Fiji to Kick-Off Largest Ever Survey of Climate Change
Fiji to Kick-Off Largest Ever In-Depth Survey of Global Public Opinion on Climate Change
10,000
Citizens in 79 Countries Engaged on What They Want from the
Paris
Agreement and Beyond
Press release: World Wide
Views on Climate and Energy
Location: 79 countries all
around the world
What: 100 World Wide Views on Climate
and Energy citizen consultations
When: 6 June 2015
Web
and social media: http://climateandenergy.wwviews.org/ and
#WWViews and
#cop21 and #article6 and
#citizenparticipation
10,000 citizens representing a cross
section of society in 79 countries
will meet on Saturday
to make their voices heard in the international
climate
change negotiations leading to Paris, France this
December.
Groups of around one hundred citizens per
location will attend daylong
meetings to deliberate on
some of the most important issues facing the
world today:
climate and energy.
Preliminary results from this unique
event will be presented next week (10
June) at the June
sessions of the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change
(UNFCCC) taking place in Bonn, Germany in advance
of the UN climate
conference (COP 21) 2015, and at
several other key meetings over the coming
key
months.
From dawn in Fiji to dusk in Arizona
With 100
debates worldwide and 79 participating countries, World Wide
Views
on Climate and Energy is going to be the largest
ever global citizen
consultation on climate
change.
Beginning at dawn in Fiji and ending at dusk in
Arizona, at least 100
citizens in each location,
reflecting the demographic diversity of their
country or
region will discuss issues of climate change and vote on
an
identical set of questions.
The results from this
voting will be published immediately on
http://climateandenergy.wwviews.org/results/,
making it possible for
everyone to follow live the
statements of lay citizens to the challenges
confronting
policy makers at COP 21 – and to compare the views
of
citizens in different countries and groupings relevant
for these
negotiations.
How concerned are the citizens
about the impacts of climate change? Should
policy makers
decide in Paris to do whatever it takes to limit
global
warming – or be less ambitious? Should a Paris
agreement be legally binding
for all countries, or only
for some? And how do the answers to these
questions
differ between citizens in developed and least develop
countries
– or between people living in islands and the
whole world as such?
Voting on well informed basis
The
simultaneous meetings around the world will focus on five
thematic
sessions:
* Importance of tackling climate
change
* Tools to tackle climate change
* UN
negotiations and national commitments
* Fairness and
distribution of efforts
* Making and keeping climate
promises
Prior to the meetings, all citizens have received
an information booklet
about pros, cons and views on
different climate and energy policies,
targets and
measures.
On the day, a short video will introduce each
theme. After discussing the
actual theme, the citizens
will vote on the questions related to it.
How to follow
the voting and results live
Visit http://climateandenergy.wwviews.org/results/
to follow the voting
live. As the meetings go on in
nearly all time zones, the results will come
in during
more than 24 hours. On June 5, the information booklet and
videos
will be published at the web page
http://climateandenergy.wwviews.org/project-essentials/.
On June 6, the
questions will be available here as
well.
Unique contribution to the UN Framework Convention
on Climate Change
The initiative has received France’s
official COP 21 label, and it is an
important
contribution to the awareness raising efforts of the
Convention,
underlining the need of public participation
in addressing climate change
and its effects and
developing adequate responses.
Christiana Figueres,
Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC, said: “This is
a
unique engagement with men and women, with adults and
teenagers from
countries world-wide coming together to
share their ideas and crystalize
their opinion on one of
the greatest challenges of this generation”.
“I hope
that decision makers will find this initiative an important
echo
chamber of citizens’ concerns, hopes and
aspirations for the kind of world
they want for
themselves and their children. It is also an
important
contribution to galvanizing public
understanding of what can often seem a
highly complex
topic, but one that goes to the heart of everyone’s lives.
I
look forward to presenting the preliminary results next
week in Bonn and at
a press conference on June 10,”she
added.
More information
The project is coordinated by
the Danish Board of Technology Foundation,
in
collaboration with Missions Publiques and the French
National Commission
for Public Debate. It is co-initiated
by the UNFCCC Secretariat and
implemented by partners in
the World Wide Views Alliance.
For more information on the
project, the partners, and the meetings
worldwide, visit
the web page: http://climateandenergy.wwviews.org/
and
follow the hashtag #WWViews on
Twitter.
Funders
The project is funded by the French
Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable
Development and Energy
(MEDDE), the National Commission for Public
Debate
(CNDP), 14 French Regions through the Association
des Régions de France
(Aquitaine, Auvergne,
Basse-Normandie, Centre-Val-de-Loire,
Franche-Comté,
Guadeloupe, Haute-Normandie,
Île-de-France, Martinique,
Nord-Pas-de-Calais,
Poitou-Charentes,
Provence-Alpes-Côte-d’Azur, La Réunion,
Rhône-Alpes),
ENGIE (GDF Suez), the Presidency of the
French National Assembly, the
German Federal Environment
Agency, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
International
Development (MAEDI), the European Space Agency (ESA),
the
Fondation de France, the EE-LV group of the French
Senate, the Danish KR
Foundation, the Norwegian Ministry
of Climate and Environment,
Grenoble-Alpes Métropole and
the city of
Paris.
ENDS