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World Wide Views on Climate and Energy
ACTION TOOLKIT
#WWViews
#COP21
climateandenergy.wwviews.org/results/
What is World Wide Views?
On June 6th, 10,000 citizens in 76 countries
attended 97 day-long meetings and were given the
opportunity to share their views on five themes:
Importance of tackling climate change
Tools to tackle climate change
UN negotiations and national commitments
Fairness and distribution of efforts
Making and keeping climate promises
"We are very excited that
World Wide Views on
Climate and Energy is
being organized and happy
to collaborate with such an
important initiative.
Bringing forward the views
and the voices of citizens
from across the globe can
only contribute to a positive
new universal climate
agreement in Paris in
December. In supporting
this unique and novel
approach, we believe we
are also making an
important contribution to
Article 6 of the Convention
as it relates to education
and public awareness."
Christiana Figueres,
UNFCCC Executive
Secretary
“June 6 was a great day for
taking democratic action on
climate. It was not a day
without a future impact; it
was not an end but a
beginning. [...] This major
citizen consultation is
therefore a direct
contribution to the
mobilization that will help us
take decisions at the end of
the year, that are
commensurate with the
climate emergency but also
with the incredible
opportunities that the
decarbonization of our
economies and our
societies provides.”
Ségolène ROYAL
Minister of Ecology,
Sustainable Development
and Energy
Why World Wide Views?
World Wide Views provides data and messages that
are supported by UNFCCC and can be used to
support advocacy work around climate change and
energy issues
Help us lift citizens’ voices from the largest
worldwide citizen deliberation on climate change: by
cherry-picking these data and messages and using
them through your streams you will be actively
supporting a ‘demonstration of viability of largescale, representative deliberation on complex
matters’ – that’s how WWV was described by The
Nature Journal (link).
Why now?
Citizens’ voices matter. The UN is working with
governments everywhere to define the climate change
agenda and preserve the planet. The data from World
Wide Views will continue to inform these processes and
be used by decision makers around the world with a view
to raising ambition.
The UN is talking about the data here (UNFCCC), there
(UN) and everywhere (Guardian). And we are nearing the
FINAL LAUNCH of the Results on September 26th at the
United Nations in New York!
Final Results Report Launch
On September 26th, UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana
Figueres supported the launch of the Final Results Report and
discussed the results at a high-level event in New York with the
following stakeholders…….
Ms. Annick Girardin, French Secretary of State for Development and Francophony, to the French Minister
of Foreign Affairs and International Development, France
Ms. Hakima El Haite, Delegate Minister to the Minister of Energy, Mines, Water and Environment, in charge of
Environment,
Morocco
Ms. Karen Florini, Deputy Special Envoy for Climate Change at the U.S. Department of State (invited)
Mr. Ronald Jumeau, Seychelles Ambassador for Climate Change and Small Island Developing States
(SIDS)
issues
Mr. Gérard Mestrallet, ENGIE CEO, member of Caring for Climate for Global Compact and Business
Dialogue moderator
Mr. Jean-Pascal van Ypersele, Vice-chair of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
Join
us
at
the
UN
Official
Side
Event
Final Results Report Launch!
on WWViews at COP21 on November
30th or follow the live streamed event
here: http://webtv.un.org/#
When?
Monday,
30 Nov 2015
18:30—20:00 (CEST)
The Challenge
COP 21 is an excellent opportunity to engage with
your members, stakeholders and other audiences by
bringing them the views of citizens on climate.
More and more people and organizations are
supporting in lifting citizens’ voices into the policy
process.
How to get involved
1.
Explore the Data
Encourage your
networks to explore the
data and come up with
new analysis that may
support your climate
action messaging.
2.
Drive Online
Viewing
Share tweets, posts,
graphics and videos
with your community
online, encouraging
them to explore and
use WWViews data.
3.
Share Data Offline
Refer to WWViews data in
discussions with delegates, in
side events, workshops in
person and to the digitally
disconnected in networks.
1. Explore
the Data
Dig into the data and tailor the
findings into key messages for
Climate NYC week and beyond
Developing new findings to support
your causes around climate change
action
WWV data is extremely
granular: results relating to
policy ambition, mitigation,
adaptation, finance, CBDR
and more are sorted per
country, gender, age and
pre-aggregated for all key
groups such as Annex 1,
developing countries , G7,
LDC’s,
AOSIS….
