UK COP 26 Coalition: COVID-19 Statement

The UK COP 26 Coalition was formed in 2019 to mobilise a broad, diverse and inclusive movement across the UK to join with global partners in demanding climate justice at COP 26 in Glasgow. COP stands for the “Conference of the Parties” to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. COP 26 will be the 26th such summit.

At the beginning of April 2020, COP 26 was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, our Coalition’s efforts to build people power for justice are not being postponed. A health emergency has not replaced the climate emergency, but each crisis has exposed the common injustices inherent in our global system. Now is not the time to stay quiet. Now is the time to organise.

 

Multiple Crises, Common Injustices

From soaring death-tolls to the threat of global famine, COVID-19, designated by the World Health Organisation as a pandemic only a month ago, has brought about the rapid disruption of our world economy like no other event in human history.

This is a public health crisis, but it’s also an unprecedented crisis of inequality, as lockdown guidelines, implemented around the world, are followed by the collapse of entire industries, unprecedented spikes in unemployment, a growing scarcity of essential commodities as a consequence of the ongoing disruption to global supply chains, and huge social dislocation arising from these.

A worldwide crisis is being exposed, of lack of access to even basic infrastructure – housing, clean water, energy and food – that would make a lockdown viable for many millions of people around the world. As the negative impacts of disruption set in, it’s the people most deprived of this basic infrastructure that feel the hardest impacts.

Inequalities of race, gender, age and ability are being exacerbated. Those with the means and security to self-isolate and access medical support are able to do so, while those without are left to suffer the consequences.

There are currently more than 70 million people around the world that have been forcibly displaced from their homes. 3 billion people have no access to hand-washing facilities.

This devastating level of deprivation undermines our collective power to contain and suppress the ongoing spread of new disease. We’ve seen no clearer illustration of the way that global inequality threatens the collective security of all of us.

The COVID-19 crisis and the inequalities it exposes are set against the backdrop of our greater ecological crisis. As the UN special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights has warned us, this crisis sees humanity on course for a century of “climate apartheid” as the impacts of rising temperatures fall with violent disproportionality between the wealthy and the poor.

As the repercussions of this pandemic plunge the world into deeper economic turmoil, we know that it’s those living already on the frontlines of climate crisis – indigenous communities, subsistence farmers, coastal communities and the urban poor, particularly in the global south – whose lives and livelihoods will again be most at risk.

Even before this pandemic, COP26 was billed as a crucial staging post in the challenge of bringing the world’s political leaders and civil society organisations together to achieve consensus on a pathway to rapidly reducing carbon emissions while building global resilience in the face of climate breakdown.

Necessarily postponed until 2021, COP26 will now be the first meeting of the world’s climate leaders in the wake of COVID-19. We will have survived one of the world’s worst public health crises in a century and we will be seeking a pathway to recovery from the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

COP26 will now be a vital arena in which to demand that this recovery, as yet to be imagined, be both a green recovery, and crucially a just recovery, that tackles the scourge of global inequality at the root, while reducing carbon emissions.

The COVID-19 crisis has exposed the deep inequalities in our structures, and highlighted the vulnerabilities of ecological, social and economic systems. But it has also shown how we can and must respond to crises. Our response must put the most vulnerable and marginalised first. It must be urgent and ambitious. It must be democratic, and we must resist authoritarian attempts to use crisis responses to increase their power and control. It must be based on transformative, people-centered solutions rather than political and economic business as usual, and it must be informed by whole systems thinking to ensure a truly just transition.

As we’re now discovering so vividly, our futures are deeply interconnected; whether we acknowledge that or not, there is no path to ecological balance that doesn’t start by putting the goals of social and economic justice front and centre.

Now is not the time to stop talking about climate change. Now is the time to raise our voices even louder, to call out the profiteers, to resist exploitation, to build power and stand in global solidarity as we prepare to tackle multiple crises and fight common injustices.

 

Signatories

2050 Climate Group
350.org
Arkbound Foundation
Biofuelwatch
Campaign against Climate Change
Carfree Glasgow
Christian Aid
Climate Change Solutions Ltd
Climate SOS: Shift Our Subsidies
Coal Action Network
Counterpoints Arts
Divest Parliament
Earth Holders Edinburgh
Edinburgh Interfaith Association
Environmental Justice Foundation
ETC Group – Action Group on Erosion, Technology and Concentration, London.
Extinction Rebellion Glasgow
Friends of the Earth England Wales and Northern Ireland
Friends of the Earth Scotland
Get Glasgow Moving
Glasgow Calls Out Polluters
Glasgow Community Food Network
Global Action Plan
Global Justice Now
Green Anticapitalist Front London
Greenpeace
Interfaith Glasgow
Jai Jagat 2020 UK
Landworkers’ Alliance
London Mining Network
Medact
Merseyside Labour for a Green New Deal
NE-CAP (North-East Call to Action on Global Poverty and Climate Change [Newcastle, UK])
Northern Night Train Campaign
Nourish Scotland
NUS Scotland
NUS Scotland
NUS UK
Oxfam
Quakers in Britain
Quakers in Scotland
Scot.E3 (Employment, Energy and Environment)
Scotland Malawi Partnership
Scottish Communities Climate Action Network (SCCAN)
Scottish Laity Network
Scottish Youth Climate Strike
SIKHS IN SCOTLAND
Stand.earth
Students Organising for Sustainability (SOS-UK)
The Gaia Foundation
Transition Edinburgh
Transition Edinburgh
UK Student Climate Network
UK Youth Climate Coalition
UN House Scotland
Urban Roots
Water Aid
Wellbeing Economy Alliance (Scotland)
Wretched of the Earth
Young Friends of the Earth Scotland
End Water Poverty
PIVJET International
WASHfID
Bangladesh Model Youth Parliament
YouthNet for Climate Justice
Birmingham Labour for a Green New Deal
MIGRANTS ORGANISING FOR RIGHTS AND EMPOWERMENT
Igapo Project
Barranquilla+20
Dynamic Earth
Glasgow Allotments Forum
Youth for Sustainable Impact
YOUNGO International Ocean’s Voice Working Group
Project Survival Pacific
Kabataan San Sidlangan, Inc.
Publish What You Pay UK
Youth for Climate Tunisia
Real Farming Trust
The Iona Community
Environics Trust
Digo Bikas Institute / Climate Justice Collective Nepal
KRuHA Indonesia
Iona Community
Glasgow Eco Trust
Caritas Justice & Peace Commission of the RC Archdiocese of St Andrews & Edinburgh
Skye Climate Action
Asociación Agentes de Cambio Nicaragua
Asociación Agentes de Cambio Nicaragua
Nourishing Change
Extinction Rebellion Manchester
Greening Wymondham
Glasgow COP Collective
International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC)
North American Megadam Resistance Alliance (NAMRA)
Plymouth Climate Council
OBSERVATORIO SOSTENIBILIDAD
Forum marocain des alternatives sud
Coalition marocain pour la justice climatique
Abanebhongo Persons with Disabilities
GROW
Climate justice Coordinator
Geography and Environmental Movement(GEM)
Geography and Environmental Movement (GEM)
Edinburgh Garden Partners
Stop Ecocide Foundation
The Iona Community
Stop Ecocide Foundation
XR UK – Communities
CEI NS
Extinction Rebellion Bath
Stop Ecocide Foundation
Abibinsroma Foundation
Abibiman Foundation
Girl Up Club Delta State Nigeria