With graduation season about to be in full swing, a new youth-led campaign in the U.S. is set to deliver a message to commencement audiences nationwide—at colleges, high schools, and potentially lower grades as well—that this generation of outgoing students is done waiting for leaders to act on the most pressing threat now facing the world: the crisis of “catastrophic climate change.”
Taking its name from its call for “zero emissions” and “zero excuses” from politicians, the “Class of 0000” project is recruiting class valedictorians and student graduation speakers to deliver one unified speech, demanding immediate action to end the fossil fuel energy system which threatens civilization as we know it. The campaign is a project of grassroots groups including the Alliance for Climate Education, Sunrise Movement, Earth Guardians, Zero Hour, and iMatter.
“How can we look forward to the next chapter of our lives when the flames of wildfires are already burning the pages of our stories?” asks Lia Harel, a high school climate activist and organizer for the campaign, in a Common Dreams op-ed published Friday. “How can we look forward to building a home with a family when the floods, hurricanes, and rising sea levels are already tearing down our walls?”
“How can we look forward to the next chapter of our lives when the flames of wildfires are already burning the pages of our stories?” —Lia Harel, Class of 0000“This is not an exaggeration, and this is certainly not a hoax,” continued Harel, who is graduating from Hopkins High School in Minnesota. “This is the reality that my generation faces. But we, the Class of 2019, are determined to reverse this reality.”
Graduation speakers across the country have been driven to join Class of 0000 seven months after the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) delivered a report warning humanity has less than a dozen years to avoid the very worst impacts of a warming planet by rapidly transitioning to 100 percent renewable energy.
“I am an activist and when I heard about the project, I knew I had to be a part of it—for the sake of my class, my generation, the future generations, and my children,” Sol Mehl Zobrist, who will be speaking at her graduation from Spring Street International School in Washington, told Common Dreams. “This is a very important topic to address and this generation is pushing hard to get our voices heard and for our rights to be respected.”
In a video on the Class of 0000 website, the campaign explains that many of this year’s high school graduates will be among the tens of millions of Americans who could be first time voters in the 2020 presidential elections.
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