As the COP28 United Nations Climate Change Conference opens today
(Thurs 30 Nov), school leaders’ union NAHT has warned that it is
‘deeply concerned’ at climate crisis and the impact it is having
on pupils, education workers and communities across the world.
As part of a submission to the COP28 TUC delegation, NAHT has
called for governments to use COP28 ‘to prioritise their actions
before it is too late’, pointing out that extreme climate events
are disrupting the education of nearly 40 million children a year
worldwide.
NAHT’s International Secretary, Helena Macormac, said: “It is
vital that decisive and substantial collective international
actions are taken as a matter of urgency – the future of our
children and young people is at stake.
“The UK government has said that tackling climate change and
biodiversity loss is its number one international priority, yet
the lack of investment and sustained joined up policy on this
area would lead us to believe that this is not the case. Climate
change is already having detrimental effect to education working
conditions in the UK, with decades of state neglect of school
buildings and classrooms not fit for purpose in extreme weather
events. We are also already seeing an increase in ‘climate
refugees’ and displaced pupils impacting on school communities.
“It is vital that the pupil voice is heard within the climate
crisis debate, and that they are able to access climate education
– it is they that will pioneer the necessary solutions to the
climate crisis. Governments must realise the integral role that
pupils, school leaders and education providers play in tackling
climate change, and work to deliver a ‘just transition’ for the
future.”