Organization:Citizens convention for ecological transition
The Citizens' convention for ecological transition also called Citizens' convention for climate, is a French assembly, consisting of 150 self-selected citizens from a pool of random citizens. This citizens assembly is called to formulate propositions to « reduce the French emissions of greenhouse gas by at least 40 % compared to 1990, in a spirit of social justice ».[1]
Origins
On April 25, 2019, Emmanuel Macron announced the project of creation of the Citizens' convention for climate, as well as the ecological defense council, during the press conference that follows the "grand débat national".[2] With the set up of the High Council for the climate on 27 November 2018, « France endows itself with governance and robust institutions to take the necessaries decisions in the matter of ecological transition, based on shared expertise and in-depth consultations of the citizens »[3]
On July 2, 2019, Patrick Bernasconi addresses a « letter of mission » to the government,[citation needed] in which he demands that the citizens' convention for ecological transition be organized by the Economical, Social and Environmental Council (Cese), which he is the president.
This letter describes the organization of the convention, the independence of its governance committee and its mandate: « To reduce the French emissions of greenhouse gas by at least 40 % compared to 1990, in a spirit of social justice ».[1]
Activity
The work of the convention lasts six months. Initially planned in July 2019, the workshops start on 4 October 2019, after a call to the members on the 26 August.[4] The members work a weekend on three. They audition climate experts, economists, associations, economic and social actors. They formulate propositions that are submitted, to the Parliament's vote, to referendum, or are directly applied by regulatory measures. A mission letter, addressed to every member, define the convention mandate.
The dates of the sessions and the program of the sessions are set as follows:
- First session: 4–5 to 6 October – Outreach, training on climate issues and organization of work of the Convention
- Second session: 25–26 to 27 October – program of work to be defined
- Third session: 15–16 to 17 November – program of work to be defined
- Fourth session: 6–7 to 8 December – program of work to be defined
- Fifth session: 10–11 to 12 January – program of work to be defined
- Sixth session: 25–26 January – program of work to be defined
Governance
Members
The citizen's convention for climate is constituted by 150 self-selected members from a randomly selected pool of electoral and telephone's subscriber's list.[5] To assure a good representation of French society, the sortition is carried out according to the methods of selection of representative samples used during the realization of surveys. The members randomly selected have the choice to accept or refuse the mission. Volunteers are paid for their expenses and receive financial compensation for their working time.[6][7][8]
Several of them have become passionate to take part in such a democratic experience.[9]
Thematic groups
On Sunday, 6 October 2019, the members of the Convention were divided into five thematic groups reflecting the diversity of social changes that must be undertaken to achieve the objectives of the Convention. These five groups are entitled:
- to eat (food and agriculture)
- have a place to live (housing)
- to work and to produce (employment and industry)
- to move (transport)
- to consume (lifestyles and consumption patterns)
Governance committee
A governance committee is animated by the Economical, Social and Environmental Council (Cese). It associates the ministry of ecological and solidarity transition, as well as qualified personalities. This committee is charged to elaborate on the work program and to ensure its implementation. It can associate citizens members of the convention.[8]
It is composed of two co-presidents :
- Thierry Pech, general director of Terra Nova, and
- Laurence Tubiana, general director president of the European Foundation for climate, negotiator of the Paris Agreement on climate.
Julien Blanchet, vice-president of the Economical, Social and Environmental Council (Cese), is also the general rapporteur of the convention.
The committee also brings together 12 qualified personalities :
- three climate experts,
- Jean Jouzel, climatologist, member of the French Academy of Sciences and advisor of the CESE.
- Anne – Marie Ducroux, president of the environmental section of the CESE ;
- Michel Colombier, co-founder and scientific director of the Institute for sustainable development and international relations.
- three participative democracy experts,
- Mathilde Imer, co-president of the association Démocratie Ouverte ;
- Loïc Blondiaux, professor of political science and président of the scientific interest group « Participation, decision, participative democracy » directed by the CNRS ;
- Jean-Michel Fourniau, director of the scientific interest group « Participation, decision, participative democracy ».
