People’s Climate March ad to be put up on the London Underground tube network. (photo: Avaaz)
08 September 14
undreds
of thousands of people are expected to take to the streets of New York,
London and eight other cities worldwide in a fortnight to pressure
world leaders to take action on global warming, in what organisers claim
will be the biggest climate march in history.
On 23 September, heads of state will join a New York
summit on climate change organised by Ban Ki-moon, the first time world
leaders have come together on the issue since the landmark Copenhagen summit in 2009, which was seen as a failure.
The UN secretary general hopes the meeting will inject
momentum into efforts to reach a global deal on cutting greenhouse gas
emissions by the end of 2015, at a conference in Paris.
Ricken Patel, executive director of digital campaign group Avaaz, one of the organisers of the People’s Climate March
on 21 September, said the demonstration was intended to send a signal
to those world leaders, who are expected to include David Cameron and
Barack Obama, though not heads of state from China and India.
“We in the movement, activists, have failed up until
this point to put up a banner and say if you care about this, now is the
time, here is the place, let’s come together, to show politicians the
political power that is out there on there. Our goal is to mobilise the
largest climate change mobilisation in history and the indications are
we’re going to get there,” he told the Guardian.
Patel said he expects more than a hundred thousand
people at the New York march alone, which will be the focus of the day’s
events. Although many of the hundreds of organisations that have
committed to taking part are environmental groups, he said not all those
attending would be traditional ‘green’ activists.
“There’s a very strong range and diversity of people
from all walks of life, including immigrant rights groups, social
justice groups. Whoever you are and wherever you are, climate change
threatens us all so it brings us together.”
Nearly 400,000 have signed a call on Avaaz’s site, saying they will attend one of the global events, which also include marches in Berlin, Paris, Delhi, Rio and Melbourne.
Patel added: “We’re building for the longterm here.
This is about launching a movement that can literally save the world
over the longterm. We want to build to last. We recognise that at this
stage what needs be done is build political momentum behind this issue –
our governments are nowhere near even the planning to reach the
agreements needed to keep warming below [temperature rises of] 2C.”
Around 500 adverts will appear on the London tube
network from Monday, calling on people to join the march, and
advertising has already appeared across the New York subway. In Rio, the
organisers have permission to project messages about the march on to
the statue of Christ.
In an open letter to be published this week,
environment and development groups including Greenpeace, Oxfam and WWF,
plus politicians including Green party MP Caroline Lucas and Labour MP
Tom Watson, have joined with trade unions and faith groups to call on
world leaders to use the UN summit to take action on climate change.
“Politicians all over the world cite a lack of public
support as a reason not to take bold action against climate change. So
on 21 September we will meet this moment with unprecedented public
mobilisations in cities around the world, including thousands of people
on the streets of London.
“Our goal is simple – to demonstrate the groundswell of demand that exists for ambitious climate action,” they write.
Celebrities backing the People’s Climate March include
model Helena Christensen, musician Peter Gabriel, actor Susan Sarandon,
Argentine footballer Lionel Messi and actor Edward Norton.
The previous biggest assembly for a climate march was in Copenhagen in 2009, when tens of thousands of people took to the streets.
Separately on Monday, NGOs Greenpeace, WWF, Green
Alliance, RSPB and Christian Aid published a report, Paris 2015: Getting
a global agreement on climate change, laying out the level of ambition
required for a deal at the UN climate talks in Paris.
Matthew Spencer, Green Alliance’s director, said:
“There is a fashionable pessimism about multilateralism which shields
people from disappointment but does nothing to protect us from the
insecurity that climate change is bringing. Only a strong international
agreement can avoid that and give nation states the confidence that they
will not be alone as they decarbonise their energy systems.”
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