International Climate Camp
2009 is a key year for Climate Change because the successor to the Kyoto Protocol should be agreed at the UNFCCC Conference of Parties (COP 15), which takes place in Copenhagen from 7-18 December. The majority of world governments will be represented there and their delegates will be responsible for finalising the details of the agreement that will provide the framework for international action on Climate Change from 2012 onwards.
President DaniloTuerk's video message
We aim to engage several of our Climate Advocates in the process leading up to COP 15 by organising an International Climate Camp for them, which will take place in Slovenia from 20-25 September 2009.
What is the International Climate Camp?
The International Climate Camp will bring together a multinational group of Climate Advocates and provide them with a creative space in which to share their experience, gain new knowledge, and generate ideas that they would like to see presented at COP 15.
The camp will be attended by five participants from each of Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Turkey, the UK, and Slovenia. They will be accommodated in a “green” venue that will give them plenty of opportunity for exchanging information, working in groups, and networking. They will find out how international agreements on climate change are developed, influenced and implemented, and will have the chance to learn more about different aspects of climate change from international experts. They will share their own ideas with these experts and develop their own list of priorities for COP 15. Crucially, they will present these priorities to representatives of the Slovenian government who will be attending COP 15 and others who will be responsible for implementing climate change policies in the country. They therefore have a chance to make a real and lasting difference.
Climate Camp Agenda
Initially the Climate Advocates will be given a thorough briefing on the processes that lead up to the formation of international climate change agreements by an expert who has been directly involved in those processes and is part of the Slovenian delegation to COP 15.
There will then be workshops led by international experts on the four major areas to be covered by the Copenhagen conference:
- Forming reduction objectives
- Financing for developing countries
- Technological cooperation
- Adaptation
Climate Advocates will then present the approaches being taken by their own countries to tackle climate change, looking at similarities, differences, and examples of good practice.
Having gathered sufficient knowledge about international approaches to climate change, the Advocates will discuss and develop their own ideas for the top ten priority issues that should be covered by the Copenhagen agreement.
On the final day the Climate Advocates will present these ideas, for discussion, to representatives of the Slovenian government, the diplomatic community in Slovenia, the EC, the UN and the media.
Organisers
The International Climate Camp is organised by the British Council in association with the British Embassy Ljubljana and Focus, the Association for Sustainable Development, and in cooperation with the European Comission Representation in Slovenia.
Climate Camp news
Climate Advocates present their goals
TV Slovenia segment on the Climate Camp
Slovene Press Agency news about Climate Camp