- four social and economical experts,
- Jean Grosset, quaestor of the CESE and director of the observatory of social dialogue at the Jean Jaurès Foundation ;
- Dominique Gillier, vice-president of the CESE and prospective mission head for the CFDT ;
- Marie-Claire Martel, president of the Coordination of federations and associations of culture (COFAC) and advisor of the CESE ;
- Catherine Tissot-Colle, communication and sustainable development director of director ERAMET and advisor of the CESE ;
- two experts from the ministry[10]
- Léo Cohen, former political collaborator in the ministry of ecological and solidarity transition (February 2016 – May 2017 then September 2018 – June 2019), particularly in charge of the preparatory work for the launch of the citizens' convention.
- Ophélie Risler, chief of the department «fights against the greenhouse effect » of the general Direction on energy and climate of the ministry of ecological and solidarity transition.
Guarantors college
A guarantor college ensures the process's compliance with the rules of independence and deontology. The guarantor college is composed of three personalities named by the Cese's president, the Senat's president and the president of the National Assembly.[8]
- Cyril Dion, co-founder of the Colibris movement and et co-director of the documentary "Demain"
- Anne Frago, director of the Culture and social Questions service of the National Assembly
- Michèle Khadi, honorary director-general of the services of Senate[11]
Final propositions of the Citizens' Convention on Climate
On the 21 June 2020, the Citizens' Convention on Climate published its final propositions.[12]
The Citizens‘ Convention on Climate calls for Referendum on
1) Changing the preambule of the Constitution to add “The reconciliation of the resulting rights, freedoms and principles must not compromise the preservation of the environment, the common heritage of mankind"
VOTE: Adopted 76%
2) Changing Article 1 of the Constitution: "The Republic guarantees the preservation of biodiversity, the environment and the fight against climate change.”
VOTE: Adopted 85%
3) The following propositions of the Convention:
- Legislating on the crime of ecocide: To adopt a law that penalizes the crime of ecocide within the framework of the 9 planetary limits, and that includes the duty of vigilance and the crime of imprudence, whose implementation is guaranteed by the High Authority of Planetary Limits.
VOTE: Adopted 63,4%
All Proposed measures of the Citizens‘ Convention on Climate
i) Constitutional amendments
- Amend the preamble of the Constitution with the addition: The reconciliation of the resulting rights, freedoms and principles must not compromise the preservation of the environment, the common heritage of mankind"
VOTE: adopted 58%
- Amendment of Article 1 of the Constitution: "The Republic guarantees the preservation of biodiversity, the environment and the fight against climate change.”
VOTE: adopted 81%
- Strengthening the monitoring of environmental policy: the aim of the members of the Convention is to give citizens a more prominent place in the monitoring mechanisms, to strengthen the effectiveness of existing bodies and to consider the creation of an "environmental defender". To this end, the members of the Convention are making several proposals: The possibility of class action lawsuits, better reporting, evaluation and control mechanisms.
VOTE: adopted 81%
- Reform of the Economic, Social and Environmental Council (CESE): The aim of the members of the Convention is to propose a reform of the CESE in order to respond to the lack of public confidence in the political institutions by relegating political action to a lower level of legitimacy. To this end, they propose to make the opinions of the CESE or of the citizens' bodies it steers more effective, visible and transparent and to involve citizens in decision-making. To achieve this, the members of the Convention have devised various methods: Introduction of mandates for randomly selected citizens and civil society, systematic consultation of the CESE and making its recommendations more binding.
VOTE: adopted 59%
1) Transportation & getting around
Developing other modes of transport than the private car
1. Encourage the use of soft or shared means of transport, particularly for commuting to and from work, by generalising and improving the sustainable mobility package provided for in the recent law on mobility guidelines.
2. Reduce incentives for the use of cars by reforming the Income Tax kilometre allowance system
3. Encourage the use of soft or shared means of transport
VOTE: adopted 96,4%
Designing public roads to allow for new ways of travelling
1. Create park and ride facilities
2. Banning city centres for the vehicles that emit the most greenhouse gases
3. Increase the amounts of the Bicycle Fund from €50 million to €200 million per year to finance cycle paths.
4. Generalize the development of reserved lanes for shared vehicles and public transport on highways and expressways.
VOTE: adopted 98,6%
Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions on Highways and Expressways
1. Reduce speed on motorways to 110 km/h maximum
VOTE: adopted 59,7%
Creating the conditions for a strong return to the use of trains beyond high-speed tracks
1. Reduce VAT on train tickets from 10% to 5.5%
2. Generalise the measures already practised by some regions to create attractive pricing.
3. Develop a massive investment plan to modernize infrastructure, vehicles and stations to turn them into multimodal hubs (links with cars, coaches, bicycles, etc.).
