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Today’s theme at COP28 was Energy and Industry, Just Transition, and Indigenous Peoples.

After reflecting on my experience here in Dubai the past few days I have come across many of these topics not just today, but everyday in COP. Firstly, I am so happy to see such a strong Indigenous presence at COP this year. I have attended many events and panels that make a space and deliberate acknowledgement for the unfair effects the climate crisis and the history of colonization and displacement has had on their people. I have also heard and felt the importance of our nature as a multigenerational story has affected Indigenous people and even still affects us now.

Women are often the heart and arrow to the orchestra of a family. For years, women have been expected to do the task of cooking, cleaning, working and providing for the family in a comforting and stabilizing manner. Across the world, women are often tasked or left with jobs that involve farming produce for the family and selling in markets to their local communities. These traditional jobs are easily learned and passed on in their families, especially for those that might not have access to other jobs due to job scarcity, lack of education or the responsibility of keeping the home. Heat stroke is a large contributor to deaths in southern countries. These deaths are unaccounted for due to the lack of data and research in these parts of the world.

Yvonne

I think we need to consider the root of these issues. Women aren’t able to get other sorts of jobs because they aren’t given the opportunity or funding in other aspects of the economy. This stems from colonization. People with power–often caucasian men from other countries have created and sustained an oppressive system in Indigenous areas restricting women from using their power to contribute to higher positions in their communities.

Women are quick to problem solve in times of extreme weather conditions. Women are faithful and spiritual in the safety of their families. Women are resilient to the positions they are put in. But, if women aren’t given the opportunity to use their profound skills in an effort to combat the climate crisis, they become victims. In fact, we are all victims. This world is our home and we must consider the historical context of the way things are.

I think the one theme that continues to inflict us as humans time and time again is the fear of change.

Moving from elementary to middle school and later to high school is hard and scary. Icarus was scared to transition from boy to man. Filled with shame, he flew to the sun and died. Racism ultimately stems from the “majority race” being scared of the minorities strong and empowering capabilities and in turn, pushing them to a corner so they cannot succeed. Putting your real personality out to others is nerve wracking due to fear of not being accepted, even though we know no one person is the same.

Though I think humans are victims to the same trope, I also think it’s quite beautiful. We continue to break boundaries that we didn’t know existed. I think this is what we need to do to combat the climate crisis. Not only for Indigenous women and children, but for our ancestors who brought our stories here. We need to give the underrepresented a place at the table to make decisions for our planet. Our health and well-being depends on it. Our kids’ kids depend on it. And we deserve it for ourselves.

Yvonne Mongare

I am deeply honored to be granted the opportunity to attend COP28 this year with Climate Generation. I have always been curious about learning how I can impact my own community, especially with knowledge that might not be readily accessible or available to others. When I started volunteering/working with Climate Gen, I realized that there were so many unjust environmental issues happening around my community. The correlation between health disparities in areas that experience environmental injustice was strong. Though I am a nursing major, I am also on the pre-medicine track and hope to use my uniquely acquired skills from both my career path and this international event to help the people within my own community become healthy and environmentally conscious individuals.

Yvonne is a Climate Generation Window Into COP delegate for COP28. To learn more, we encourage you to meet the full delegation and subscribe to the Window Into COP digest.

The post A Place at the Table appeared first on Climate Generation.

A Place at the Table

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Corpus Christi Leaders Believe Data Center Plans May Be Behind Delays to Emergency Water Supply

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Authorities in Sinton won’t confirm or deny Corpus Christi’s suggestion that the small town is hoarding its precious groundwater for data centers. Across Texas, a booming buildout of server farms is adding strain to water resources that are already stretched to their limit.

This story was produced in partnership by Inside Climate News and the Texas Newsroom, the state’s network of public radio stations.

Corpus Christi Leaders Believe Data Center Plans May Be Behind Delays to Emergency Water Supply

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New Zealand Moves to Ban Tort Liability for Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Climate Damage

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The move comes as the American Petroleum Institute and Republicans in Congress push legislation in the U.S. to shield the oil and gas industry from climate accountability.

New Zealand’s government has announced that it plans to amend the country’s signature climate law to prohibit liability arising from climate change damages, a controversial move that critics say would shield polluters from climate lawsuits and undermine the rule of law. It comes amidst recent legislative action from Republican lawmakers in the U.S. to similarly restrict liability for climate-related harms.

