Hi,
Global NDCs Get Failing Grade On
Climate Literacy Ambitions and Gender Education Commitments
EARTHDAY.ORG, the global organizer of Earth Day, today released an
independent study which analyzed each country’s Nationally Determined
Contributions (NDCs) for the prevalence and depth of inclusion of
climate literacy and gender equality. Nationally Determined
Contributions are national, long-term climate plans which must be
submitted every five years under the Paris Agreement. Out of 165 NDCs
reviewed, EARTHDAY.ORG found that none thoroughly address
climate education and/or climate literacy. Only 29 climate
plans moderately referenced the issue and cited limited actions for
implementation.
EARTHDAY.ORG believes every school in the world must have
compulsory, assessed climate and environmental education with a strong
civic engagement component. Formally launched in 2020, EARTHDAY.ORG’s
Climate Literacy Campaign has been working vigorously to secure
stepped up ambition on climate education and drive countries to
include it in their NDCs.
EARTHDAY.ORG is working to not only start an education revolution
with the Climate Literacy Campaign, but an education revolution that
is just and equitable for students from every country, any ethnicity,
and for students of all gender identities. It is critical to break
down academic silos, embed environmental justice, and prioritize
gender equity throughout education systems. The newly released report
also evaluates the role of gender in the Nationally Determined
Contributions. According to EARTHDAY.ORG’s findings, gender is
referenced in 107 NDCs but only 7 countries make the connection
between gender equality and climate education and/or literacy.
“Youth are critical stakeholders in addressing climate change, and
providing them with proper education about this should be part of
every discussion about climate change. It is unacceptable that most
countries haven’t made commitments to climate literacy in their NDCs.
Of those that did, their commitments are not sufficient enough to
address the climate emergency,” said Rachel Weisbrot, Education and
Communications Manager, EARTHDAY.ORG.
View the full report here.
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