The youth voice at the Commission on Sustainable Development

BerniseThe Commission on Sustainable Development of the United Nations has reached its High Level Segment and Ministers are presenting their finals remarks on the issues on energy for development, climate change, air pollution, and industrial development. Youth, recognized as a major group at this UN Commission, were able to present their final statement highlighting the needs and weaknesses of the work of the Commission and showing ways to move forward. Please see the statement below presented by Bernise Ang from Singapore.

Thank you Mr Chairman.

Before I begin, I would like to express my thanks to the valuable
contribution from the representative of the Nederlands.

Where is the urgency in CSD-14?

Your decisions and plans decide whether or not my peers and I have a future to look forward to.

We would also like to note that youth of colour, indigenous youth and low-income youth are already bearing the burdens of climate change, and the policies that do little to combat it.

We represent the biggest stakeholder in this entire commission.

The future is more than a legacy; it is our lives
Where is the urgency in CSD-14?

The future is more than a legacy; it is our lives.

The chair’s summary includes nuclear and so-called “clean coal” in the definition of clean energy. For young people – for the future – the definition is clear: small-scale hydro, wind, solar, marine power are clean; but nuclear, fossil fuels and large scale hydro-electric and incineration are neither clean, renewable, nor sustainable.

If the turnout in this room is anything to go by, we *have* come together to find solutions towards real sustainable development. We believe in environmental justice and encourage you to remember that, as embodied in the Rio Declaration, “Human beings are at the centre of concerns for sustainable
development”.

During these weeks we have heard from governments that are not adopting environmental and social regulations because of a reluctance to interfere with the market. But the *fact* is that – there IS no market today that governments do not interfere with by using taxes, subsidies, and trade barriers. We are concerned that many governments are willing to interfere in the market only on behalf of big business and not on behalf of the people, or the environment. Therefore – we call on member states to create such regulations, along with enhancing clear corporate accountability measures.

We would strongly encourage you to embrace the plan of work you agreed upon at the Earth Summit and WSSD. Implementation does not mean passing responsibility to the market. Successful implementation requires equal opportunity, active participation and meaningful collaboration among stakeholders under the guidance of governments.

In these two weeks, we have inundated you with examples of youth who have initiated viable, sustainable, and profitable development projects. Here is a reminder of what we have told you:

In Sweden and the UK we are running fair trade purchasing programs; In rural Nepal we are organising small hydropower projects; In North America we are converting universities to clean energy; In Ghana we are improving irrigation for agricultural development; In the US and Mexico we are supporting farmers through fair trade coffee and cultural exchange.

And we’ve got more.

These are serious solutions that we are providing for serious problems. We *must* be taken seriously.

Although identified as an important cross-cutting issue at CSD-11, education has not been adequately addressed here. The words “youth” and “education” have appeared in the chair’s summary – but there is no coherent strategy for implementation. The UN Decade on Education for Sustainable Development plays an important role and *must* be completed with ambitious national plans.

Youth must be informed about how energy decisions will affect our future, so that we can be the agents of *our* own development. Education is the critical link between knowledge – and action. We are 2.8 billion youth with unlimited potential for change.

Delegates – please stand up if you have children.
[pause]
Having read the chair’s summary, do you think that this document gives hope
for your children in twenty years?
[pause]
HERE is the urgency in CSD-14. The future is more than a legacy; it is our
lives.

Thank you delegates. Thank you Mr Chairman.

3 Responses to “The youth voice at the Commission on Sustainable Development”


  1. 1 Josh Tulkin May 12th, 2006 at 4:07 pm

    That is beautiful. It made me want to clap, to cry, to grab my clipboard and go make a revolution. Keep it up.

  2. 2 Karl Erb May 12th, 2006 at 10:50 pm

    You all rock! Well said, inspiring, glad to know you.
    Thanks for your good works.

  3. 3 Michael Gale May 13th, 2006 at 2:24 pm

    The Commission has come to a close, but our work is only beginning. We need to use the partnerships, lessons learned, obstacles identified, and the changes that happened to our souls to put further fuel (renewable of course) in to the movement.

    What have you done for the movement today?

Comments are currently closed.

About Juan


Juan Hoffmaister, originally from Costa Rica, is active young leader working to bring the environmental and development agenda together. He formerly served as youth advisor to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and has represented youth perspectives on environmental negotiations worldwide. His work has been featured by NPR and other media outlets, and has recently completed a Watson Fellowship meeting comity leaders from across 4 continents responding to climate-induced disasters and water stress around the world through community-based adaptation. He has been an active advocate in UN negotiations since 2005, and he believes that the industrialized nations have the responsibility of helping the poor and vulnerable cope with the impacts of our changing climates, and he is currently working with youth from around the world in creating a new international agreement to keep the planet cool. On his spare time, he enjoys diving, reading, and drinking coffee. More @ ChangingClimates.info

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