Engaging Citizens in urban climate action for inclusive just transition programs
Thu, 04 Nov. 2021, 11:30-12:45 | Room: Lomond Auditorium
Find out more about the Event here
Find out more about COP26 here
View all cop26 blue zone side events here
Climate Action needs the active involvement of all citizens to succeed. The event will look at five different experiences of how to engage citizens in climate action that have in common the understanding that only strong co-productive action of governments and citizens will make the ecological conversion happen. The radical changes we have before us need strong forces that act “from below” and involve social groups that in the past have received little attention in the dominant technocratic approach from above.
• Engaging local communities and municipalities to build an inclusive, resilient, and effective climate movement
What started as a Covid restraint, no COP in 2020, became a real opportunity for deep social engagement of people, organizations, and municipalities in Israel to make the climate topic their own. The Israel Climate Coalition of over 80 organizations, set an ambitious goal - to reach all sectors and regions of society at the local level. 14 regional climate conferences took place that addressed local environmental and social topics and put them in the broader context of the climate crisis to both validate the local causes and empower the national Climate movement.
Rony Erez, Co-Director of the Heschel Center for Sustainability and a member of the Israeli Climate Coalition, Tel Aviv
• Engaging women’s organisations to promote gender-responsive urban climate policy
GenderCC’s project ‘Gender into Urban Climate Change Initiative’ has brought together women’s organisations from four countries and 14 pilot cities to assess urban climate action from a gender perspective and develop recommendations for gender-responsive policies. We present findings and lessons learned and launch a guidebook on GenderCC’s gender assessment approach.
Gotelind Alber, GenderCC-Women for Climate Justice, Board Member, Berlin
• Citizen engagement in sustainable energy transition
We are living through a fundamental shift from a fossil energy system and energy culture to one based on renewables. This transition entails dramatic changes in the way people use electricity, heat their homes, and move around. The social changes promise to be more revolutionary than the technological ones, an insight which the European Commission has taken up pushing the concept of energy citizenship. Three EU flagship research projects, Greta, Enclude e DIALOGUES are asking how to engage citizens who up to now have no agency in the energy transition, vulnerable groups, often threatened by energy poverty or health risks, elderly, single mothers, and women in general. We will look at Citizens Action Labs which DIALOGUES uses for these social groups to find their own voice in the energy transition.
Karl-Ludwig Schibel, Senior fellow Climate Alliance of European Cities, Città di Castello, Italy
• Glasgow’s Open Space Strategy – tackling societal, health and environmental problems
Glasgow is using a placed-based approach to deliver a variety of benefits for people and nature. With their open space strategy and using nature-based solutions Glasgow is seeking to link people and place to encourage ownership and stewardship - particularly driving entrepreneurship amongst the underprivileged. Exploring ways of dealing with management of public space in a period of austerity in public spending, for example by including local stakeholders, is another focus area. Glasgow is supported by Connecting Nature project, innovating with nature-based solutions to co-create climate resilient urban communities by connecting cities, academics, & businesses, funded via the European Union through Horizon 2020 programme.
Gillian Dick, Spatial Planning Manager, Glasgow City Council
• Empowering vulnerable families in their energy-efficiency refurbishment
Energy poverty – or vulnerability – is a critical factor for a fair energy transition. It remains at high levels in Europe due to increasing energy costs and slow progress on energy efficiency improvements. Ghent has been one of the cities in the forefront of empowering vulnerable families in their energy-efficiency refurbishment. In recent years the city has created a lot of space for initiatives coming from citizens, organizations, and companies for reducing energy consumption and making energy production more sustainable.
Tine Heyse, president of the board of Climate Alliance of European Cities and Mayor for Environment, Climate, Energy and North-South, City of Ghent, Belgium
In collaboration with the projects: