Climate Emergency Archives - Green Party Trade Union Group https://gptu.greenparty.org.uk/tag/climate-emergency/ Organised workers in the Green Party Wed, 26 Oct 2022 12:20:31 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8 https://gptu.greenparty.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/137/2021/01/cropped-gptu-logo-32x32.jpg Climate Emergency Archives - Green Party Trade Union Group https://gptu.greenparty.org.uk/tag/climate-emergency/ 32 32 ‘This Crisis Demands Action’ Climate Justice demonstration November 12th https://gptu.greenparty.org.uk/events/this-crisis-demands-action-climate-justice-demonstration-november-12th/ Wed, 26 Oct 2022 09:55:15 +0000 https://gptu.greenparty.org.uk/?p=1740 The COP26 Coalition has called a demonstration on November 12th assembling at noon at the Shell Centre on London’s South Bank. This will be one of many protests across the UK. The Coalition has made the following statement: Global temperatures, rising. Energy bills, rising. Billionaire profits, rising. While people are being forced to choose between […]

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The COP26 Coalition has called a demonstration on November 12th assembling at noon at the Shell Centre on London’s South Bank. This will be one of many protests across the UK.

The Coalition has made the following statement:

Global temperatures, rising. Energy bills, rising. Billionaire profits, rising. While people are being forced to choose between heating and eating, energy companies are making record-breaking profits.

From bailouts to big business, ramping up more deadly fossil fuels to trashing nature and cutting our wages the Government is refusing to listen. Their policies both here and globally are causing devastation with working people and people of colour – who have contributed the least to the problem – paying the price with killer famines, floods, crop failures, fires and rising poverty.

To stop this crisis we need action that cuts carbon, tackles inequality and ends the injustices baked into our world.

This year world leaders will meet in Egypt for COP27 and African movements have called for a Global Day of Action for climate justice. Communities in the global south need urgent climate finance and reparations for the loss and damages that have caused mass destruction of lives and livelihoods. The UK government must stop its climate wrecking plans and implement real climate solutions that solve both the climate and cost of living crisis and ensure that everyone has a right to live with dignity.

Justice won’t be handed to us by world leaders or delivered by corporations. We need to organise in our communities and ensure that not only is no one is cold or hungry this winter but that we stop the headlong rush into climate catastrophe.

Get organised, bring your banners, instruments and people and join our demonstration on 12th Nov!

To find out more about the Climate Justice Coalition (transitioning from the COP26 Coalition) or to find out where else in the country we are holding events go to our website;

In solidarity,

The Climate Justice Coalition
#ThisCrisisDemandsAction

If you have any accessibility issues please email info@climatejusticecoalition.uk

if you are interested in helping to organise or do something on the day please email info@climatejusticecoalition.uk

Details of demonstrations on November 12th

  • LONDON – Shell Building 12:00
  • EDINBURGH – St Andrew Sq 12:00
  • NEWCASTLE – Grey’s Monument 12:00
  • BIRMINGHAM – Victoria Sq 14:00
  • SHEFFIELD – Barkers Pool 12:00
  • BRISTOL – College Green 12:00
  • PLYMOUTH – Guildhall Sq 11:00
  • SOUTHAMPTON – Guildhall Sq 12:45
  • CARDIFF – Cardiff Crown Court 11:00
  • SWANSEA – Castle Square 12:00
  • CARMARTHEN – Carmarthen Park 12:30
  • BLACKPOOL – location tbc.
  • EASTBOURNE – location tbc.
  • CORNWALL – location tbc.
  • DERRY & DUBLIN – organised by CJC Ireland
  • BELFAST – organised by CJC Belfast
  • LEICESTER – Clock Tower 14:00
  • LEAMINGTON SPA – Pump Room Gardens 12:00
  • MARKET HARBOROUGH – Old Grammar School 13:00

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UK Heatwave: How can we safeguard workers? https://gptu.greenparty.org.uk/views/heatwave-safeguard-workers/ Fri, 12 Aug 2022 14:26:24 +0000 https://gptu.greenparty.org.uk/?p=1618 Ben Gladwin, Warwickshire-based teacher and local NEU officer, highlights the example of schools as workers and unions in the UK increasingly call for climate protections.

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This article was first published by Green World on Thursday 11th August 2022. You can read the original here.