New Zealand Moves to Ban Tort Liability for Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Climate Damage

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Pacific civil society cautions ISA of ‘bluewashing’ deep-sea mining

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SUVA, FIJI, Tuesday 19 May 2026 – Pacific civil society groups are calling for transparency and inclusion in regional deep-sea mining talks, as environmental stewardship concerns and poor economic prospects accompany the corporate push.

This cautionary call comes on the first day of the International Seabed Authority (ISA)’s Pacific Small Island Developing States regional workshop, the so-called ‘Deep Seabed Sustainable Blue Growth Initiative’ in Suva, Fiji.

The Pacific Regional Non-Government Organisations (PRNGO) Alliance, including Pacific Conference of Churches (PCC), Fiji Council of Social Services (FCOSS), Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG), Greenpeace Australia Pacific (GPAP), and over 20 Pacific civil society organisations, questioned the agenda of the “blue growth” forum, arguing that the workshop emphasises sponsoring States, but only includes observer engagement with other Pacific Small Island Developing States (PSIDS).

The collective stressed the importance of ensuring that the workshop does not unintentionally privilege or amplify only the perspectives of sponsoring States in a manner that could be perceived as legitimising or advancing deep-sea mining pathways in the Pacific.

Mr Joey Tau, Chair of the PRNGO Alliance, said: “We are extremely concerned that the current agenda is inappropriate to the Pacific context; as it stands, it clearly centres states that have an interest in deep-sea mining, with relations and benefits to the mining industry. Such regional workshops must ensure equal visibility and space for non-sponsoring States, particularly those advocating for precautionary approaches and environmental safeguards.

“We also challenge the ISA in its mandate to encourage policy discussions on effective protection of the marine environment and not just on the economics, exploration and exploitation.”

Ms Vani Catanasiga, Executive Director of the FCOSS, said: “The ISA came in to conduct a workshop, but they excluded civil society organisations. Why has that been allowed? The ISA is excluding a body of knowledge that is needed for concrete conversations that also takes into consideration the well-being of the Pacific people. This was not well thought through – this forum should have at least emphasised the importance of a civil society perspective. As we are aware, deep-sea mining will have transboundary harm; this is why it is important to have civil society in the room during these conversations.”

Reverend James Bhagwan, General-Secretary of PCC, said: For Pacific peoples, there is nothing sustainable about deep-sea mining when it violates our cultural and spiritual connection to the ocean. The ocean is not an empty space. It is not simply a resource. It is our common home, our provider, our ancestor, our climate regulator, and part of God’s creation. In the Pacific, we have long said: the ocean is us, and we are the ocean. To mine the ocean is to wound the life-system that holds our peoples, our islands and future generations together.”

Ms Laisa Nainoka, Oceans Campaigner at PANG, said: “There is no such thing as sustainable deep-sea mining. Harm does not become harmless just because we rebrand it. It is fundamentally destructive, with far-reaching impacts on the ocean, marine life, and the communities that depend on them for survival. These impacts are not confined to the high seas or the exclusive economic zones of sponsoring states, it is felt across the entire ocean.”

Mr Rae Bainteiti, Political Coordinator at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said: Calling the destruction of our ocean floor ‘sustainable blue growth’ is deceptive, biased, and wrong – it is bluewashing the biggest modern threat to the Pacific. Deep-sea mining is a risky investment that will cost the Pacific the most and benefit us the least. The average Pacific Island State would only receive mere thousands of dollars through the ISA benefit-sharing regime as it stands, while international mining companies rake in billions. There is no Pacific ‘blue growth’ in a mined ocean. True blue growth should mean investing in healthy oceans, sustainable livelihoods, climate resilience, and protecting marine ecosystems, not opening the door to another extractive industry.”

Pacific civil society organisations have consistently emphasised that, rather than framing deep-sea mining as an opportunity for “blue growth,” the ISA should prioritise its environmental protection obligations.

At the forum this week, PRNGO is calling for the ISA to:

  • Actively include civil society and community perspectives in workshops;
  • Prevent pro-mining bias in deep-sea mining governance by shifting focus away from heavily invested Sponsoring States toward meaningful engagement with PSIDS;
  • Give equal weight to dialogue about protecting nature, including the role of independent science, the application of the precautionary approach, and the consideration of cumulative mining impacts.

To date, 40 countries have called for a moratorium or precautionary pause on deep-sea mining, including seven Pacific nations.

– ENDS –

Pacific civil society cautions ISA of ‘bluewashing’ deep-sea mining

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