VOTE: adopted 95,9%
Reducing the long-distance traffic of heavy goods vehicles that emit greenhouse gases by allowing a modal shift to rail or inland waterways
1. Developing sea (and river) freight transport “highways” on specific routes
2. Impose regular monitoring of eco-driving training for drivers
3. Require truck manufacturers to adopt the same energy sector in their research and development.
4. Gradually phasing out tax advantages on diesel, in exchange for a strong compensation for carriers in the form of increased financial aids for the purchase of new, cleaner trucks to replace polluting trucks.
5. Encourage, through regulatory and tax obligations, partial deferral to other, less emitting means of freight transport
6. Require shippers to incorporate environmental clauses in their contracts.
7. Encouraging the transport of goods on short, local routes by modulating the VAT.
VOTE: adopted 97,3%
To reduce to zero the emissions of ships during their operations in ports (embarking and disembarking of passengers or goods)
1. Prohibit the use of polluting engines during stops in ports and harbours
2. Provide the means to supply electricity to ships in port in order to reduce emissions from the use of engines.
3. Acting on international regulations to control greenhouse gas emissions from ships.
VOTE: adopted 95,9%
Acting on regulations and the transitioning to clean vehicles
1. Increase the bonus for vehicles that pollute less, in order to assist households and professionals in their development.
2. Strongly reinforcing the penalty on polluting vehicles and introducing weight as one of the criteria to be taken into account.
3. Prohibit from 2025 onwards, the marketing of new vehicles with high emissions; old vehicles may continue to be used in the same way as new ones.
4. Modifying taxes on insurance policies according to CO2 emissions of the vehicle in question to encourage clean vehicles.
5. Enable access to clean vehicles by developing long-term leasing
6. Offering zero-interest loans, with a government guarantee, for the purchase of a low-emission vehicle (i.e. one that is light and not too expensive)
7. Introduction of green stickers to be placed on license plates for the cleanest vehicles, which grants particular services: access to the city centre, parking spaces, etc.
8. Provide training for garages, and more broadly for the "oil" sector, to accompany the gradual transformation of the vehicle fleet towards new engines, fuels and systems.
VOTE: adopted 86,6%
Involve companies and administrations to rethink and organize the travel of their employees better
1. Reinforcing the use of mobility plans by making them compulsory for all companies and local authorities.
2. The Mobility Organising Authorities (AOM) can help to set up these mobility plans to support companies
3. Promote inter-company and intra-company plans (carpooling, employee pick-up by bus, bicycle, etc.) as part of mobility plans.
4. Promoting new ways of organizing work
VOTE: adopted 89,9%
To set up a single website, providing all the information on the transport systems and means of transport in a given area.
1. To set up a single portal that makes it possible to know at any time, quickly and simply, what means and systems exist in a given area for getting around.
2. Develop a project for the unification of transport tickets or multimodal cards
VOTE: adopted 95,8%
Include citizens in the governance of mobility at the local as well as the national level
1. Integrating citizens into mobility organising authorities at all levels (AOM)
VOTE: adopted 96,6%
Limiting the adverse effects of air travel
1. Adopt an enhanced eco-contribution per kilometre
2. Gradually organise the end of air traffic on domestic flights by 2025, only on routes where there is a low-carbon alternative that is satisfactory in terms of price and time (on a journey of less than 4 hours).
3. Prohibit the construction of new airports and the extension of existing ones.
4. Increasing fuel taxes for recreational aviation
5. Promoting the idea of a European eco-contribution
6. Ensuring that all emissions that cannot be eliminated are fully offset by carbon sinks.
7. Support, in the medium term, R&D in the development of a biofuel industry for aircraft.
VOTE: adopted 88,1%
2) Consumption
Creating an obligation to disclose the carbon impact of products and services
1. Make it mandatory to display greenhouse gas emissions in retail and consumer places and in advertisements for brands.
2. Develop and then implement a carbon score on all consumer products and services.
VOTE: adopted 98,8%
Regulating advertising to reduce incentives for over-consumption
1. Effectively and efficiently prohibit the advertising of the products that emit the most greenhouse gases, in all types of advertising.
