老司机直播 students represent Canadian youth at UN climate summit
Since 2005, the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition has sent delegates to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, and the group has often included 老司机直播 students.
This year, or the Conference of the Parties is being held in Marrakech, Morocco, and two 老司机直播 students and an alum are among a group of selected from across Canada to attend.
The group includes Christa Croos, a 老司机直播 Scarborough student, and Sam Harrison, a third-year engineering student. 老司机直播 alumna Maya Menezes, who has worked on divestment and environmental justice organizing, is also attending as a youth delegate.
The 22nd annual conference, which began this week and runs through Nov. 18, is aimed at driving the implementation of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. The youth delegates will be authorized to attend most of the sessions.
老司机直播 engineering student Sam Harrison is attending COP22 this year (photo by Marit Mitchell)
At COP22, Harrison will be serving on the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition鈥檚 policy and research team, where he hopes to hold politicians accountable for their promises 鈥 and help them devise practical steps forward.
鈥淲e want change to be made in a way that provides a just transition to a low carbon economy for everyday citizens, Indigenous peoples and workers. People in the fossil fuel industry shouldn鈥檛 get left behind,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here has to be support for retraining.鈥
He and his co-delegates have four goals for COP22: to urge Canada to develop a stronger policy framework for mitigating climate change at home, to devise ways to divest from fossil fuels that increase equality in the Canadian economy, to work intimately with Indigenous communities and other environmental stewards, and to examine Canada鈥檚 role in global financial support for climate change action.
Harrison has been a vocal advocate on climate change, energy and sustainability issues since high school.
In Grade 11 he became director of Kids for Climate Action, a group founded by his sister Sophie Harrison, who will also be attending COP22 as part of the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition.
Although they were too young to vote, the siblings saw decisions being made that would affect them and their futures, so they formed Kids for Climate Action to speak directly to policymakers.
鈥淪am is unique in that he has a passion for understanding policy as well as technology 鈥 I鈥檝e been thrilled to see him bring this unique perspective to the classroom,鈥 says Aimy Bazylak, an associate professor in the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering. 鈥淚鈥檓 certain that he will provide a key contribution to the conference and serve as an outstanding representative of Canadian youth.鈥
When Croos, an immigrant from Sri Lanka, visited her native country this summer, she witnessed the destructive effects of global warming. It fueled her passion for environmental activism.
鈥淚 applied on a whim because I didn鈥檛 think I had enough experience,鈥 says Croos, a fourth-year environmental science and chemistry student. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge opportunity for me, and I was so excited to be given this platform to use my story and my skills to further the climate movement.鈥
Croos鈥檚 story starts with immigrating to Toronto in 2001 at age seven. Right away, she missed the seaside village where she grew up.
鈥淲e tried in those first few years to remain close to nature, but with a newly immigrated family lifestyle there just wasn't the time or the means,鈥 she says.
To renew that connection, she joined every school club and activity that focused on environmental sustainability, from promoting recycling to building butterfly gardens.
When she travelled to Sri Lanka several years after leaving, she was saddened to see her country confronting sea level rises, drought and other long-term consequences of climate change.
鈥淥n my most recent trip a few months ago, I tried to see some of the country鈥檚 natural wonders, but everything had been affected in some negative way,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t painted a grim picture of the future of Sri Lanka鈥檚 environmental health. And it鈥檚 the same in many countries in the global south.鈥
At 老司机直播 Scarborough, she鈥檚 a member of the Environmental and Physical Sciences Students鈥 Association, plays an active role in the Divest Fossil Fuels campaign at 老司机直播 and has participated in various marches and sit-ins protesting global warming. She's hoping the delegation gets a chance to sit down and talk with Canada's Minister of Environment and Climate Change Catherine McKenna and Green Party leader Elizabeth May.
Set to graduate this spring, she is currently applying to law school, hoping she can practise environmental law.
鈥淲e鈥檙e inheriting all the problems, and we鈥檙e often dismissed as not caring enough, knowing enough or being realistic enough. I鈥檓 excited to use my voice as a young person at this conference, and join the chorus calling for climate justice.鈥