Published on Monday, February 11, 2013 by Common Dreams
Bill McKibben: 'It’s been kind of amazing to watch' the fossil fuel divestment campaign grow at campuses across the nation
- Andrea Germanos, staff writer
The calls for fossil fuel divestment at
universities are growing louder, with the most
recent calls coming from Tufts and Cornell students
urging their universities to take climate action and
divest their endowments from the polluting
industries.
On Sunday, the Tufts Community Union Senate,
which represents undergraduate students to the
administration, overwhelmingly
passed a resolution calling upon
the university to divest its endowment from fossil
fuels.
The resolution
(.pdf), which passed by a 24 - 1 vote, cites Tufts’
vision statement that reads “as an institution, we
are committed to improving the human condition,” and
calls upon the Board of Trustees to immediately stop any new investment in fossil fuel companies; and to ensure that within five years none of its directly held or commingled assets include holdings of either public equities or corporate bonds in fossil fuel companies as determined by the Carbon Tracker list;
In a similar move, on Thursday, Cornell's
Student Assembly voted
22 - 2 to for a resolution calling for its
university's endowment to divest from fossil fuels.
Cornell's resolution calls for full divestment
of the university's endowment from the fossil fuel
industry by 2020, and also calls for 30% of the
divested funds to be reinvested in sustainable
options by 2030, KyotoNOW!, Cornell’s student
climate justice organization, reports.
“When we say ‘carbon neutral’, we should mean
it,” The
Cornell Daily Sun reports
Anna-Lisa Castle, former Kyoto NOW! co-president, as
saying. “It doesn’t mean we should just start
recycling on campus; we also want to see that we are
not hypocritical by investing millions of dollars in
the fossil fuel industry.”
In an op-ed urging the university to answer the
call to divest from fossil fuels, Cornell senior
Julia Fiore writes:
The climate will neither repair itself, nor will fossil fuels be replaced with sustainable energy, if we do not put pressure on dirty energy industries. Most scientists agree that we, as a planet, are approaching a tipping point in the climate battle; if a movement to divest were to exist, like it did for Apartheid thirty years ago, it should be now, not later.
Noting that the divestment movement has already
seen successes
at Unity and Hampshire Colleges,
and that the divestment movement continues at
hundreds of colleges across the nation, Bill
McKibben, 350.org founder, told Democracy
Now! last week:
Well, talking about this burgeoning divestment
movement. It’s been kind of amazing to watch in
the last six weeks as the number of campuses has
mushroomed to the point—at 234 campuses now. The
Nation said last week that this
may be the largest student movement in several
decades. In one sense, it came very quickly out of
nowhere. In another sense, you know, last year was
the hottest year we’ve ever seen in America. We
watched the drought, we watched Sandy. I think
it’s no surprise, really, that young people are
starting to say, "We’ve got to spend another 60,
70 years on this planet. We better do something
fast." And that something means standing up to the
fossil fuel industry that’s been in the way of
rational change for a quarter-century now. MORE
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