2. Regulate advertising to strongly limit the daily and non-chosen exposure to incentives to consume
3. Putting in place labels to encourage people to consume less.
VOTE: adopted 89,6%
Limit overpackaging and the use of single-use plastics by developing bulk buying, recycling and deposit in retail facilities
1. Gradually introduce an obligation to introduce bulk buying in all stores and impose a percentage on central buyers.
2. Gradual implementation of a glass deposit systems (washable and reusable) until a generalised implementation in 2025.
3. Promote the development of compostable bio-based packaging to ensure the transition before the end of single-use plastic packaging.
4. Replace a significant part of the Household Waste Disposal Tax (TEOM) by more fair and eco-responsible modalities.
VOTE: adopted 95,9%
Ensuring better implementation of government environmental policies and evaluating them to make them more effective
1. More effective and rapid monitoring and sanctioning of infringements of environmental regulations
2. Strengthen and centralize the evaluation and monitoring of government policies on the environment
VOTE: adopted 95,9%
Education, training and awareness-raising to enable responsible consumption
1. Modifying the education programme to generalise education for the environment and sustainable development in the French school system
2. Strengthen environmental education and sustainable development by making it a cross-cutting task for teachers.
3. Raising the awareness of the entire French population by linking understanding of the climate emergency and actions to take.
VOTE: adopted 97,9%
3) Living & Housing
Make comprehensive energetic renovation of buildings mandatory by 2040
1. Forcing homeowners and landlords to renovate their properties in a comprehensive manner
2. Require the replacement of oil and coal-fired boilers in new and renovated buildings by 2030.
3. Deploy a harmonized network of one-stop-shop public support services for households having to undertake renovations
4. Gradual system of aid packages for renovation, with loans and grants for the most needy
5. Train construction professionals to meet the demand for global renovation and ensure a transition of all building professions to eco-responsible practices.
VOTE: adopted 87,3%
Significantly limit energy consumption in public, private and industrial areas
1. To force public spaces and commercial and industry buildings to reduce their energy consumption through strong measures.
2. Make a major change in behaviour by encouraging individuals to reduce their energy consumption.
3. Encourage limiting the use of heating and air-conditioning in housing, public spaces and those open to the public, as well as in commercial and industry buildings (maximum average temperature of 19°, no air-conditioning below 25°).
VOTE: adopted 92%
Combating land degradation and urban sprawl by making life attractive in towns and villages
1. Define a restrictive envelope of a maximum number of hectares that can be developed, reducing by 2 the development of artificialised soils and make the PLUI and PLU (Local Urban Planning Strategy) conform to the SCOT (Scheme for Territorial Coherence) (instead of compatible).
2. Prohibit any development of land as long as commercial, artisanal or industrial rehabilitation or wasteland is possible within the existing urban area.
3. Take immediate enforcement measures to halt the development of space-intensive suburban commercial zones.
4. Firmly and definitively protect natural areas, suburban agricultural areas and suburban forests. Ensure sustainable management of all private and public forests. Ensure the creation of vegetable cultivation belts around the urban centres.
5. Facilitate the conversion of unoccupied developed land to other uses.
6. Facilitate requisitioning of vacant housing and offices
7. Facilitate the recovery and rehabilitation of wasteland, in particular by the possibility for municipalities to expropriate wasteland abandoned for 10 years or more.
8. Assess the potential for reversibility of buildings prior to demolition.
9. Allow the construction of apartment buildings in suburban areas
10. Strengthen checks on compliance with the obligations to protect land and limit the consumption of non-urbanised land and impose criminal penalties for failure to comply with these obligations.
11. Raise awareness of the importance and value of more compact cities, and develop a new culture of collective housing.
12. Financing housing renovations in small communities
13. Making centres more attractive by revitalizing shops and keeping schools in rural areas
VOTE: Adopted with 99%
4) Production and work
Promoting more responsible production, developing repair, recycling and waste management facilities
1. Design: Increasing product longevity and reducing pollution
2. Enforce the law on the prohibition of programmed obsolescence
3. Make it compulsory to make it possible to repair manufactured products that are sold in France (1), the availability of original spare parts for a defined period of time (2 ). Set up local repair facilities and workshops, and make after-sales services accessible (3)
4. Make recycling of all plastic objects mandatory from 2023, eliminate all single-use plastics from 2023 and increase recycling of other materials.