By Ben Gladwin

The July heatwave broke the record for being the hottest temperatures ever experienced in Britain. With temperatures having reached 40.2 degrees in Heathrow London, people were confronted with heat that was debilitating, dangerous, and even potentially deadly. Climate scientists have long predicted that Britain will experience more intense and frequent hot summers. In the immediate aftermath of the July 2022 heat wave they stated that, due to current models for climate change, the UK can no longer be considered a cold country, recommending that the Government set out a plan to adapt to the new reality of extreme heat. Despite this, our workplaces are still lacking when it comes to providing conducive and safe conditions for UK workers. 

The impact of the July heat wave on schools gives us an insight into how the increasing intensity of summer temperatures affects different workers in a close environment. Schools employ more than teachers; site management, caters, educational assistants and even construction workers are all part of the daily running of schools. Classrooms are spaces which can be quite confined, with up to 30 or more students plus education staff. In hot weather, and if they lack ventilation, classroom temperatures can reach high temperatures with consequences for students and staff. More than that, school catering staff working with hot implements can also add to the pressure of working in heat, and site management workers in outdoor settings also run a risk of exposure to heat and sun.

During the heat wave in July, head teachers and the National Education Union sent a warning to the Department for Education that many school buildings across the country weren’t fit for purpose for working in extreme temperatures due to lack of air conditioning and poor ventilation. 

Given the lack of existing framework, schools were left to their own discretion as to what measures to take such as stopping physical activities such as sports days, providing water for staff and students, and even school closures. For the schools that stayed open, the government inspection body Ofsted announced that inspections would still take place for schools scheduled for an inspection, which even at times of ‘normal’ temperatures add to the stress and workload of school staff. To be inspected in 40-degree heat puts schools under even greater pressure. Although Ofsted stated that schools could request to defer inspections, these requests would be considered they would not be deferred for certain.

All this left schools with a confusing framework with which to decide how to adapt to the heat wave. Some schools closed – the Telegraph reported 200 schools nationally – while others remained open. Perhaps predictably, student attendance dropped with roughly one-third of pupils not attending school. The impact of this on lessons and teachers’ planning would be to add stress as planning for a lesson for 30 pupils, and then only having half turn up means that activities need changing and the lesson needs adapting. 

Consideration needs to be taken too for pupils’ learning if they remain at home during extreme weather events. The pandemic saw schools close and online learning become a substitute for learning in the classroom – this is very difficult to adapt for short-term situations such as heat waves.     

Issues therefore arise around protection for workers in extreme weather – this is crucial, as various health problems can arise if people are exposed to heat for too long. Dizziness, fainting, confusion, and if blood temperature exceeds 39 degrees, there is a high risk of heat stroke. Given the increasing evidence that Britain will experience more extreme and more frequent heatwaves, it would seem logical that the Government puts in place a framework for adapting workplaces. 

Countries within the EU have taken measures – Germany has a defined maximum temperature of 26 degrees whereby the employer must take action such as providing drinking water, although this is not enshrined in law. Depending on the federal state in Germany, schools can close due to hot temperatures – called Hitzefrei, which translates as ‘heat free’ – but this is down to the discretion of the school. Spain has a legal requirement of physical work between 14 and 25 degrees, which, if not met by the employer, can lead to an official complaint by the workforce to the Labour and Security Inspection.

Currently, very few legal frameworks exist in the UK beyond the Government Health and Safety Executive’s (HSE) Workplace Regulations of 1992. The regulations state that workplace temperatures must be ‘reasonable’, without stating what a maximum temperature would be. Employers are also not legally obliged to send workers home if the workplace is too hot. The Government’s own website recommends a minimum temperature in the workplace where employees are engaged in physical work.

As the example of schools shows, workers will be faced with increasing temperatures and more extreme heat in the summer in the coming decades. Our current legislative framework doesn’t cover the reality of working in a world where summer temperatures can reach the mid to high 30s and, even as we saw in July, low 40s. 

Action needs to be taken to ensure that workers are safe to work in environments which are conducive to such extremes. This needs to include ventilation in areas such as classrooms, as well as a legal maximum temperature beyond which it is no longer considered reasonable to work. The TUC has already called for measures to be taken, but it is up to workers to organise if they want to protect themselves in an age of climate extremes.

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