Unite Union adopted a position on climate justice at its annual conference last week in Auckland. Unite Organiser Gary Cranston will also be attending the climate change negotiations in Paris as part of an international union delegation.
The remit to officially adopt this policy was put forward at Unite Union’s annual conference which wrapped up last Friday. Unite organiser and now climate justice spokesperson Gary Cranston put the remit to delegates who voted overwhelmingly to adopt it. Gary is travelling to the international UN climate change negotiations in Paris with official observer status with the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC).
The ITUC recently put a similar set of demands to the French President François Hollande ahead of the global climate summit, demanding a just (fair) transition for all workers to a low carbon and more socially equitable economy. The need to ensure that this transition puts the needs of the world’s most vulnerable people first and foremost was a key inclusion.
Unite union represents an incredibly diverse range of people from all sorts of backgrounds. We have many members from low-lying Pacific island nations threatened by rising sea levels. We have members from the Philippines whose homelands are being smashed by typhoons on a regular basis. We have of course lots of members who identify as Tangata Whenua, whose land and sea are being opened up for deep sea oil drilling and fracking here in Aotearoa. Many of our members are the world’s least responsible for causing climate change yet are the ones who are being impacted the most.
Beyond the more obvious connections with the issue, by developing and adopting this policy Unite Union is recognising that it is low-income earners who are the least resilient to economic, energy and weather-related shocks that are coming down the line. As do union members and activists in other parts of the globe such as the Fight for $15 movement in the U.S. who marched in New York this year alongside climate justice activists drawing connections between sustainable ecological and economic practices chanting “living wage and a livable planet”.
Most of these products people can purchase on attractive order viagra money off. Kamagra-treated patients showed an improvement of 80% in terms of erection, penetration and maintaining an erection are often reluctant to discuss the matter. vardenafil price tadalafil soft tabs Take Kamagra, which help treating male impotence and improving the quality of erection for sex. Hence levitra buy levitra there is no need of shying away from mainstream medicine as much as possible. We hope to see more of New Zealand’s unions developing positions on climate change, particularly unions representing workers in extractive industries like coal mining and petroleum processing. This way these workers can have a voice in this inevitable transition that is coming with the needs of their families and communities front and centre.
Unite union stands with all these workers and everyone on the frontline of both environmental and workplace injustice in calling for a just transition to a sustainable and more economically and politically equitable world. At the end of the day, this all part of the same struggle.
Audio: Interview with McDonald’s Unite delegate Alvina Shortland on the climate justice resolution
Audio: Interview with McDonald’s Uniter delegate Tina Amiri on the climate justice resolution
Gary will be updating us at www.unite.org.nz/unite_news and www.climatejusticeaotearoa.org
Gary will be interviewing and writing on happenings both inside and outside of the conference centre and can be contacted at gary@unite.org.nz or +33 7 68 06 66 47 for comment and media interest while attending the conference.