COP28: Global youth claim their right to hope for real climate action

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At the annual Conference of Parties, or COP, underway in the United Arab Emirates, skepticism about world leaders’ agreeing to real action against climate change might be at an all-time high. Not least because the host is an oil- and gas-producing country.

But many young people milling around the youth pavilion in Dubai are also pushing to be heard above the cynicism and apathy. Not least because they are the generation whose lives will be most influenced by a warming planet. 

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A climate conference in a country built on big oil might generate cynicism in the most hopeful among us. But young climate activists say they have no time for the pessimism that marks the debate over global warming.

The Christian Science Monitor is in the middle of publishing a special series called The Climate Generation, about the cohort born since 1989, when consciousness of children’s rights and global warming began to intersect. At COP28, we met up with three of them whom we profiled in our series: Naomi Cambridge from Barbados, Deon Shekuza from Namibia, and Farzana Faruk Jhumu from Bangladesh. 

They do not shy away from voicing their criticisms about this conference. But they also say they have no choice but to push for change. “It is my responsibility to be hopeful and to be there for [my country],” says Ms. Jhumu. 

Fresh off 21 hours of travel and two flights from her home in Barbados to “the farthest I have ever been,” Naomi Cambridge tackles the first day of her first-ever Conference of Parties, or COP, powered by “adrenaline and hope.”

Like many young activists balancing their climate work and university studies, she spent hours on the way to Dubai cramming for end-of-semester university exams waiting for her next week. At the climate conference Tuesday, she smiles and waves down colleagues she had previously only met via Zoom, as they push for commitments to phase out fossil fuels and financing for developing countries.

“We are not all starting from an equal playing field or the same starting line,” Ms. Cambridge said of developing nations’ struggle to access or afford renewable energy technologies – a major concern. “It is our generation’s role to push for climate justice.”

Why We Wrote This

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A climate conference in a country built on big oil might generate cynicism in the most hopeful among us. But young climate activists say they have no time for the pessimism that marks the debate over global warming.

Two dynamics hit her within her first hour here: inclusivity and the “influx” of oil and gas firm lobbyists and PR firm handlers. “Being at COP at an oil- and gas-producing country is a bit of a paradox, but it is not necessarily a negative thing,” she says. If the United Arab Emirates and other oil producers “are sincere,” it can “bring climate activists into the same room.”

This is the kind of credible hope that defines the Climate Generation, as the Monitor chronicled in a global project about the cohort born since 1989, when consciousness of children’s rights and global warming began to intersect. Here at COP28, we met up with three of these young change-makers to hear how the conference is playing out from their perspectives.

Public cynicism and skepticism abounded even before this COP opened in Dubai, with the world set to miss its 1.5-degree-Celsius target. Climate apathy is prevalent among young people, which is why Ms. Cambridge has set out to counter it at COP. “Hope is the fundamental thing that spurs action. We need action; therefore we need to be powered by hope,” she says.



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