YEA! MN Student Sustainability Summit a Success!
Over eighty middle and high school students gathered at the University of Minnesota for the YEA! MN Student Sustainability Summit this spring.
State view: Cravaack plan a troubling backlash against climate-change education
We published a response to Congressman Cravaack’s amendment to cut funding for climate change education in the Duluth News Tribune.
Educate, Inspire and Empower
Established in January 2006 by polar explorer Will Steger, the Will Steger Foundation, educates, inspires and empowers people to engage in solutions to climate change.
Join Us!
For an enlightening evening with Dr. Eugenie Scott August 6, 2012 at 7:00 PM Climate Science in Schools: the Next Evolution – Free Public Forum Humphrey School of Public Affairs
Minnesota's Changing Climate (Updated)
We are pleased to announce that Minnesota's Changing Climate: Engaging Students in Environmental Stewardship has won the 2012 Environmental Initiative Awards in the Environmental Education Category.
7th Annual Summer Institute for Climate Change Education
Investigate Minnesota’s Changing Climate at the Will Steger Foundation’s 7th Annual Summer Institute for Climate Change Education
August 7 and 8, 2012 at the School of Environmental Studies in Apple Valley, MN
Learn More...
Join the National Bike Ride for Sustainable Solutions and Support WSF!
This year, WSF Executive Director, Nicole Rom and Board Member David Bryan are participating in Climate Ride, combining their love of cycling and work with the Will Steger Foundation.
Read More...
Minnesota's Changing Climate Classroom
Join the Will Steger Foundation on an Exploration of Minnesota’s Changing Climate
Minnesota’s Changing Climate curriculum project ties Will Steger’s adventures from boyhood to adulthood with engaging content on Minnesota’s natural environment (i.e. biomes) and the impacts of climate change. The curriculum includes lesson plans for grades 3-12, as well as an online classroom with video, audio and interactive content.
Explore Now...
Steger Foundation Blog: Most Recent
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Minnesota's Changing Climate Updates, May 25
Written by Ann Benson, Education Program AssistantWe are happy to announce that Minnesota's Changing Climate received the Environmental Education Award at the 2012 Environmental Initiative Awards! Thanks to all of our partners who made this work possible! As the school year is winding down and you are looking back on all you have accomplished this year,…Written on Friday, 25 May 2012 12:10 in Climate Lessons Read 22 times -
YEA! MN Student Sustainability Summit a Success!
Written by Abby Fenton, Youth Programs DirectorOver eighty middle and high school students gathered at the University of Minnesota for the YEA! MN Student Sustainability Summit this spring. Watch the video recap from the summit!Written on Thursday, 24 May 2012 11:37 in Local (Minnesota) Read 168 times Read more... -
Climate Change finds a place in Next Generation Science Standards
Written by Kristen Poppleton, Director of EducationLast week the first public draft of the Next Generation Science Standards became available on-line. The new standards lean heavily on the Framework for K-12 Science Education, released a few months ago by the National Academies Press. The standards were written for a number of reasons including, the fact that…Written on Thursday, 24 May 2012 11:29 in Climate Lessons Read 92 times -
Will Steger Foundation Launches Innovative Region-Wide Mentorship Program
The Will Steger Foundation is kicking off the summer with research to develop and launch an innovative mentorship program within the RE-AMP network that connects youth climate leaders with veteran staff from climate-focused non-profit organizations across the Midwest. Mentorship is defined as a mutually beneficial learning relationship between two people…Written on Wednesday, 23 May 2012 15:39 in Climate NewsTags: emergingleaders youthaction minnesota midwest local mn mnyouth youthclimate environmentalmovementRead 171 times Read more... -
State view: Cravaack plan a troubling backlash against climate-change education
Written by Kristen Poppleton, Director of EducationWe published a response to Congressman Cravaack’s amendment to cut funding for climate change education in the Duluth News Tribune. Read the article…Written on Thursday, 17 May 2012 14:25 in Climate News Read 78 times Read more...
Quick Links
US Perspectives at COP17: Final Statements to the UN Plenary
Perspectives from a Youth Climate Leader and the U.S. Lead Negotiator, Todd Stern
Abigail Borah, Middlebury College student delivered (unauthorized) remarks to the plenary on behalf of the American people just before Todd Stern, representing the U.S. State Department:
"I am speaking on behalf of the United States of America because my negotiators cannot. The obstructionist Congress has shackled justice and delayed ambition for too long. I am scared for my future. 2020 is too late to wait. We need an urgent path to a fair, ambitious, and legally binding treaty. You must take responsibility to act now, or you will threaten the lives of youth and the world's most vulnerable. You must set aside partisan politics and let science dictate decisions. You must pledge ambitious targets to lower emissions, not expectations. Citizens across the world are being held hostage by stillborn negotiations. We need leaders who will commit to real change, not empty rhetoric. Keep your promises. Keep our hope alive. 2020 is too late to wait."
What Happened?
As of 10:45pm on Saturday Dec. 10, 2011, the only big decision of the COP process was a recommendation by a working group that the next Kyoto commitment would be 8 years. They also suggested that the commitment would allow for a range of 20-40% reductions from 1990 levels by the major industrialized nations. Many of the developing countries were not satisfied by this level of “ambition” and therefore wanted a 5 year commitment so they could ratchet up the standard for the next one. Parties additionally wanted to change language of the proposal, and probably could have fought over the exact wording forever. At the end of the day, the chairman of the working group decided that the 8 year, semi-weak reductions were better than nothing, and forced it through. He made a quick motion, no one objected in a half-second (literally), and down went the gavel signaling the close of this particular session until COP 18.
COP: The Final Countdown
Friday, December 9th: COP Exhaustion
The conference was supposed to end on Friday, theoretically with an evening plenary session that began at 8 pm. However, the meeting only ran an hour, with little to no concrete accomplishments or timeframe for wrapping up the COP. So the COP continues on Saturday, but with much less energy and lower attendance. I can only hope that the skeleton crew here wants to get down to business so we can move on.
In some ways I’m happy the negotiations are still going on, as little has been accomplished, although I’m also getting frustrated that things keep getting dragged out with little assurance of a final, successful outcome. Apparently some parties were at the conference center until 3am last night/this morning, which meant approximately 16 hours of being at the COP for many delegates.
Final Reflection on COP 17: “A People United, Will Never Be Defeated”
“A People United, Will Never Be Defeated”
One week ago in the big march and rally through the streets of Durban those words were echoed over and over along with many other chants as 7,000 activists from all over the world made their statement.
Were the delegates and ministers from the 191 countries represented at COP 17 listening? I’m thinking not. Now that the COP has finally been gaveled until COP 18 in Qatar next year what are we left with?
Winding Down and Gearing Up
COP 17 ends tomorrow, but for all the NGOs and Inter governmental organizations it only means that our work is just continuing.
The context of that work however may be slightly different depending on what happens inside the Baobab Plenary Room today and tomorrow.
A major discussion item is emission control and closing the gigaton gap so that a peak in global emissions by 2015 is still achievable. This will keep a credible 1.5 degree Celsius or 2 degree Celsius pathway in reach, instead of the 4 degrees Celsius (or more) rise predicted if a new agreement is not reached until 2020 which is what the US seems to be delaying negotiations around.
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