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WOMEN IN CLIMATE CHANGE
A national forum series presented with Green Capital
As the nation debates the CPRS and the world heads for the Copenhagen climate summit, leading Australian women will pose a new challenge for policy-makers, business managers and marketers:
How do we unleash female consumer and community power on carbon solutions?
- Women are half the electorate
- Women make 70% of purchasing decisions that determine household carbon footprint
- Women answering opinion polls consistently outpoint men in supporting serious action on the environment by governments, business and individuals
- Women bring incredible energy and social networking skills to addressing society’s great challenges
While many now accept the need to drive change in society to effectively tackle the challenge of climate change, how to do it is a hot topic. Hear why understanding the role and power of women in getting there is essential.
So what do women want from our climate policymakers? What are the messages marketers need to hear if they want to reach women consumers on climate and environment? And how can women take a strong leadership role in transforming society as we move to a low-carbon future?
The Women in Climate Change (WICC) series is part of the 1 Million Women campaign, which aims to empower a million Australian women to take practical action on climate change by collectively cutting 1 million tonnes of CO2 pollution in their daily lives, thus driving long-term behaviour change. WICC has been supported by the Australian Government through the Women’s Leadership and Development Program.
The inaugural WICC forums will explore the role of gender for Australia’s climate crisis. In recognising both the need for behaviour change and the power of women in driving demand for solutions-related products, services and programs, these events will consider the issues through the lens of women in society, in the community and in business.
- How do we successfully change deeply embedded behaviour?
- How do we harness the power of women as change agents, to improve the sustainability landscape?
- How can self-empowerment help society find its voice and contribute to the dialogue?
- What tools can we provide so society can just ‘get on with it’?
The WICC events are for everyone - women and men – who need to drive change in their organisations and communities.
The series includes representatives of many Australian women’s organisations, and leading women drawn from politics, business, the public service, faith communities, the arts, science, community, the media and other fields. With great keynote speakers, panel discussions and special entertainment, the WICC forums are a great opportunity to:
- Share in a dynamic and fresh dialogue ahead of the imminent CPRS discussion and the UN Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen this December, and
- Gain tools to empower you and your organisation to take action now
You’ll hear leading Australian women offer their perspectives for climate policy and practical programs and activities that will mobilise women from all backgrounds and cultures to join in cutting CO2 pollution. WICC will empower women to find their voice, take an advocacy role and confront the challenges of achieving long-term behaviour change.
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Suddenly the green shoots of a 'New Green Economy' are everywhere … so will they take root, or burn off? The environment has featured in government stimulus responses to the global recession, and the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme is dominating national politics. But the recession will pass, the CPRS may yet fall through, and Australia has to address the question: What then?
Transformation to a low-carbon, sustainable economy won't just happen without a lot of nurturing. From energy to transport, water to waste, buildings to broadband, Green Capital is exploring this emerging green economy and the interconnected network underlying it. Who's driving it and who’ll pay? What's working and what's holding us back? And when can we expect real change?
To help plot a path for change, Green Capital is engaging leading thinkers and doers from the public, business and community sectors in dialogue on this enormous challenge. Through our series of three ‘Emerging Green Economy' events in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, our speakers and panellists will map out progress and probe barriers in key sectors like energy, water, transport and resource conservation.
What exactly is meant by a ‘green economy’ anyway? Is there actually a plan to restructure the whole economy from wasteful and polluting to clean and green? Will promised green jobs materialise? How do we close out old economy infrastructure like coal plants and ramp up clean investment in a brave new world? Along with new technologies, how do we engineer cultural transformation as well?
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After years of inaction on big waste problems, are Australia's environment ministers about to usher in a new era of waste management and recycling that will affect hundreds of businesses, consumers, all local governments and our environment? We may be on the cusp of a national revolution in Australia's waste management practices. A draft National Waste Strategy has been released by Federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett; recyclers and environmentalists have collaborated to launch the National Recycling Initiative; the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme will have significant impacts on the waste industry; e-waste and other products are under scrutiny for take-back schemes...
On May 22nd, Federal & State Environment Ministers will meet once again to consider these pressing issues. Green Capital is pleased to provide you with the opportunity to hear how these new policies will impact waste management across the broad spectrum of business, government and the wider community. |
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- Green Depreciation for buildings and equipment?
- Replacement of fuel excise with full-cost recovery 'road pricing'?
- Incentivisation for major new clean technology and infrastructure development?
- Transformation of FBT to drive green vehicles and public transport?
- Right-pricing on natural resources?
Australia's Future Tax System Review, headed by Treasury Secretary Ken Henry, will map out the future for taxation in Australia for the next generation. Environment, climate change and sustainability were key themes in early submissions in 2008 and now the Henry Review is heading into its public consultation phase. Amidst the current turmoil of the Global Economic Crisis and after the soft start proposed for the CPRS, is tax change a vital new front for attaining the goal of a sustainable society? The objectives of the Henry Review explicitly include considerations of sustainability, climate change and environmental impacts. Taxation reform may offer the opportunity for ground-breaking change. As a complement to the CPRS, reform may provide the incentives required to stimulate a green economic recovery, to positively impact the health and well-being of society and to make significant in-roads into addressing these increasingly urgent problems. How will these changes impact your sector? How can taxation encourage and support the necessary transition to a greener economy? |
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| Booking Form Speakers Ticket Prices | Carbon Countdown - The Turning Point Paper [PDF 109Kb] Carbon Countdown – who wins? who loses?
Government, Garnaut and Treasury have set the scene. Industry and business, environment, trade union and social welfare groups have made their cases. Thousands of stories have run in the media. Canberra is hard at work preparing a ‘white paper’ and legislation, as stakeholders continue to lobby and the politicians take positions.
Now for the next round of debate at Green Capital’s ‘Carbon Ethics’. Hear first hand what the key lobbyists are saying about targets, pricing, permits and green industry policies and their answers to critics. Who is taking what position and why? Has there been any movement? Is there any room to move?
Keynote speeches by the Hon Peter Garrett, Minister for Environment on behalf of the Prime Minister (Sydney); and Simon Longstaff, St James Ethics Centre (Sydney & Melbourne).
Our panel members represent the players fighting it out in the media and the corridors of power. Join us in defining your Carbon Ethics... | |
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Green Capital invites you to attend the launch of Carbon Offset Watch.Sydney: Tuesday, 16th September, 5:30 - 8:30pm Sydney Convention & Exhibition CentreOn September 16, the first independent ranking of Australian carbon-offset providers – Carbon Offset Watch - will be released by Total Environment Centre, CHOICE and Institute of Sustainable Futures. If you are looking for the best providers, this extensive survey is of real value. Join us as we examine provider practices, accreditation, transparency, the range of products and other essential features in a informal cocktail environment.
With consumer confidence and corporate reputations at stake, what’s the next stage in voluntary carbon management? |
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