SPECIAL REPORT: LOOKING AHEAD TO COP26: CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE COMMONWEALTH
THE CLIMATE PARLIAMENT: LEGISLATORS WORKING WORLDWIDE TO COMBAT CLIMATE CHANGE We are running out of time. At current emission levels, we will exhaust a safe 1.5°C ‘carbon budget’ by the end of this decade. The climate crisis poses a threat to civilisation and to the very survival of the human species. Most countries are moving in the right direction, making climate commitments and investing in renewable energy. But the world is not moving forward at the speed and scale needed to avoid going beyond a point of no return. Elected politicians have a key role to play in the race to prevent a climate catastrophe, as they are a main source of political will. They are in a unique position to push for climate ambition. If they are to take action, legislators must be informed about the latest scientific evidence on climate, advances in renewable energy technology and best practices regarding energy policy. The Climate Parliament is an international, multi-partisan network of legislators working across the world to help solve the climate crisis and accelerate the transition to renewable energy. We are working on several fronts to mobilise climate action.
Image credit: CC license Rodrigo Fernandez
Parliamentary Action on Renewable Energy The Climate Parliament is partnering with the European Union and with the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) to create awareness among key legislators from the Africa Region and from small island developing states, to mobilise them to encourage their governments to raise their climate and renewable energy ambition. The Parliamentary Action on Renewable Energy (PARE) programme, co-sponsored by the Pan-African Parliament, is organising a series of virtual roundtable meetings featuring renowned experts in three areas: a) rural access to renewable energy through mini-grids and other off-grid solutions b) large-scale renewable energy and green grids c) sustainable transport.
The online sessions provide a platform to exchange information on cutting-edge research, success stories and best practices, and to discuss the role of policy in promoting investment in sustainable energy. A growing network of legislators have participated. The series includes: international roundtables focused on specific topics or research programmes; national roundtables including MPs from a single country; and one-on-one engagement with key legislators. The project supports legislators by providing toolkits and policy briefs on concrete action with recommendations in six main areas: climate ambition, large-scale renewables, green grids, sustainable transport, rural access to electricity, and energy efficiency. We are developing a Map of Green Ambition, a tool specifically designed for legislators that includes factsheets summarising the deployment of renewable energy in different countries. The main objective of the PARE project is to raise awareness and build capacity among legislators about climate and energy issues, thus creating the conditions for parliamentary action. Informing the legislators has a multiplier effect, as they reach out to colleagues and their constituents, and encourage their governments to act faster. One outcome that has resulted from the national virtual roundtables has been the establishment of informal cross-party groups in several national Parliaments on climate and clean energy issues. As a result of the national roundtables and the one-on-one engagement with key legislators, we have established Climate Parliament groups in the following Commonwealth countries: The Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia. We have also set up groups in Algeria, Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Gabon, Mauritania, Senegal, Togo and Zimbabwe. The Climate Parliament groups are gender-diverse and multipartisan (including MPs close to the government and from the opposition) and bring together legislators who are motivated to take
Sergio Missana is the Executive Director of the Climate Parliament. He is a well-
known Chilean author who holds a PhD in Spanish from Stanford University. He has worked with the BBVA Foundation in Madrid and was a member of the Governing Council of the European Foundation Centre in Brussels. He was an editor of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report on human rights violations committed by the Chilean military dictatorship between 1973 and 1990.
The Parliamentarian | 2021: Issue Three | 100 years of publishing | 241