Can Twitter save civilization? We’re about to find out.
As the clock winds down on the big climate negotiation in Copenhagen this December (formally known as the 15th Conference of the Parties, or COP-15), the future of the planet and its inhabitants may be in the hands of tweeters, especially tots, teens and twenty-somethings.
Several groups are attempting to mobilize a worldwide mandate for action in Copenhagen, calling for boots to hit streets and thumbs to hit keyboards, to harness the power of Twitter, FaceBook, MySpace, You Tube, FlickR, text messaging and the potential power of the PDA Nation.
One of my favorites (in part because I’ve been a sometime advisor on it) is a campaign called Hopenhagen, launched last week during “climate week” in New York City. At the request of the United Nations, the International Advertising Association is applying its creative powers to a viral effort in which young people will petition for a “definitive, equitable and effective” climate agreement at COP-15.
Led by the global communications powerhouse Ogilvy & Mather, the campaign urges young people to become citizens of a Hopenhagen community, complete with a virtual passport. With help from corporate giants Coca Cola, Siemens and SAP, and with support from a growing list of “Friends of Hopenhagen” who range from Reader’s Digest and the Wall Street Journal to Mother Jones magazine, Ogilvy will deploy media and billboards in major cities to promote the power of the grassroots.
Rather than complaining about an infringement on its name, the City of Copenhagen has agreed enthusiastically to rename itself “Hopenhagen” in December, replacing Cs with Hs where the city’s name appears at the airport and on highway signs leading to COP-15.
Hopenhagen is one of several current opportunities for youth to help shape the future they will inherit, and for old-timers like me to improve the future we will pass along. Here are some of the others:
Tck Tck Tck: Organized by the Global Campaign for Climate Action, Tck Tck Tck is an alliance of civil society organizations, trade unions, faith groups and individuals using social media and the internet to demand a “fair, ambitious and binding” climate treaty. Partners include the World Wildlife Fund, Oxfam and Amnesty International, the Union of Concerned Scientists, the World Council of Churches and the Global Campaign Against Poverty, among others.
International Day of Climate Action – Oct. 24, 2009: 350.org is a coalition of more than 200 organizations encouraging local people to hold thousands of events around the world on Oct. 24 to “show our world and its decision-makers just how big, beautiful and unified the climate movement really is”. The group’s web site offers a tool kit to help local activists organize their events.
So far, 1,578 events are scheduled in 125 countries. The goal is to push for a global agreement that reduces atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases to a maximum of 350 parts per million – the ambitious emissions reduction target advocated by Dr. James Hansen, the outspoken chief climate scientist at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
1Sky: Back in the United States, the meta-group 1Sky is mobilizing people to shower Senators with telephone calls in call for action on a climate bill this year. 1Sky has set up a system that makes it easy to let your fingers to do the marching straight into the offices of your Senators.
Raise Your Voice: The Danish government, YouTube and Google have created a web site for people to post their own videos and “raise their voices” about global climate change. The best of the videos will be featured Dec. 15 during a CNN/YouTube “debate” at Copenhagen and on an Earth Globe at the conference.
Focus the Nation: FTN has created a network to help climate activists communicate about their plans and to join groups working on climate campaigns this fall. FTN also helps local groups organize Clean Energy Forums.
Apollo Alliance: The Apollo Alliance is working with Ceres, the Clean Economy Network and others to help businesses lobby the Senate Oct. 6-7 for clean energy and climate legislation. (To point out that businesses have a stake in climate action is a vast understatement. Converting the world to clean energy technologies is likely to be the biggest market opportunity in the history of commerce.) For more information, go to www.wecanlead.org.
Power Shift 2009: A project of the Energy Action Coalition, Power Shift has organized tens of thousands of young people to march in Washington, D.C. in the past. This fall, it is organizing regional summits – 11 so far — to “exercise the political power of young voters and ask President Obama and Congress to pass a clean energy jobs plan by December to rebuild our economy, end our dependence on dirty energy, and bring America lasting security.”
To veterans of the Vietnam era like me, social networking seems less impressive than taking to the streets. For my generation, social commitment meant braving enlistment in a war, or a concussion and jail time to protest the war. Some old-fashioned protest still is underway today in acts of civil disobedience, lately against coal mining and coal power plants. Ask Jim Hansen, who is one of several people facing jail time for a protest against mountain top removal in Appalachia.
When I asked a friend of mine – a young mother with pre-teen children – why more of today’s youth aren’t marching in the old way, she replied: “Kids today don’t march. They network.” Clearly, we need both.
To us wonks and wags emerged in climate policy, a campaign like Hopenhagen may seem light on substance. I think we’ll be surprised. Boiling global warming’s esoterica into a simple but true choice between “hope” and “cope” might be the key to engaging the masses.
- So, if you want to make a difference by forcing leaders to lead, here’s what you can do:
- Sign up for one of the mobilizations above. Better yet, sign up for all of them;
- In a response to this post, alert us to other mobilization opportunities;
- Help these efforts go viral by alerting your social networks;
- Follow emerging developments as we approach COP-15, including more opportunities to raise your voice. One source of information is the COP-15 web site.
