Democracy: The Importance Of Public Debate With Climate Related Topics

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To the average citizen, climate change and sustainability are abstract concepts heard about on the news from scientists, experts, and politicians, knowing the consequences could be huge, knowing we should recycle more, but other than that, we feel disconnected from the topic. The impact of climate change on day-to-day life is limited, and therefore the pressing need for sustainable solutions to tackle the negative effects barely exists — we simply don’t feel responsible. Of course, this isn’t the case — climate change affects everyone and we all need to be a part of the solution.

Sustainability targets are being hurriedly set, revised, and recalculated for both corporations and governments. However, as with the majority of our global issues, in order to ensure success and lasting outcomes, the dialogue needs not only to involve governments and corporations, it must also involve the public.

Engaging citizens in the decisions of their communities is essential for both ensuring a behavioral shift within communities — empowering citizens to take ownership of their own actions, and also for allowing alternative solutions to be proposed and implemented.

Pioneering projects

Numerous countries have recently taken the lead, enacting legislation that requires citizen to be consulted when it comes to environmental legislation or sustainable solutions. In Holland, the Environmental code ‘Omgevingswet’ obligates municipalities to involve stakeholders, and consult citizens. Germany’s ‘Bürgerbeteiligung und Bürgerbegehren’ policy makes citizen consultation mandatory for any major change on urban planning, and the Scottish Planning Policy requires community consultation around major urban planning projects.

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But having the legislation and acting on it efficiently are two separate things. Dutch energy company Eneco attempted to create a small-scale wind farm in Scotland. Planning began in July 2010, and over the next five years the project was rejected twice after numerous consultations, appeals, revisions, and considerable financial input. The reasons given for rejecting the project was the company’s failure to take into account the public’s concern of the “visual impact, and the significant adverse impact on residential amenity resulting from the significant adverse visual impact, [which] outweighs the general support given to renewable energy.”

Two of the biggest blunders were the lack of awareness and information available, and the company’s use of a one-sided consultation method (a door-to-door tick-box survey).

By failing to provide citizens with a full understanding of the implications of climate change and positive counter effects wind turbines are able to have, citizens can only see the immediate impact the turbines will have on their lives (i.e. damaging the visual landscape). The use of a tick-box survey railroads people into giving a predetermined decision, and only allows them to answer specific questions. These two combined remove citizen autonomy.

Human-centered technology

This is where CivicTech comes in.

It is a technology that is utilized to improve the relationship between people and their government, by giving people more of a voice to participate in public decision making, and allowing government to gather citizen feedback in a more effective and constructive way.

Civocracy provides a safe space for citizen to contribute, and highlights relevant information to fully inform them on current issues. It allows local governments to centralize public, private, and civic knowledge, and analyze inputs so they can form effective policy that offers the opportunity to problem solve at scale, and create sustainable and replicable solutions.

Picture: Robin Benzrihem. Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

North Holland deployed Civocracy for just this. They opened a discussion aiming to update their biodiversity policy and implement projects to increase the region’s biodiversity. The discussion featured citizens from a range of demographics, as well as key corporate organizations such as the Port of Amsterdam, the ANV Hollands Noorden (an agricultural company), and De Vlinderstichting (a wildlife foundation).

The local government was able to reach and involve a greater number of individuals through digital correspondence than through traditional methods, including young people, and those who work full time (and thus struggle to find time to attend town hall meetings).

Following the discussion, a white paper was produced and submitted directly to parliament; it featured 10 different citizen inputs quote-for-quote. Policy is now being amended to guarantee an improvement of the region’s biodiversity.

While seemingly simple, this marks a drastic change: citizens’ voices and ideas directly impacting major policy reform.

Failures lead to learnings

One of the key differences between the success of this project and the failure of the Benhar wind farm? The government in North Holland shared ownership of the issue, making everyone co-responsible for the region’s sustainability, and ensured that the public was well informed and active in the political process. The government was also transparent at each step of the decision-making process, ensuring that the outcomes successfully served the needs and desire of the general public, not just political and corporate agendas. Even if the government opted to make an alternative decision, its transparency would have ensured trust between it and its citizens remained, as they were open about the complexity of internal decision making, and length of time the steps took.

Picture: Paul Rysz. Nice, France.

Other cities have successfully gathered implementable ideas to combat climate change, such as Nice Cote d’Azur. They received citizen propositions requesting the standardized use of rooftop solar panels on all new buildings in the city, as well as insisting on a reconsideration of the bureaucratic policy around adding solar panels to one’s own property. The city is now working on the ways it can restructure policy to allow this to happen.

“Administrations can’t govern like they used to; there’s incredible strength to be gained by associating citizens in the process. The Civocracy platform is an environment capable of stimulating quality debates and producing constructive outcomes.” — Innovation-Digital Department, Métropole Nice Côte d’Azur

It’s clear that in cases where CivicTech initiatives are utilized, governments are able to make better informed decisions and corporations can avoid huge time and monetary losses. Sustainable development cannot exist properly without the active involvement of all parties: government, corporates, and citizens, as it’s only together that we can positively combat the effects of climate change.

By Emily McDonnell, Civocracy

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The Beam

The Beam Magazine is an independent climate solutions and climate action magazine. It tells about the most exciting solutions, makes a concrete contribution to eliminating climate injustices and preserving this planet for all of us in its diversity and beauty. Our cross-country team of editors works with a network of 150 local journalists in 50 countries talking to change makers and communities. THE BEAM is published in Berlin and distributed in nearly 1,000 publicly accessible locations, to companies, organizations and individuals in 40 countries across the world powered by FairPlanet.

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