a campus talk next spring.
Visiting Associate Professor of Computer Science Rafael Ubal Tena documented his experience at COP26 on video, with interviews and reporting from the events.
鈥淚 made it my mission about two years ago to educate students on this matter, both through YouTube videos and in person, in spite of my area of expertise [computer science] being seemingly unrelated,鈥 said Ubal. 鈥淥ur ecological degradation is a topic that should be present in every field and space. Attending the COP raised a lot of curiosity and interest among my students.鈥
Associate Professor of the Practice of Philosophy David Storey recorded interviews with attendees to examine a range of issues surrounding climate change. He expects the experience to shape his teaching and research.
鈥淚 work on climate change ethics, and one thing that COP26 drove home for me is that energy is everything,鈥 said Storey. 鈥淒uring a panel on the potential of green hydrogen, Tara and I started talking about the ethical issues around not just fossil fuel energy but 鈥榗lean鈥 and 鈥榞reen鈥 energy, such as the mining of cobalt, a key resource for lithium-ion batteries, in the Congo. So, I decided that next year, I will teach a course on energy justice, and pursue research on the ethical dimensions of energy politics and policy.鈥
In addition to Gareau, Ubal, and Storey, the delegation included Professor of Philosophy Patrick Byrne, Professor of Political Science David Deese, School of Theology and Ministry Professor Mary Jo Iozzio, School of Social Work Assistant Professor Praveen Kumar, Rappaport Center for Law and Public Policy staff member Cindy Nguyen, International Studies Program Director Erik Owens, and Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society Visiting Professor Kurt Straif. 听
BC delegates said the experience exposed the massive challenges to creating coordinated global action, yet also offered a glimpse of the grassroots activism needed to make serious progress.
鈥淢y biggest takeaway was, though this conference is extremely important and there are very important things being decided, the way these lessons get translated into action is through individuals,鈥 said Ginny Alex, a senior in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development. 鈥淩egulations are essential, but people who are passionate to teach, act, and create change are equally important to reaching our climate goals.鈥
The event put the delegates at a crossroads of the world, assembled in the exhibition halls for panels, speeches, and conversation. BC delegates encountered former Secretary of State and current Biden administration climate official John F. Kerry J.D. 鈥76, U.S. Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) 鈥68, J.D. 鈥72, former EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy鈥攏ow the White House national climate advisor鈥攁nd Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
Delegates said personal encounters struck a chord. Gareau met the finance minister of Jamaica and an undersecretary of state from Libya as the three searched for a meeting room. Students were impressed by the life stories of citizen delegates from around the world.
鈥淚 was most inspired by the Indigenous representatives from across the globe who spoke about the effects of climate change in their communities,鈥 said Connell School of Nursing graduate student Nicola Roux. 鈥淎s the defenders of their ancestral lands and this planet, these communities are often affected most by and expected to solve a climate crisis that they have contributed very little to causing.
鈥淎ttending COP26 has reignited my belief that we must keep people at the center of climate solutions and that planetary health must be incorporated into everything I do as a nurse as it is so inextricably tied to human health.鈥
Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences junior Julia Horchos said conversations with delegates, like the one she had with a young man from Nepal, offered unique perspectives on the climate crisis.
鈥淢y experience at COP26 has made me excited to take an active role in international climate policy,鈥 Horchos said. 鈥淚 hope to combine my passions in environmental studies and political science to aid in the creation of climate change-based legislation or litigation of environmental cases. It is evident that there is much to be accomplished within the field of climate policy, and the responsibility of achieving that goal lies in the hands of my generation.鈥
Alex, an applied psychology and human development major who plans to attend law school, experienced an 鈥渁ha鈥 moment at a World Health Organization talk on climate justice and mental health.
鈥淎s the panelists began to speak it became clear that the discussion was far more focused on the mental health of climate migrants, which was a population I had never considered studying in my research. Throughout the session, the biggest takeaway was that though there are many anecdotal experiences that can serve as evidence, there is not enough empirical data to support any strong statements. At that moment, I was inspired to be one of the people to help collect that data in the future.鈥
Additional student delegates were Morrissey College seniors Diana Bunge and Mingyue Ma.
Funding to support the delegation came from the University Fellowships Committee in the Provost鈥檚 Office, the Dean鈥檚 Office of the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences, the Office of Global Engagement, the Environmental Studies Program, the Longergan Institute, Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society, and the Global Public Health and the Common Good Program.
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Ed Hayward | University Communications | December 2021