5. Strengthen and enforce regulations on waste from economic activities, household non-hazardous waste (NHW) and inert non-hazardous waste (INW)
VOTE: adopted 97,2%
Developing and Supporting Transition Innovation
1. By 2025, any financial aid for innovation must be part of a process moving away from a carbon-based model.
VOTE: adopted 98,6%
Organize and support the financing of the transformation of the production tools of companies within the framework of the ecological transition.
1. Regulate the use of regulated savings managed by CDC and banks to finance green investments - Evolve CDC's governance to support this rationale
2. Companies that distribute more than €10 million in annual dividends will contribute 4% of the financing effort each year and those with dividends of €10 million or less will contribute 2%.
3. Set up the financing arrangements by law or decree with a State loan dedicated to financing the transformation of companies.
VOTE: adopted 95,1%
Accompanying the reconversion of companies and the transformation of professions at regional level
1. Accompanying employees and companies through the transition
2. Create a new governance of jobs and skills transition at national and regional level
VOTE: adopted 98,6%
Add a carbon footprint to the balance book of all structures that have to produce a balance sheet
1. Annualize reporting and extend it to all organizations - Scope 3 emissions - Penalty for non-achievement as a % of revenue
2. Broaden the reporting scope to the financial sector - Strengthen reporting obligations to the financial sector
3. Bonus for companies with a positive development - Making public aid conditional on a positive development of the greenhouse gas balance sheet
VOTE: adopted 95,2%
Strengthening environmental clauses in public procurement
1. Strengthening environmental clauses in public procurement
VOTE: adopted 98%
Protection of ecosystems and biodiversity
1. Protection of ecosystems and biodiversity
VOTE: adopted 94,4%
1. Carbon adjustment at EU borders (based on carbon footprint) and consideration of redistribution issues to avoid burdening the least advantaged households
VOTE: adopted 97,7%
Production, storage and redistribution of energy for and by everyone
1. Improvement of territorial/regional governance
2. Participation of citizens, local businesses, local associations and local authorities in RE projects
3. Development of self-consumption
VOTE: adopted 96,5%
Keeping pace with the evolution of digital technology to reduce its environmental impact
1.Keeping pace with the evolution of digital technology to reduce its environmental impact
VOTE: adopted 98%
5) Food sector
Moving the collective restaurant sector towards more virtuous practices
1. 1. To set up an investment premium for establishments to equip themselves, train staff, and conduct awareness campaigns, in order to achieve the objectives of the EGalim law.
2. Propose a bonus of 10 cts per meal for small organic and local canteens (less than 200 meals per day) to help them absorb the extra cost for the first 3 years of their transition.
3. Create an "observatory of the restaurant sector " with the aim of sharing good practices and monitoring the achievement of the objectives of the EGalim law.
4. Set up a control body to ensure the proper implementation of the EGalim law.
5. To encourage reflection on rewriting the decree of 30 September 2011 on the nutritional quality of meals served in school canteens.
6. Switch to a daily vegetarian choice in self-service restaurants from 2022 onwards and encourage single-menu restaurants to develop vegetarian menus.
7. Extend all the provisions of the EGalim law to private collective catering from 2025.
8. Extend the list of products eligible for the 50% threshold defined by the law to farmers in transition to organic farming and to products with low environmental costs.
9. Helping to structure the sectors so that they can recognise products in quality signs.
VOTE: adopted 93%
Making tripartite negotiations more transparent and fairer for farmers
1. Ensure the presence of the DGCCRF (Directorate General for Competition, Consumer Affairs and Fraud Control) in the negotiations, make the method compulsory for all sectors and organise regular meetings at the inter-professional level, oblige food companies and central purchasing bodies to be transparent.
VOTE: adopted 98%
Developing short supply chains (local trade)
1. Use the public procurement lever to promote products from short, local and low environmental cost circuits, in the form of a "purchasing guide" to be sent to public purchasers.
VOTE: adopted 99%
Pursue efforts to reduce food waste in catering and at the individual level.
