Skip to main content
Regional secretary with the National Education Union
The climate emergency must be core work for Unison, delegates told
Unison delegates in Liverpool

DEALING with the climate emergency must be brought to the core of all union work, delegates told the conference today.

Unison also pledged to campaign against laws that restrict the right to peaceful protest over climate and other issues.

NEC speaker Stephen Smellie warned that the climate emergency “poses a threat to public services and life.”

He said: “We must acknowledge those Unison members working in councils responding to climate change under attack from Reform and we will stand by them.

“We oppose further drilling for fossil fuels. The only safe thing about fossil fuels is to leave them in the ground.”

He said that the union must “fight for a publicly owned energy sector.”

Savannah Ferguson, a South Lanarkshire home care worker, told of the challenges faced trying to deliver services as the climate emergency worsens.

She said: “We need a just transition not just for energy workers but for all public services workers.”

Ian Allinson, from Greater Manchester Transport, highlighted the “enormous wealth tied up in fossil capital,” which was why there was an increasing clampdown on protest and “extraordinary” prison sentences handed down to protesters.

“Our ability to protest is vital,” he insisted.

Retired member Roger Bannister praised the “Lancashire nannas who have campaigned against fracking who risked arrest.

“They succeeded in driving the frackers away.”

Lee Davies from Liverpool insisted that even though there has been excellent recruitment of new green reps in the union, “all reps should still work together on climate change.

“Pension divestment campaign is one example of where all the branch activists can come together.”

Energy Group chairwoman Lyndsey McNaught reminded delegates that climate change is “not a distant threat. It’s here. It’s now.

“We must turn commitment into action and we must work together.”

She said that to achieve this, members in the energy group “are essential for delivering our policy.”

University of Sussex delegate Ruben Brett insisted that there was much that could be learned from China in the work they have carried out on climate change.

China, for example, “is responsible for 50 per cent of the world’s solar power production.”

He said: “We need to co-operate with China on climate change instead of demonising it.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Relatives carry the body of 13-year-old Seraje Ebrahim, killed in an Israeli strike on a drinking water distribution point, for burial outside Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip, July 13, 2025
Gaza / 14 July 2025
14 July 2025

Over 30 nations to gather in Colombia to bring a halt to the genocide in Gaza

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (left) and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi pose for a photo during their meeting in Beijing, China, July 13, 2025. Photo: Russian Foreign Ministry Press Service via AP
China / 14 July 2025
14 July 2025
A Palestinian man carries the body of his child, who was killed by an Israeli military air strike on Gaza, at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, July 12, 2025
Gaza Genocide / 13 July 2025
13 July 2025
Similar stories
School support staff members of Unison during a rally outside the Scottish parliament in Holyrood, Edinburgh, September 27, 2023
Features / 20 June 2025
20 June 2025

Almost half of universities face deficits, merger mania is taking hold, and massive fee hikes that will lock out working-class students are on the horizon, write RUBEN BRETT, PAUL WHITEHOUSE and DAN GRACE

School support staff members of Unison during a rally outside the Scottish parliament in Holyrood, Edinburgh, September 27, 2023
Unison Conference 2025 / 19 June 2025
19 June 2025
Unison conference 2025
Unison Conference 2025 / 17 June 2025
17 June 2025
Campaigners protest at the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Ass
Britain / 12 March 2025
12 March 2025