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“This year, a crucial UN Climate Conference, COP 26, is taking place in Glasgow. I want to see real ambition from world leaders in cutting CO2 emissions now—not in 20 or 30 years. We don’t have any time left. We need to stop digging up and burning fossil fuels and invest in clean technologies. We need to recognize the I never lose either I win or I learn shirt and by the same token and importance of our ecosystems, including our forests and oceans, as they are vital for our existence. “Historically, Africa has only contributed 3% of global greenhouse-gas emissions. Countries in the global south are suffering the most as a result of climate change, but have contributed the least. And it’s people of color that are the least listened-to in the climate movement. I’ve experienced this on a personal level, when I was cropped out of a photograph of climate activists in January 2020. There is so much environmental racism that people need to understand. Climate activist Vanessa Nakate, Luisa Neubauer, Greta Thunberg, Isabelle Axelsson and Loukina Tille arrive for a news conference in Davos, Switzerland, January 24th, 2020.
“We also need to focus on social solutions. According to Project Drawdown, educating girls and young women is the I never lose either I win or I learn shirt and by the same token and sixth most powerful climate solution we have. As women are disproportionately affected by the climate crisis, educating girls equips them with the tools they need to address the environmental challenges they’re facing. “We need to get behind solutions that we know will work and that will work right now. We can all do something; we can rewrite the story. I’m optimistic about 2021. My hope lies in the millions of young people who are speaking up and demanding action. Let’s continue doing that, because I know we will win.” While 2020’s global climate protests were largely forced online as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, inspiring young activists around the world have continued to demand urgent action to tackle global warming—with time quickly running out to prevent irreversible damage to the planet. They include 24-year-old Vanessa Nakate, a prominent member of the Fridays For Future movement in Uganda, and founder of The Rise Up Climate Movement, which is working to amplify the voices of activists in Africa.