1. Pursuing efforts in collective catering
VOTE: adopted 97%
Developing agro-ecological practices
1. Reach 50% of farms in agro-ecology by 2040
2. Inclusion in the law and the NSP: Developing organic farming (maintaining aid for conversion, restoring aid to maintain organic farming, having the cost of annual certification of the label borne by the State)
3. Nitrogen fertilizers: Increase the General Tax on Polluting Activities (TGAP)
4. Reduction in the use of pesticides with a ban on CMR (carcinogenic, mutagenic, retroproductive) products, reduction in the use of plant protection products by 50% by 2025 and a ban on the most environmentally damaging pesticides by 2035.
5. Inclusion in the law and the NHP: Helping to structure the crop sector (increased autonomy of the French animal population, 100% autonomy for human food in plant proteins, increased crop diversification in the CAP, implementation of the national Plant Protein Plan).
6. Inclusion in the law and the NSP: Helping to maintain permanent grasslands (avoid bare land as much as possible by setting up compulsory plant cover, remunerating farmers for the services they provide for carbon storage through their activities)
7. Inclusion in the law and the NHP: Prohibit the financing of the establishment of new livestock farms that do not respect the conditions of agroecology and low greenhouse gas emissions, support farmers in restructuring their livestock to improve the quality of production.
VOTE: adopted 98%
Reforming agricultural education and training
1. Reforming agricultural education and training: integrating the teaching of agroecology into the compulsory core curriculum, imposing internships on farms that apply agroecological methods, opening up continuing education on agroecological practices for all farmers, training technical advisers in agroecological practices.
VOTE: adopted 99%
Maintaining France's ambitious position for the CAP (Common Agricultural Policy) negotiations
1. Raise greening condition requirements levels
2. Transforming the allocation of aid per hectare into aid for agricultural assets
VOTE: adopted 97%
The CAP as a lever for transformation at national level
1. Establish a mechanism for monitoring and evaluating the achievement of the climate performance of the National Strategic Plan (NSP)
2. To make the National Strategic Plan (NSP) compatible with the National Low Carbon Strategy (SNBC), the National Biodiversity Strategy (SNB), the National Plan for Health and Environment (PNSE), the National Strategy to Combat Imported Deforestation (SNDI)
3. Integrate all the provisions concerning the development of agroecology into the National Strategic Plan (NSP).
VOTE: adopted 99%
Encourage the development of a low-emission fishery.
1. Improving knowledge of fish stocks/displacement to better define quotas and eliminate overfishing
2. Continue efforts to limit fishing in fragile areas and for fragile stocks and strengthen controls on the ban on deep-sea fishing.
3. To develop rational and environmentally friendly aquaculture farms, in order to avoid fishing fish in their natural environment.
4. Protecting the oceans' capacity to store carbon, including by protecting whales and marine species.
5. Reduce greenhouse gas emissions from fishing, shipping and port activities by continuing the modernisation of the ship fleet towards green propulsion systems.
VOTE: adopted 99%
Reflecting on a model of trade policy for the future to encourage healthy food and low greenhouse gas emission agriculture in France
1. Renegotiate the CETA (Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement) at European level to incorporate the climate objectives of the Paris Agreement
2. Ask the French Government to defend a reform of European trade policy: include the precautionary principle in trade agreements, make compliance with the commitments of the Paris Agreement binding objectives, put an end to private arbitration tribunals, guarantee transparency and allow democratic control of negotiations.
3. Ask the French Government to defend positions at the WTO: take the Paris Agreement into consideration in trade negotiations, put in place sanctions for recalcitrant states, include environmental clauses in trade agreement negotiations.
VOTE: adopted 91%
Better information for consumers
1. Better inform consumers by strengthening communication around the PNNS and reforming the PNNS into PNNSC
2. Prohibit advertising of products banned by the PNNS
3. Design a new national food solidarity to enable low-income households to have access to sustainable food.
VOTE: adopted 99%
Regulating the production, import and use of processing aids and food additives
1. Inform consumers of the degree of processing of products, in particular through compulsory labelling and the introduction of an agro-food ethical charter that provides information on and qualifies technical auxiliaries (colorants,...) and food additives in terms of greenhouse gases. Providing rapid and compulsory information on food accidents.
2. Prohibit the importation of products that are composed of technical auxiliaries banned by the European Union.
3. Phasing out the use of technical auxiliaries and food additives within 5 years.
4. Taxing highly processed products with a high carbon footprint and low nutritional intake
5. To set up food vouchers for the poorest to be used in the AMAPs (Association for the Maintenance of Peasant Agriculture) or for organic products.
