We are just adding on and read note on the draftContinue work on your creative nonfiction draft this week. Utilize the comments from the professor and your peers to develop, clarify, add to, and revis

Sursame 6


Although late, this is a great draft! Very thorough! As you move forward, continue to develop, clarify, add to, and revise. Your revision is due before midnight on Sunday.
Important Notes for Everyone:
* You will need three sources. The assignment asked the research to inform the time period or place, but I'm also fine with research that supports your topic. Use MLA formatting and citations.
* Your revision should be a minimum of three to four full pages, double-spaced, using 12 point Times New Roman font.
* All changes need to be highlighted in your revision before turning in. You can do this with the Word highlighting tool.





Name

CW1100

Professor name

July 21, 2020

Climate Justice

Today's decisions will significantly impact tomorrow's world, which the future generations will operate. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports establish our climate change actions' long-run ramifications. The climate change operations of the people currently are estimated to jeopardize the privileges and the living of the coming generations and environmental sustainability. Most of the effects associated with climate change are regional, and others have catastrophic ramifications to the marine ecosystem, weather, and entire environment. The global climate summit agreements should acknowledge the essentiality of climate justice. Concurrently, climate justice touches the aspect of future justice. The whole transition to complete renewable energy plays a critical role in championing the health and privileges of the current and future generations with the opinion of climate action. In this assignment, I aim to explore the past, ongoing, and next global climate justice.

The holistic application of entirely renewable energy is firmly embedded in the Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals. Renewable energy campaign contributes to the health and the overall well-being of the today and tomorrow's generation. I have observed the imminent dangers and the continuous threats of global warming every day. The total global goal to create and maintain a sustainable 100% renewable energy is should no longer be treated lightly or a mere idea but a universal generational benefit urgency.

From the scientific literature, I attest that environmental justice has been the pivotal subject of the geographical debates since its disclosure through the United States' exploration with environmental racism. Observantly, as the values and the norms of environmental justice get into international law and the civil society movements, the situations expand more (Fisher).

A 100% renewable energy mix is an essential element to achieve energy autonomy by 2030. Notably, attaining 100% renewable energy will involve several structural changes in electricity production (Selosse et al. 100). Reunion Island is vastly endowed with renewable energy sources like solar, geothermal, hydropower, sea energy, and biomass, which are powerful elements for the achievement of the global agenda 2030 and achieve climate justice.

Climate justice manifests the concerns of fair treatment and productive involvement of all persons regardless of color, gender, and race, among other descriptive factors, in the creations, establishment, and implementation of the environmental laws, policies, and regulations (Jenkins 118). Through the prospects of informing, educating, and mobilizing the global partners and the general public to uneven distribution, environmental perils, and benefits, ensuring productive participation of affected communities in critical decision making depicts a distributive and strategic justice concerns.

Initially, environmental justice focused on domestic, activist-led, and communal strategies for ensuring an equal and just distribution of the toxic burden. However, the federal governments devised policies to protect against any future inequality in climate justice decisions by acknowledging that local and other specific groups are affected, and also the national ramifications of the noxious components are observable (Jenkins). Climate Justice establishes a proactive ideological plan to mitigate the growth rate to control climate change.

Additionally, there is a responsibility for climate justice in legal procedures. There is an emergence of atmospheric trust litigation in the United States, which targets the government agencies and utilizes public trust to oppose the government's environmental servitude responsibilities.

As a result of environmental challenges that depict ecological and climate justice, participation in critical decision making is not adequate. Therefore, there is an increase in demand and an urge for more appropriate justice strategies such as energy centered approaches. As depicted earlier, energy justice majors with the energy system. Energy justice has the potentiality to mitigate the pitfalls of climate justice. It provides a lens through which scientists and corporates can initiate solutions on climate justice-related issues.

Climate justice between regions and states is achievable, and ideal has history has depicted. It is attainable by subsuming the countries with vast access to a stable climate and have a large share of climate advantage. Argumentatively, the states who enjoy more of the climate benefits should bear a higher percentage of the total climate change abatement. In this approach, it represents an effective climate justice among the global states (Puaschunder). Climate change costs should be shared and distributed among generations based on the current and the future. In this context, there are climate change losers and winners. The winners should collect the taxes from mitigating the adverse effects, and the losers should focus on raising the revenue to offset the costs associated with climate change.

In conclusion, I have made an extensive exploration of climate justice from the past, current, and future to safeguard tomorrow's generation's ambitions. Importantly, climate justice has been attainable through a precise application of holistic renewable energy to mitigate climate change. Additionally, it evident that climate change advocacy winners should play the tax collectors role, and the losers should raise the revenue to reduce further implications of climate change.



















Works Cited

Fisher, Susannah. "The emerging geographies of climate justice." The Geographical Journal 181.1 (2015): 73-82.

Jenkins, Kirsten. "Setting energy justice apart from the crowd: lessons from environmental and climate justice." Energy Research & Social Science 39 (2018): 117-121.

Puaschunder, Julia. "Mapping climate justice." Governance & Climate Justice. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2020. 23-38.

Selosse, Sandrine, et al. "The renewable energy revolution of reunion island." Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 89 (2018): 99-105.