With opponents of action fighting to maintain a status quo that cannot be sustained, it apparently will take a planetary village to deal with climate change.
- Bill Becker
Previous in TP Climate Progress

The Audacity of Hopenhagen!
Great post, Joe. This is the most important Fall of our lives. Having our voices heard at this crucial moment is essential.
Hi Joe “TCK TCK TCK” links to “tkctkctkc”.
[JR: Fixed, ty!]
Yesterday at the library, they had a video playing which was presented by “deniers”. People were invited to come and see the video. The sign read, “A CONVENIENT TRUTH PRESENTED: APOCALYPSE? NO! AL GORE AND JIM HANSEN PREDICT DISASTER AS A RESULT OF GLOBAL WARMING. CHRISTOPHER MONCKTON PRESENTS THE ACTUAL SCIENCE… FIND OUT WHAT CLIMATE SCIENTISTS SAY ABOUT GLOBAL WARMING AND THE HYSTERIA BEING PROMOTED BY THE POLITICIANS… PROF. DAVID LEGATES, UDEL FACULTY MEMBER WILL PROVIDE HIS INSIGHT TO THE DISCUSSION…” Also mentioned the name Laurence Gould. I would like to plaster some signs around town myself to let people know the truth. Any suggestions? I have no way to make colorful post boards and don’t know that much about the deniers.
Oh! Their sign also says, “OUR LEGISLATORS ARE WILLING TO IMPOSE HUGE TAXES… TO FIGHT A PROBLEM THAT DOES NOT EXIST.. C.MONCKTON POINTS OUT THE TRUTH BEHIND THE CONTROVERSY AND LISTS THE MORAL ISSUES,” etc.
The only way I could fight them is to make signs myself, writing and drawing by hand, as I don’t have proper tools or know how to do it otherwise. Any help would be appreciated. I would like to be able to make several copies of a sign and put them around town but would first need an original sign. (I did confiscate THEIR sign before leaving)!
Opportunities for citizen action keep arriving as the effort intensifies to embolden U.S. Senators and Copenhagen negotiators this fall. For example, a “National Teach In on Global Warming Solutions” is being planned in conjunction with the international day of action Oct. 24. For guidance on how to organize, structure and publicize local teach-ins, go to http://www.nationalteachin.org/organizers.php. Meantime, Change.org is organizing a “Blog Action Day” on Oct. 15, an annual event that unifies the world’s bloggers to post on a single issue on the same day. This year’s topic: climate change, of course. If you have a blog and want to participate, go to http://www.blogactionday.org. Change.org says it already has registered more than 1,800 bloggers with 7 million readers in 98 countries.
Poor Cynthia! Where do you live?
My suggestion is to sponsor a movie night at the library and play “The 11th Hour”. I would also suggest ask the librarian put out a display with books about climate change written by REAL scientists, such as “Hell and High Water” by Joe Romm, or Gus Speth’s “The Bridge at the Edge of the World” or “The Discovery of Global Warming” by Spencer Weart. Monckton is NOT a scientist.
It’s hard to fight skeptics, but you can try to reach those in your community who have not fallen prey to their lies. I understand your frustration!
I didn’t see Beyond Talk listed. http://www.beyondtalk.net They’re planning a mass civil disobedience on Nov. 30. Great talk at Elizabethtown college Mr. Romm.
For some reason my comment doesn’t show, though when I tried to post it again, it told me that I have already submitted such a comment. Is it waiting to be moderated?
One more youth climate change campaign you could have mentioned, Bill, is PlanetCall.org. Based in Copenhagen but international in reach, the campaign is working to gather 1 million signatures from global youth stating their desire for an amibitious new climate treaty at COP15 in December. Youth who visit PlanetCall.org can also leave a “Call,” their Twitter-like post stating what climate change solutions they’d like to see adopted. http://bit.ly/MbGM9
Agree Justin, PlanetCall.org is backed by the UN Secertary-General and other high-profile names and most importantly has a tangible outcome, which I think is crucial to youth who are passionate about how we should be mitigating climate change and want to be sure that their voice is heard. The signed Declaration and “Calls” will I believe be handed by representatives from global youth organisations to Connie Hedegaard, the host of COP15, in an official capacity in December. http://bit.ly/MbGM9
OK, lets see if this works now. I see that PlanetCall has already been mentioned, so no need to repeat that. Anyway –
Al Gore sanctioned Repower America, works closely I think with 1Sky, focusing on domestic political lobbying – http://www.repoweramerica.org
Avaaz – deals with other issues as well, but has climate change currently at the top of their agenda. truely global in reach. http://www.avaaz.org
10:10 global – with the dual purpose of actually reducing personal/business emissions by 10% during 2010, but also using this to push politicians and leaders into action. Just starting globally, but so far successful in the UK (in terms of sign ups, actual reductions remain to be seen of course) – http://www.1010global.org
And I just love that Copenhagen will “officially” be Hopenhagen in December!