Dispatches from Dubai
Members of Boston Collegeās delegation to the worldās largest international climate change conference, COP28 U.A.E., discussed their experiences and took questions via live interactive Zoom sessions earlier this month, offering BC community members an opportunity to hear firsthand about proceedings. The December 4 and 11 āDispatches from Dubaiā were hosted by the Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society.
For the third consecutive year, the University is an official Observer Organization for the United Nations Climate Change Conference, orĢż Conference of the Parties (COP). This highly influential annual global eventāheld this year from November 30 through December 12āserves as the center of global climate change policymaking.
"āDispatches from Dubaiā are part of a series of programs that the Schiller Institute is hosting to extend the University's investment in sending our delegation to COP,ā said Schiller Institute Seidner Family Executive Director Laura Steinberg, noting that the events allow the full BC community to benefit from the delegation's experience. āWhile the conference receives plenty of media coverage, we see tremendous value in BC faculty and students being able to hear directly from their peers,ā she said.
On December 4, an engaging group of eight undergraduates, School of Social Work Assistant Professor MarĆa PiƱeros-LeaƱo, and Lynch School of Education and Human Development Associate Dean Julia DeVoy, shared their impressions of the first week at the conference, as well as their insights, interests, and takeaways. While at COP28, the delegates attended high-level sessions with world leaders, smaller events tailored to specific topics, and debriefings by youth and research groups. They also explored pavilions hosted by the countries in attendance, and enjoyed the opportunity to visit Dubai.
At the dispatch session, delegates touched on climate change-related Issues including fossil fuels, greenhouse gases, and global water and food scarcity. Ģż
Gabriella D'Angelo ā25, an environmental geoscience and economics major, was struck by āthe sheer amount of people who are also passionate about same things. She called it āinspiring,ā adding that she has gleaned ideas for career options and ways to get more involved in sustainability issues. Her Boston College ID tag, she said,Ģż prompted an approach by a representative of a nonprofit Cape Cod-based wildlife fund, with whom she spoke and exchanged contact information in hopes of collaborating on campus events.
āIāve made connections and broadened my global perspective,ā D'Angelo said.
Human centered engineering and economics major Leonard Alsleben ā26 had āpreconceived notionsā going into the conference, since it was held in Dubai and presided over by Sultan Al Jaber, chief executive of the United Arab Emirates' state oil company, Adnoc. Butāgiven the focus on methane emissions, one of the most dangerous forms of greenhouse gasāAlsleben cited a pledge by 50 companies which represent half of global oil production, to reach near zero methane emissions by 2030 as an āambitious but promising goal.ā
ĢżPiƱeros-LeaƱo, the group's faculty leadāwho also attended COP27ādiscussed highlights of her experience, noting in particular the inclusion for the first time of a day focused on health, which placed it "officially on the COP28 agenda."
She also spoke about a meeting that included U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry J.D. ā76, H '14, former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates, and World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. āIt struck me that health was seen in a holistic view, including mental health," she said. "A lot of work needs to be done in this area.ā
āGender also takes a primary role this year,ā added PiƱeros-LeaƱo, āan effort to put women at the center of conversation, though decisions are still being made predominantly by males.ā Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, she noted, highlighted the strength of women joining forces.
Dispatch attendees were eager to pose questions to the delegates. One asked about the groupās recurring discussion of the need for various sectorsāthose in STEM, with social science backgrounds, in politics, and othersāto work together to solve global crises, and how this could play out.
In response, Lynch School of Education and Human Development Associate Dean of Undergraduate Students and Programs Julia DeVoy underscored the important role of the Schiller Institute in fostering and facilitating such collaboration.
ĢżāThatās the beauty of the Schiller Institute," she said. "These are complex problems and require multifaceted, multi-perspective, multi-modal approaches. Engineers have to talk to the social scientists, design thinkers have to talk to entrepreneurs. You canāt just have policy makers make policy without talking to environmentalists, psychologists, and others. We have to have a transdisciplinary set of approaches. Thatās the only way to make progress.ā
The session wrapped with two COP28 delegates headed to Dubai for the second weekāamong a group of four faculty members and six graduate students who participated in the December 11 dispatchāseeking advice from those who had navigated the first week of this large-scale event. Practical tips included packing clothing appropriate for hot weather as well as comfortable walking shoes, and a recommendation of where to find the best coffee (the Colombian pavilion).
Other members of the first-week delegates who participated in the first dispatch were: seniors Anna Davis, Emily Forand, Gabriela Levitt, Sophia Riordan, Jonathon Strang, and junior Sancia Sehdev.
COP28 week two delegates included School of Social Work Associate Professor Praveen Kumar, the faculty lead; Carroll School of Management Associate Professor Gergana Nenkov; Schiller Institute Professor of Climate Science and Society Yi Ming; Lynch School Assistant Professor Caitlyn Bolton; Kathleen Archibald M.S.W. ā24; Leila Ismaio J.D. ā25; Ji In Kim D.N.P ā25 of the Connell School of Nursing; Chanelle Robinson Ph.D. ā24 (Theology); Matthew Mersky Ph.D. ā25 (English); and Edwin Ward J.D./M.A. ā24.
The 20 COP28 delegates were chosen from a pool of some 300 applicants.
"Coordinating the BC delegation to COP aligns beautifully with the Schiller Institute's mission because the institute is the hub for interdisciplinary, cross-college activities on campus,ā said Steinberg. āClimate change demands attention from each of us, and students and faculty from all schools and departments at BC are invited to join the delegation. Faculty and staff from many parts of the University make the final selection, a very difficult task when there are so many well-qualified, passionate applicants from BC who would like to attend."
BC delegates shared āday in the lifeā postings and photos for COP28 on theĢżSchiller Instituteās Instagram: .
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