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EDITORIALS & ARTICLES
Education as a transformation tool to enable climate-change containment
Climate change poses the biggest existential threat to humanity. As world leaders prepare to renew their pledge to combat the crisis amid increasingly-frequent natural hazards and the raging covid pandemic, one measure that so far remains grossly under-tapped is the transformative role that education can play in mitigating climate change.
Towards achieving carbon neutrality
- In the lead up to CoP-26, more countries have been committing themselves to achieving carbon neutrality by 2050.
- This includes using regulation and policy to improve energy efficiency, develop alternative energy sources, reduce overall energy consumption and minimize wastage.
- These measures require financing, public consensus and lifestyle changes. They will also have profound impacts on countries’ industrial structures and economic policies which may lead to a short-term jolt to the global economy.
- But these actions are a vital step toward ending the worldwide indiscriminate exploitation of low-cost natural resources that is now taking its toll on the environment and fuelling the climate crisis.
- Asia and the Pacific is responsible for nearly half of global greenhouse gas emissions and more than 60% of people in the region work in sectors that are highly susceptible to changing weather patterns.
- So, the battle against climate change will be won or lost in Asia and the Pacific.
- For that reason, Asia and the Pacific must promote a new paradigm of economic development that can turn climate actions into drivers of economic growth that are ecologically sustainable and climate-friendly.
- And the new paradigm requires a fundamental transformation of the mindset and lifestyle of future generations.
- Education can and must become an active agent in catalysing climate mitigation and adaptation in line with the global agreements.
- Education can be transformative in at least three ways:
- Universal values such as global citizenry and sustainable development must be incorporated into mainstream, foundational and formative years of study.
- This will help students become self-directed, lifelong learners.
- It will also help to raise self-awareness, enable a cultural transformation, and change the mind-sets and lifestyles of future global citizens.
- It equips them with the tools needed to lead and actively support sustainable development.
- More investment and better quality of expenditure in education to scale up learning, particularly for disadvantaged and marginalized groups including girls and women, is the best strategy to support sustainable development.
- The more well-educated people there are in a country, the better the capacity and agility of that country to prevent or mitigate future hazards.
- Education can be more responsive in producing experts, innovators, and leaders with the skills to tackle climate change and other related development challenges.
- Such challenges include converting waste to energy, increasing food production and minimizing food waste to feed the growing population sustainably, transitioning to clean energy and transport and creating and preparing for green jobs.
- Italy requires all students to take more than 33 hours of climate change classes each year in higher secondary education.
- The Philippines has committed to intensify climate literacy and support climate action in schools.
- The Republic of Korea has started a project to transform schools into green campuses that will showcase education programs for environmental protection and use eco-friendly energy.
- The Paris Agreement calls for its signatories to undertake educational and public awareness campaigns on climate change and ensure public participation in programmes to achieve its targets.
- The Asian Development Bank (ADB) launched the Climate Change Fund in 2008 and has since actively pursued ways to mainstream climate change issues in education.
- The bank is supporting clean energy in several education projects including preparing graduates with green skills.
- The Ban Ki-moon (BKM) Foundation For a Better Future is urging governments and the international community to prioritize environmental education, encourage young international leaders and empower women and young people.
- To develop an education system for sustainable development, a comprehensive cooperation between central and local governments, schools, universities, communities, non-government organizations (NGOs) and the private sector is required.
- This collaboration is critical to develop education policies that will prepare and engage students in sustainable development through science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) projects.