You
name it!
Where to find the data…….
Come up with your own
unique interesting findings
that shed new light on your
priority issues and support
your
organizations’
messaging on
Climate
Change and Energy.
Sharing findings makes the
most out of of citizens
voice!
Webtool
for
automatic
visualization analysis here:
Climateandenergy.wwviews.
org/download-results/
Open
source
data
on
citizens’ perceptions are
available as an CSV file in
different formats can be
found at this link.
Regional, Country Grouping
Comparisons……
Users can see the
webtool to generate
graphic visualizations
based on different
country groupings.
Results are
available for
comparison here.
Example of how data has been analyzed
2. Drive
Online
Viewing
Share tweets, posts, graphics
and videos with your community
online, encouraging them to vote
Shareable
Messages
Here are some quotes
and tweets for you to
share and help you
spread the word about
citizens views on
climate
Tell @UN citizens views at
#COP21 See #wwviews
results
climateandenergy.wwviews.org/
results/
10,000 citizens voted on issues
of climate change and energy
@WWViews #wwwviews. See
results at
climateandenergy.wwviews.org/resu
lts/
Amplify the voices of citizens on
climate for #COP21 See
#wwviews
climateandenergy.wwviews.org/re
sults/
Compare citizen views
of different countries for
#COP21 See #wwviews
climateandenergy.wwviews
.org/results
Tweet Key Findings
The following slides contain tweetable analysis and
vizualizations from findings……
#WWViews
#COP21
@WWViews
1. Importance
of
Tackling Climate
Change
More visualizations found at this link.
78% of global citizens feel very
concerned about climate
change
#COP21 #WWViews
66% of citizens think that
measures to tackle climate
change are an opportunity
to improve our quality of life.
#COP21 #WWViews
63% of citizens consider that
whatever it takes must be done
in Paris to keep
warming below 2°C.
#COP21 #WWViews
2. Tools
to
Tackle
Climate
Change
More visualizations for download found at this link.
78 % of citizens choose
educations programs for the
broader public as a popular tool
to reduce greenhouse #COP21
#WWViews
45% of citizens would like to
see all fossil fuel exploration
stopped. 34% of citizens from
petroleum exporting countries
agree with this measure.
#COP21 #WWViews
88% of citizens are in favour of
a carbon tax, the highest
number being in Senegal (98%)
#COP21 #WWViews
United
Nations
negotiations
and National
Commitments
3.
More visualizations for download found at this link.
82% of citizens consider that
the efforts of developing
countries should depend on
funding from developed
countries (completely or partly)
#COP21 #WWViews
68% of global citizens
think that a Paris agreement
should include a global longterm goal becomes legally
binding for all countries #COP21
#WWViews
High-income countries should
scale up climate finance
commitments #COP21
#WWViews
4. Fairness
and
distribution
of efforts
More visualizations for download found at this link.
79% of citizens think that highincome countries should pay
more, than already agreed on,
for mitigation and adaption in
low-income countries ($100
billion)
#COP21 #WWViews
WWViews key finding: All
countries must reduce their
GHG emissions, even if others
do not #COP21 #WWViews
68% think that a longterm goal of zero
emissions at the end of
this century should be
legally binding for all
countries #COP21
#WWViews
5. Making
and
Keeping Climate
Promises
More visualizations for download found at this link.
71% of citizens believe an
agreement in Paris should
include national short-term
goals that are legally binding for
all countries - #COP21
#WWViews
90% of global citizens believe
that all countries should publish
an annual report on their
emissions and progress made.
-#COP21 #WWViews
50% of citizens ask that
countries have the right to
inspect each other’s reporting of
adaptation and mitigation efforts
- #COP21 #WWViews
3. Share Data
Offline
Share World Wide Views to your
members for spreading citizens’
views into dialogues and
debates at COP21.
Where can you find the final Results
Report?
The following link:
http://climateandenergy.wwvie
ws.org/publications/
Thank you!
Get ready for to amplify
voices ahead of COP21!
#WWViews
#COP21
Questions regarding Toolkit contact:
[email protected]