Published on 11th November 2024
Students from 14 local schools will take on the role of negotiating teams during the United Nations climate change conference (COP29) at a valuable youth climate summit.
The event on 19 November coincides with COP29 climate talks in Baku, Azerbaijan with the backdrop of the council chambers in Cheltenham. Emulating the real-life conference, which will run from 11 to 22 November, pupils from secondary schools across the area will generate joint proposals to speed up climate action and adaptation. As with leaders in Baku, they will look to set funding goals that reflect just how urgently extra support is needed around the world.
The young people will form teams representing a diverse mix of developing, emerging and developed countries attending COP29 - including Australia, Barbados, India, the Marshall Islands, UK, and USA as well as Azerbaijan. They will agree resolutions on key themes, putting forward policy positions using carefully chosen arguments in a conference debate that mirrors the UN negotiations and the drive for consensus.
The Mayor of Cheltenham, Councillor Paul Baker, will formally open the conference, welcoming the students to the centre of local decision making. Cheltenham Borough Council is hosting and supporting the event, which includes a grant from Cheltenham Community Pride. Organised by the charity InterClimate Network (ICN) working together with Cheltenham Education Partnership, this is a welcome return of the summit for Gloucestershire schools.
The second part of the conference brings the issues close to home so that young people can have a say about climate action in our area. In a ‘Local Action’ session, council teams and local organisations as well as schools will showcase their own work to reduce emissions and adapt to change. The summit aims to raise the profile of what’s already happening in schools and our local communities and plans to inspire even more ways to work together.
The young people will then be invited to put forward their questions to a panel made up of local decision makers. Councillor Iain Dobie, cabinet member for the climate emergency will join this Climate Question Time panel along with representatives from the council, business, the community and university.
Councillor Iain Dobie, cabinet member for the climate emergency, said: “It is becoming increasingly important year on year that schools and young people get involved and take up their role in the climate crisis. This conference is imperative to understand the issues facing our planet, and students are integral to the future of the climate and should be invited into climate discussions as such.”
Raechel Kelly at Planet Cheltenham said: “I’m delighted to be asked to take part in the conference again, where young people are given an insight into what the COP process is all about. It’s also great to highlight all the important work happening locally, which young people can get involved with.”
Michila Critchley, programme director at InterClimate Network, said: “With each passing year, the need for urgent global action steps up another notch. 2024 has seen some truly awful scenes around the world as people from USA to India, to our own local area try to cope with intense weather. COP29 will try to secure greater ambition for climate action, and then it’s all about money and the need to unlock new sources of funding to tackle and adapt to climate change.
“This conference allows secondary school students from across Gloucestershire to become immersed in these critical global negotiations as at the UN and importantly, means they can put our own decision-makers on the spot. What’s key is that everyone leaves at the end of the day inspired and informed about climate action in school and our community.
“ICN greatly appreciates the support of Cheltenham Borough Council and Cheltenham Community Pride, as well as Benefact Group for this event.”
For media enquiries, contact: communications, telephone 01242 264231, email [email protected]
Notes to editors
1. Conference agenda and summary
A climate conference for secondary schools will take place in the council chambers of Cheltenham Borough Council, Municipal Offices, Promenade, Cheltenham, GL50 9SA. It will provide the opportunity for students to engage in UN-style COP29 critical debate, and to meet and put their questions to local decision-makers.
The Mayor, Councillor Baker, and senior officers of the council will join students from local secondary schools.
Outline agenda:
10:00 |
Welcome The Mayor of Cheltenham will open proceedings |
10:00
|
PART 1 Global Negotiations Using ICN’s COP29 resource activities and briefings, students:
Student teams prepare in advance a short opening statement to present on the day before working on joint solutions and decisions. |
12:25 |
PART 2 Local Climate Action Attention turns to progress and actions in support of climate action and developing green skills locally. This includes:
Students feedback their pledges for action Evaluation and final words
|
14:30 |
Conference close |
2. About InterClimate Network and our resources
InterClimate Network (ICN) is the brand of the charity, InterClimate Trust. ICN’s schools’ programme has a track-record of inspiring youth voices and advocacy on climate change through its long-running model climate conferences, alongside work inspiring youth climate voices and climate action in schools.
For COP29 ICN has updated our award-winning COP resource and continued its objective to sharply focus on lived experience of climate change around the world, particularly for young people and the most vulnerable. Find out more at: https://interclimate.org/climate-conferences/
Michila Critchley, programme manager, InterClimate Network
Tel 07790 252771
3. Conference funding and support
Council funding, a grant from Cheltenham Community Pride and sponsorship from Benefact Group means that the conferences are free to schools, and thanks go to them all for their support.
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