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At this month's annual United Nations conference on climate change in Egypt, delegates from around the globe will encounter something new: a Climate Justice Pavilion in the official "Blue Zone," where diplomats and policymakers gather. Finally, at this 27th Conference of the Parties—aka COP 27—environmental justice advocates will be in the zone where it happens, centering justice, focusing on equity, and highlighting the communities hit worst and first by the effects of climate change and our dirty-energy economy.

In this all-hands-on-deck moment, it is essential to recognize and advance the dignity of all those hands. Only with climate justice can climate action succeed. 

At the COP, we U.S. climate justice activists will join our voices with Indigenous communities, people from across the Global South, and climate justice groups from around the world. We may be far-flung, but we face parallel problems. In the forests of the American South, we are fighting the wood-pellet industry; our counterparts in Indonesia are fighting the palm oil industry. Oil companies that pollute the air and contaminate the water in the U.S. are also busy polluting other countries. And just as U.S. communities find ourselves battling corporations based in faraway states, communities throughout the Global South find themselves battling corporations based in faraway countries.   

Our solutions, too, are similar: community-controlled solar energy independent of the grid. Forest protection efforts that curb climate change while blunting flooding and erosion. Agricultural practices that produce healthy food without depleting the land or furthering climate change. 

The movement for justice for Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color is not an American thing; it's a global thing. We are all reaching out to learn from each other, support each other, and advocate for a more just and sustainable world, and we are relentless.  

At a U.N. COP, you don't run into a lot of climate deniers anymore, but climate delayers are still common. They argue for pumping the brakes on climate action. They don't want to commit to the ambitious goals and timetables our climate crisis requires. Their real goal is winning the next election or hitting the next quarter's profit projections, instead of building a more sustainable, prosperous, and equitable world for the long term and for every person. 

Climate justice voices are united in knowing this foot-dragging has to stop. It's time for a new chapter, focused on implementing the solutions we already know will work—many of which have been developed in the very communities that have been most impacted by climate change. I call it a new era of IRON will—of implementation, resolve, opportunity, and new approaches. 

Here's what I mean:  

I've been working on environmental justice since the movement was born in the 1990s. The cause has taken me to Appalachia, New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward, and to African villages; and to the White House, the United Nations, and annual COPs held in Poland and Spain. Closer to home in South Carolina, we've won affordable weatherization and solar-power access for low-income families; installed solar-powered hydropanels that make clean, healthy water from sunlight and air; and assembled and deployed climate disaster relief kits equipped with dozens of items, from boats and solar-powered electric chargers to electric bikes, tents, and solar-powered grills.

I've been at this long enough to know that in order to address climate change, everybody must be involved. It must be as simple as a family swapping out lightbulbs or weatherizing a home, and as complex as global negotiations held at official U.N. COPs. Whether we're focusing on modest initiatives or ambitious paradigm shifts, and whether we're working in a small town or on the international stage, we must always center justice.

In this all-hands-on-deck moment, it is essential to recognize and advance the dignity of all those hands. Only with climate justice can climate action succeed. 


This content originally appeared on Common Dreams - Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community and was authored by Rev. Leo Woodberry.