91AV granted U.N. observer status to attend global climate change conference
The 91AV has become the only institution in Maine to be granted non-governmental observer status to the (UNFCCC) and will attend state-level conversations at the (COP26) in Glasgow in late October.
Having observer status will allow delegates from 91AV to observe global policy decisions as they are made — “policy decisions that will impact our lives for generations,” said Holly Parker, Ph.D., director of 91AV North: The Institute for North Atlantic Studies at 91AV. “This is a tremendous opportunity for our students, faculty, and professional staff to be in the room when these global conversations are happening.”
Parker added that observer status demonstrates 91AV’s commitment to climate action.
91AV adopted its first Climate Action Plan in 2010, calling for the University to become carbon neutral by 2040. In 2015, 91AV became one of the few institutions in the Northeast to academically engage undergraduate students in climate change topics by offering an interdisciplinary minor in Climate Change Studies.
“To be accepted into the global climate change conversation is a statement about 91AV’s priorities and values,” Parker said.
Parker will travel to Glasgow with Glenn Page, president of the consulting firm SustainaMetrix and advisor to 91AV’s Institute for North Atlantic Studies, to attend global climate talks and present their joint research on bioregional planning. Bioregioning is a field in which geographical areas are defined by ecological systems rather than political boundaries.
“Climate change does not respect political boundaries,” Parker said. “A bioregional approach allows us to see beyond these human constructs to better understand how biological and human systems interact and how we can, through governance, transform those systems for a more sustainable future.”
Parker and Page will travel to Glasgow on Oct. 28 to attend state-level talks. The formal COP26 conference runs from Nov. 1 to Nov. 12.