The conference aims to put the climate crisis at the centre of the debate about how to deal with the economic crisis. We need to find alternatives to the government's austerity programme designed to deliver jobs and move us in the direction of a low carbon economy.
This
 is part of an interview with Graham Petersen, the UCU's national 
environment co-ordinator, on the current Red Pepper website. The full 
interview can be found at 
Graham
 is one of the many trade unionists who will be contributing to the 
"Confronting the Climate Crisis" conference on June 8th. Others 
include officers and rank-and-file members the CWU, FBU, PCS, TSSA, 
Unison, Unite, and several other unions.
They
 will argue that in its impact of the price of food, the prospect of 
harsher winters and larger fuel bills, and the potential for 
creating climate jobs, climate change is already, in Graham's phrase, a 
"core organising issue" for the  unions. But there is a larger issue.
In
 the past the trade union movement was in the forefront of campaigns on 
the great moral causes of their age, from the anti-slavery movement in 
the nineteenth century to the anti-apartheid movement in the 1980's. The
 First International was launched by trade unionists to support the 
cause of Polish independence.
The
 challenge of not leaving to our children and grandchildren a planet 
devastated by climate chaos is the great moral cause of our age. In the 
words of Suzanne Jeffery, Chair of the Campaign against Climate Change 
Trade Union Group, the June 8th conference is an opportunity for today's
 trade unionists to "step up to the mark" as our predecessors did.
You can also join our facebook event at https://www.facebook.com/events/156810361152225/ and help to generate interest in the conference by tweeting your comments using the hash-tag #ctcc2013.
 
 








