Trade unions support Action for Climate
Seven European trade unions, including the European Federation of Journalists (EFJ), are supporting the global day of protest being staged by young people against climate change on Friday: ETUC, EFJ, EFBWW, EPSU, EFFAT, ETF and IndustriAll (representing workers in energy intensive industries).
Greta Thunberg, the 16-year-old Swedish school student who started the ‘Friday’s for Future’ movement, has called for her peers around the world to join her to demonstrate outside national parliaments or local government buildings. Some 727 protests are scheduled across Europe, including another major demonstration in Brussels which will begin outside International Trade Union House.
A banner reading ‘No jobs on a dead planet – workers support climate action’ will be hung on the front of the building to show solidarity with the thousands of protestors expected.
The show of support has been organised by the European Trade Union Confederation, the International Trade Union Confederation and the industiAll European Trade Union.
It follows a meeting between representatives of Belgium’s Youth for Climate movement, including Anuna de Wever, and ETUC general secretary Luca Visentini and IndustriAll Europe general secretary Luc Triangle last week.
Trade unions and their youth organisations stand with the students in calling on countries to fulfill their obligations under the Paris Agreement, which commits them to limit any temperature rise to well below 2 degrees (and pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5 degrees) this century by delivering a “just transition” to a green economy and society. The European trade union movement has been fighting for many years to build a socially fair low-carbon society: the ETUC and its affiliates, including the EFJ, call on the EU to adopt an objective to reach zero-net emissions by 2050.
Luca Visentini, General Secretary of the European Trade Union Confederation said “Congratulations to all young people who are taking action for our planet. Trade unions strongly support their call for more urgency and ambition in tackling climate change. We have a duty to leave future generations a living planet and a decent society. Trade unions know from our history that we cannot simply rely on politicians to deliver. Trade unions would not exist were it not for working people coming together to demand social justice. For that reason we salute and we support young people calling for climate justice and we encourage our young members to keep on supporting this movement.”
IndustriAll Europe general secretary Luc Triangle said: “We stand with the young people protesting today in calling on politicians to urgently deliver on their Paris promise of a just transition to a sustainable economy because there are no jobs on a dead planet. There is no doubt that climate change requires another industrial revolution and a just transition is the only way to ensure that doesn’t come at the cost of jobs and prosperity. It’s time policy makers stopped paying lip service to this principle and followed these young people in taking action.”
“Climate change is happening and journalists have a duty to let people know what’s going on,” added Ricardo Gutiérrez, EFJ general secretary. “The media should now consider climate change as the most important story in the world. It is challenging people’s fundamental values. It is a terrible threat to the human species. Journalists have a duty to sound the alarm, to mobilize citizens. We cannot remain passive, under the pretext of respecting an alleged duty of impartiality or neutrality.”
The trade unions supporting the young people include European sectoral unions covering industry, transport, building workers, food, agriculture and tourism, public services and journalists in addition to European Trade Union Confederation.
?❌No jobs on a dead planet!
7⃣ European trade unions supporting the global day of protest being staged by young people against climate change on Friday @etuc_ces @EFJEUROPE ,@EFBWW_Union,@EPSUnions ,@EFFAT_org ,@ETF_Europe @industriAll_EU▶️https://t.co/xbEfmGev1T pic.twitter.com/cNsigPy1Kf
— EUROPEAN TRADE UNION (@etuc_ces) March 14, 2019
Notes to editors:
- The ETUC comprises 90 national trade union confederations in 38 countries, plus 10 European trade union federations.
- The EFJ is the largest organisation of journalists in Europe, representing over 320,000 journalists in 71 journalists’ organisations across 45 countries.
- IndustriAll Europe represents 7 million workers, many in energy intensive industries such as the metal, chemical and mining sectors.
- EFBWW the European Federation of Building and Woodworkers represents 75 affiliates in 34 countries
- EPSU, the European federation of Public Service Union representing 8 million workers in different sectors such as health, energy, public administration
- EFFAT is the European Federation of Food, Agriculture and Tourism Trade Unions. representing 120 national trade unions from 35 European countries.
- The European Transport Workers’ Federation (ETF) represents over 5 million transport workers in 41 countries www.etf-europe.org
ETUC have published a guide to involving trade unions in climate action and a study of industrial regions and climate policies.
IndustriAll Europe recently published a policy briefing on how energy intensive industries can contribute to decarbonising the economy.
EPSU has published an overview of actions public services unions have undertaken including to prevent energy poverty and just transition and supports the climate protest.
Picture credit: EFJ.