Tom Youngman

Co-founder of Green Vision: The Bath Youth Climate Movement, member of the Department for Energy and Climate Change's Youth Advisory Panel and member of the UK Youth Climate Coalition's delegation to the United Nations climate change negotiations. Human being and active citizen. thomas@youngman.me.uk.
All this week People & Planet and the UK Youth Climate Coalition have been campaigning to prevent oil from the Canada’s Tar Sands - a huge fuel deposit that requires decimation of the Canadian wilderness to extract - from being sold in the EU. This oil’s extraction is at least five times more carbon-intensive than usual and, if Canada’s tar sands are fully exploited, according to NASA climate scientist James Hansen it’s “game over for the climate”.
Europe is on the verge of banning this and other especially damaging fuels from being sold within it’s borders - but the UK is obstructing progress! Join me in calling on the UK government to support the European Fuel Quality Directive preventing the sale of tar sands oil.

All this week People & Planet and the UK Youth Climate Coalition have been campaigning to prevent oil from the Canada’s Tar Sands - a huge fuel deposit that requires decimation of the Canadian wilderness to extract - from being sold in the EU. This oil’s extraction is at least five times more carbon-intensive than usual and, if Canada’s tar sands are fully exploited, according to NASA climate scientist James Hansen it’s “game over for the climate”.

Europe is on the verge of banning this and other especially damaging fuels from being sold within it’s borders - but the UK is obstructing progress! Join me in calling on the UK government to support the European Fuel Quality Directive preventing the sale of tar sands oil.

8 notes
Tags: #tar sands #climate change #UKYCC #people and planet #Environment

2 notes
Tags: #Environment #RSPB #Conservation

It’s not a great big boast because we’ve never had a green government. We are the greenest government ever but that’s not enough, we need to be a hell of a lot greener that we are.

Tory MP and former editor of The Ecologist, Zac Goldsmith on the BBC’s ‘HARDtalk’.

I think I concur. Not going to give the government much praise but, as he rightly says, it’s not hard to be the greenest government ever.

42 notes
Tags: #Zac Goldsmith #Environment #climate change #politics #Conservatives

Communicating the Challenge is the Challenge: Looking Back on the UN climate talks in Durban

Three weeks ago, I made this video. I was exhausted, husky and, if I’m honest, disheartened. I’d just spent two weeks at the United Nations climate talks in Durban, South Africa. They were the best weeks of my life, but that it’s taken me until now to write something about it says it all.

The rest of the UKYCC delegation to the UN, pictured on our training weekend in Bath.

I applied to be on the UK Youth Climate Coalition’s delegation to the UN (pictured, right) in April. When I heard the news of my selection, that in seven months time I would be at the UN, attempting to make change on a truly daunting scale, I was staying with an exchange family in rural Spain. My immediate challenge was explaining what this meant in my second language to people with little knowledge or interest in climate change. Although they were sympathetic, I’m not sure my host family really understood what I meant - but they did let me use their computer for my first delegation Skype calls.

Returning from Durban, I’ve found myself clasping helplessly at words out of my reach when asked the question “how was South Africa?” to the extent I did when trying to explain my excitement in Spanish back in April. If I’m honest, I’ve found it hard to reconnect with my friends back home. It’s not about the people, it’s about the purpose. I’d spent two weeks with a clear aim, working with groups of peers with a shared goal and more than enough enthusiasm to make up for our lack of agency or resources. I planned my days at 8:30am and often didn’t finish work until 2:00am. It was ridiculous, but it was glorious.

I think the bizarre experiences are what convey the wonder of it best. I met the Bolivian Minister for the Environment at 3:00am, me wearing no socks and shoes, and chatted to him in Spanish. I played a rather fun game called ‘Ninja’ with a very senior British diplomat. I attempted to get on the 10 o’clock news by offering a man tinsel. I shouted the loudest I’ve ever shouted (video, rally inside conference centre pictured, left - can you spot me?) - and was echoed by hundreds of others - inside the conference centre.

But after all that, the conference did not deliver a solution. In the video I recorded three weeks ago today, I was downtrodden. That was justified. The way the decisions were made was fast, closed and undemocratic. Documents were released and agreed faster than we could get to the Documents Counter to collect them, let alone read them. This was not the open, consensus process the UNFCCC (the part of the UN that deals with climate change) likes to claim it is. This was old-fashioned, closed-door diplomacy. If that was an effective way of delivering a solution, I’d be happy, but it isn’t. It left decisions till the eleventh (if only it was that early….) hour and gave poorer nations no input whatsoever. Let’s be frank, what we have on the table now is shit. But it could be worse, we could have nothing. One day, some flowers could use this shit to grow.

