Athens: Great Green Events – 10/10/10 Avaaz.org
Posted by keeptalkinggreece in environment
Let’s remember the “climate” for a change! Let’s learn “Green”!
This Sunday – 10/10/10 – people from 187 nations will come together in 6,300 “climate work parties” from Greece to Palau. Aim of the worldwide action is to shatter a dangerous myth: that the global climate movement has somehow disappeared.
Avaaz, the international civic organization that promotes activism on issues such as climate change, human rights and religious conflicts, is the initiator of the events.
Great Events in Athens
Local events in Athens include a ”Lunch Street Party” and a “10% School Challenge”
10% School Challenge - All Day Long
My favorite! Not only for Kids!
Athens downtown – Syntagma Square
Together with final day of the Athens Green Design Festival. At the festival, “we will be engaging the public with fun activities such as giving them a chance to ride a bicycle that generates the electricity to power a stereo system, asking “pop quiz” questions about climate change (and giving prizes!), and holding a scavenger hunt for people to identify recyclable versus non-recycable items around the festival. Additionally, we will be launching a competition (as part of the international 10:10 initiative) for 10 public schools to reduce their carbon footprints by 10%.”
Event Host: British Council Challenge Europe
For more info: tp://challengeeurope.britishcouncil.org/
Lunch Street (& Work) Party – Lunch and Fun! 13:00 – 19:00
Plans include: Planting trees, Cleaning up the park, Paint over the walls, Live Music
I understand you must bring food & drinks
Place: Protomayias Square, Moustoksydi & Eyelpidon/ On the Bridge
Πλατεία Πρωτομαγιάς, Μουστοξύδη & Ευελπίδων/ Στη γέφυρα πάνω από τη Μουστοξύδη!
I have no idea where it is but you can click here and see the map or e-mail organisors
Event Website: (mainly Greek) http://lunchstreetparty.blogspot.com/
For events in other countries, please, click the link in the Press Release below!
Avaaz.org Press Release
This Sunday, 10/10/10, we’ll smash a world record: citizens of 187 nations have organized more than 6300 “climate work parties,” from Greece to Palau. The message: the world’s people are taking action on climate — and it’s time for governments to join us.
Let’s show that the global climate movement is energized
This Sunday, at more than 6300 events in 187 countries, citizens around the world will shatter a dangerous myth: that the global climate movement has somehow disappeared.
We’ll show world leaders and the media that we’re bigger, more diverse, and more creative than ever — and that we simply won’t give up until our planet, and those who live on it, are safe.
On Sunday, October 10 — that’s 10/10/10, a date to remember — we will gather in climate “work parties” around the globe to demonstrate our determination and trumpet a call to our governments: “We’re getting to work… what about you?”
The more of us take part, the more unmistakable our message of determination to defeat climate change. And these parties won’t just be vitally important; they’ll be fun, too. Click below to find an event near you and RSVP (or register an event of your own) — it’s time to roll up our sleeves and take action:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/global_work_party/?vl
The timing is critical: in the weeks and months to come, governments will make important decisions about whether to keep striving for a global climate treaty. All year, they’ve been reeling from last December’s Copenhagen summit, where leaders failed to reach a legally binding agreement — or even commit to developing one. Today, if politicians think that the public outcry for climate action has ended, they will succumb to the whispers of the fossil fuel lobby — and simply give up on reaching a real deal.
But even as governments dither, the climate crisis itself is accelerating. 2010 is the hottest year on record. Climate-linked natural disasters, like the floods in Pakistan, have claimed thousands of lives. And scientists say the the picture is only getting worse. Our movement must race ahead more quickly than the crisis itself — and pull the politicians along with us.
By demonstrating our willingness to take action, the Global Work Party issues a challenge to our leaders. Local events include tree plantings in rural Tanzania, solar installation in China, and an international bike-ride from Jordan to Israel — along with much simpler events organized by small groups of friends. Wherever we are and however we get involved, we’re making a point: if we’re driving solutions to climate change within our own communities, our political leaders have no excuse not to get to work nationally and globally.







