Pressure builds for schools to put climate change study on curriculum
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[May 26, 2021]
By Gavin Jones
ROME (Reuters) - International bodies and
pressure groups are calling for climate change studies to become a
standard part of the school curriculum worldwide, saying the step is
vital to reach targets on cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
The United Nations Education, Science and Culture Organisation, UNESCO,
said this month that environmental studies should be standard teaching
in all countries by 2025.
That may seem an ambitious goal but some environmental lobbies and
politicians say it is too timid.
"Without faster progress on education there will be no chance of
achieving the goal of net zero carbon emissions by 2050," said Italian
lawmaker Lorenzo Fioramonti, a former education minister.
Fioramonti championed a law which in 2020 made Italy the world's first
country to make climate study compulsory in schools, but he admits that
putting it into practice in the classroom has been patchy.
He resigned in a row over education funding shortly after the law was
passed and so was unable to oversee its application, while the COVID-19
emergency left Italy's schools struggling to teach the usual curriculum,
never mind introduce innovations.
New Zealand has since introduced climate change studies into its
secondary school curriculum, and other countries such as Argentina and
Mexico have taken preliminary steps to follow suit.
The Brookings Institution, a U.S. think-tank, has called for climate
action projects in all schools by 2025.
It said in a March report that the ensuing changes in consumer behaviour
could have a bigger impact on cutting carbon dioxide emissions by 2050
than that from investing in wind turbines and solar power.
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Children hold placards during a global climate change strike rally
in Nicosia, Cyprus September 27, 2019. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou/File
Photo
In Britain, former Schools Minister Jim Knight, of
the opposition Labour Party, presented a bill on Tuesday calling for
"sustainable citizenship education" including climate change, to
become part of the basic school curriculum from 2023.
Britain, as annual president of the Group of Seven rich countries,
and Italy, which heads the broader G20, have a potentially key role
in pushing the agenda on climate change education. Together, they
are organising the U.N. climate change conference known as COP26, to
be held in Glasgow in November.
"If we are to make the changes in energy consumption, transport and
food choices that we need to reach our carbon zero goal then the
best place to start is in schools," said Knight.
Green parties and pressure groups have also been lobbying the G20 to
adopt a commitment to mandatory teaching of climate change when
education ministers from the member countries meet in Catania,
Sicily, on June 22.
Fioramonti, one of a group of former ministers and non-government
organisations behind the effort, said they had had "good feedback
from a number of countries, including Italy".
(Editing by Alison Williams)
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