I’ll take most not from the conference, but from the people I’ve met. I’ve met people of character far beyond the leaders attending the talks. Young people have spent months preparing off their own back, and most, like me, have funded themselves, running events and raffles and seeking support from their families, friends and communities. No politician did that to attend this conference. No politician can speak with the conviction of any of the young people that went to COP17.

So where am I now? I have emerged from what I can only define as a great struggle for me, and I’ve emerged stronger. It is now 2012. As I start a new year, it is not about finding a new challenge, but about finding away to continue the old one, and use the skills, connections and experience I have built. For me, this year is about action at home, using knowledge from outside in the context I know best. It’s about using that to inspire others to do the same in their communities.

So what do I think you should take from this? I don’t know. Open yourself up to all challenges. Discover what you’re passionate about and pursue it further than anyone ever imagined it could be pursued. Ultimately, don’t let me patronise you. This is my story, for now. I look forward to reading yours.

I went to Durban with the UK Youth Climate Change Coalition (UKYCC) - see our delegation’s blog here. I was kindly supported by many friends, family members, local businesses and by my local community - you can see a full list here. To see photos of the trip, visit my own Flickr page or the UKYCC flickr page.

28 notes
Tags: #COP17 #Durban #Environment #UKYCC #climate change #opinion #original content #writing

So I’ve just spent three weeks in Durban, South Africa to attend the United Nations climate change negotiations. It was the hardest experience of my life, but also the best experience of my life. Although making change in a place with so little agency was demoralising, to attempt it with hundreds of fellow young people of incredible enthusiasm and intelligence from around the world was wonderful. I’ve made friends I’ll never lose, from the UK Youth Climate Coalition delegation with which I went to Durban and from all over the globe..

Stay tuned for a longer reflection.

16 notes
Tags: #climate change #unfccc #original content #UN #Environment #UKYCC

Tags: #Environment #climate change #psychology

Musical timelapse joy!

greenvision:

Spy the post about guerrilla gardening Hedgemead Park with Transition Bath last week? Iva of Transition Bath has produced this awesome timelapse video of the two-day initial work. Well worth a watch!

(Source: greenvision)

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Tags: #Green Vision #guerrilla gardening #Environment

Cat Stace: What the FCCC are CDMs?

Great blog post by Cat Stace, a fellow UKYCC delegate to COP17, jargon-busting the term ‘Clean Development Mechanisms’.

So now back to topic – today’s acronym is CDM, the Clean Development Mechanism. CDM is a part of the Kyoto Protocol and allows countries who have signed up to reduce their own emissions to instead pay for emissions-reducing projects in other countries. This allows richer, developed countries in the global North to reduce emissions by helping poorer developing nations to reduce their emissions.

Her analogy later on is especially fun!

Critics might say that it is similar to someone avoiding going on a diet by feeding someone else celery whilst carrying on eating the Krispy Kremes. They’re helping out other people with the low-calorie options but not shifting their own pounds.

Check out the full article here.

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Tags: #UKYCC #UN #COP17 #climate change #Environment

Kasey Klimes: The Real Reason Why Bicycles are the Key to Better Cities

Beautiful article by Kasey Klimes on ‘Next American City’. Although the pretension of the initial proposition of the bicycle as “an instrument of experiential understanding” may put you off, it’s well worth continuing. The pretension is justified.

Yes, the bicycle is a stunningly efficient machine of transportation, but in the city it is so much more. The bicycle is new vision for the blind man. It is a thrilling tool of communication, an experiential device for the beauty and the ills of the urban context. One cannot turn a blind eye on a bicycle - they must acknowledge their community, all of it.

Interaction with an urban environment - and a rural environment - on a bicycle is a so much more complete experience. Connection to humanity and the built environment we have created makes cycling so much more personal than the detachment of a car.

1 note
Tags: #cycling #Environment

Determined to protect the climate system for present and future generations United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Last article of the preamble. Ratified by every nation on earth. Let’s hope they mean it.
1 note
Tags: #climate change #UNFCCC #Environment #un