VOTE: adopted 100%
Reforming the operation of labels
1. Reforming the functioning of labels by abolishing private labels and introducing a label for products derived from agro-ecological agriculture.
VOTE: adopted 98%
Legislating on the crime of ecocide
1. To adopt a law that penalizes the crime of ecocide within the framework of the 9 planetary limits, and that includes the duty of vigilance and the crime of imprudence, whose implementation is guaranteed by the High Authority of Planetary Limits.
VOTE: adopted 99%
Citizens assembly
The citizen's convention for climate is an unprecedented initiative of citizens assembly in France, a tool of participative and deliberative democracy inspired by the citizen's assembly of Ireland[6]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Mission letter of the CESE for the citizens convention for climate". http://www.conventioncitoyennepourleclimat.fr/files/lettre-de-mission.pdf.
- ↑ d’Allens, Gaspard (July 10, 2019). "Comment Cyril Dion et Emmanuel Macron ont élaboré l’assemblée citoyenne pour le climat". Reporterre. https://reporterre.net/Comment-Cyril-Dion-et-Emmanuel-Macron-ont-elabore-l-assemblee-citoyenne-pour-le-climat.
- ↑ "Compte rendu du Conseil des ministres du 15 mai 2019" (in fr). https://www.gouvernement.fr/conseil-des-ministres/2019-05-15/conseil-de-defense-ecologique.
- ↑ Cossardeaux, Joël (14 August 2019). "La lente mise en marche de la Convention citoyenne pour le climat". Les Échos. https://www.lesechos.fr/politique-societe/politique/la-lente-mise-en-marche-de-la-convention-citoyenne-pour-le-climat-1124258. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- ↑ Adam Sage (14 April 2020). "Macron gets a mauling over green assembly’s plan to ban hypermarkets" (in en). The Times. https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/world/macron-gets-a-mauling-over-green-assemblys-plan-to-ban-hypermarkets-t3jqflv00. Retrieved 16 April 2020. "More than 250,000 people were contacted using a random telephone number search and asked if they wanted to join the convention. Most refused. But 150 agreed after being told that they would be paid €86.24 a day and have their expenses reimbursed."
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 "150 Français tirés au sort, six mois de débat, la taxe carbone sur la table : la Convention citoyenne sur le climat se précise". Le Monde. 19 May 2019. https://www.lemonde.fr/politique/article/2019/05/19/150-francais-tires-au-sort-six-mois-de-debat-la-taxe-carbone-sur-la-table-la-convention-citoyenne-se-precise_5464124_823448.html. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- ↑ "François de Rugy et Patrick Bernasconi installent le comité de gouvernance de la Convention citoyenne pour la transition écologique et précisent ses modalités d’organisation" (in fr). http://www.ecologique-solidaire.gouv.fr/francois-rugy-et-patrick-bernasconi-installent-comite-gouvernance-convention-citoyenne-transition-0.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 "Convention citoyenne sur le climat : François de Rugy détaille son fonctionnement". Actu-Environnement. 3 June 2019. https://www.actu-environnement.com/ae/news/Convention-citoyenne-climat-Francois-de-Rugy-33543.php4.
- ↑ Chrisafis, Angelique (2020-01-10). "Citizens' assembly ready to help Macron set French climate policies" (in en-GB). The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jan/10/citizens-panels-ready-help-macron-french-climate-policies.
- ↑ "Convention citoyenne pour le climat : le comité de gouvernance est installé". Actu-Environnement. 3 July 2019. https://www.actu-environnement.com/ae/news/convention-citoyenne-climat-comite-gouvernance-derugy-cese-reunion-septembre-33726.php4.
- ↑ Pennetier, Marine (25 July 2019). "Cyril Dion garant de la convention citoyenne sur le climat". Boursorama. https://www.boursorama.com/actualite-economique/actualites/cyril-dion-garant-de-la-convention-citoyenne-sur-le-climat-346178cdbc6d8d8224cd23a451749155. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- ↑ "Final propositions of the French Citizens' Convention on Climate" (in en). 2020-06-21. https://www.democracy-international.org/final-propositions-french-citizens-convention-climate.
Further reading