6 Environmental Youth Activists Who Can Inspire You to Be an Advocate for Social Change

By: Corrine Flowers, Community Organizer Intern

Many youths have taken the lead in the fight for climate and environmental action. As most vividly seen through the youth climate strikes that have taken place throughout the U.S. and other international regions, youths from all across the world have come together to advocate for environmental and social justice. Yet, there is still much more that can be done. With that being said, here are six environmental youth activists who can inspire you to stand up and be an advocate for social change!


Xiuhtezcatl MartinezA 19yr old from Boulder, Colorado, and the Youth Director for Earth Guardians, an organization that teaches youth how to lead the charge in environmental and social justice activism. Within his personal activism, Xiuhteztcatl has fought for indigenous rights and climate change. He has also spoken at United Nations conferences and partook in several lawsuits against industrial corporations and the United States government for their lack of concern about the environment and the impact that this it is having on future generations.

 

 

https://xiuhtezcatl.com/
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter


Isra Hirsi – A 16yr old from Minneaopolis, Minnesota, and one of the Co-founders & Co-directors of the U.S. Youth Climate Strike. She is an environmental and racial justice activist, who has fought for climate change, an end to gun violence and more diversity & intersectionality within social movements.  In addition to leading the U.S. Youth Climate Strike, she’s a member of a youth climate coalition called “MN Can’t Wait,” has written pieces for periodicals, such as Medium, and has educated people on the disproportionate effects that climate issues have on African Americans and other marginalized groups.

Facebook
Instagram
Twitter

 


Jerome Foster II A 17yr old from Washington, DC, and the Founder & Executive Director of “One Million of US,” a national youth-led organization that advocates for social justice reform and youth votership. Through his activism he has fought for environmental justice, climate action, civil rights and youth votership. He has also organized climate strikes at the White House, advocated for environment related congressional bills, such as the Climate Change Education Act, is the Editor-in-chief of “The Climate Reporter” and has  received prestigious awards, such as the Amnesty International Ambassador of Conscience Award.  

 

https://xolbron.github.io/
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
LinkedIn


Amariyanna CopenyA 12yr old from Flint, Michigan, and the founder of “Dear Flint Kids” and “Wednesdays for Water,” two social  media campaigns that advocate for access to resources for the children of Flint and access to clean water. Amariyana is famously and more commonly known by her nickname “Little Miss Flint.” She is an activist and philanthropist who dreams of growing up to be the President of the United States! She uses her activism to spread awareness about the water crisis in Flint Michigan and the lack of access to clean water around the world. She also has fundraised more than half a million dollars worth of money and supplies for kids that live in Flint Michigan.  

https://www.maricopeny.com/
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter


Feliquan CharlemagneA  17yr old from Ocala, Florida who is the National Creative Director and Florida State Lead for the U.S. Youth Climate Strike. Feliquan was inspired to get involved in climate activism due to his family being displaced from their home in the Virgin Islands because of climate change. Through his activism he provides awareness about the potential devastation from rising sea levels and economic destabilization that climate issues can cause for countries in the Global South. Feliquan also uses his story to teach about the trauma that families can suffer from through the disastrous affects of climate change.

 

Instagram
Twitter


Autumn Peltier A 15yr old from Ottawa, Ontario, and the Chief Water Commissioner for the Anishinabek Nation, a political advocacy organization that works on behalf of the 40 First Nations across Ontario. Autumn is a clean water advocate who brings awareness to the sacredness that water has within indigenous cultures and to the inaccessibility to clean water on Canadian reservations. Due to her activism she has been given the title of “water protector” and “water warrior” and was invited to give a speech about clean water for the U.N. in both 2018 and 2019.  

Facebook
Instagram

VGI, Urban Agriculture, and Climate Change

Hello Friends of VGI! 

My name is Will, and I’m a grant writing intern for Victory Garden Initiative this summer. It’s been a fantastic experience so far, as I’ve gotten to know many of the passionate gardeners and volunteers who make VGI’s impactful work possible.

Like many of you, I often experience anxiety and personal inadequacy in confronting the existential threat of climate change. The popular literature and news coverage on climate change frequently focuses on the pressing need to quickly transition to renewable energies and reduce our dependence on fossil fuels–policy and market solutions that can feel out of our control. Although the clean energy transition is important, agriculture, and its related food system components–processing, packaging, distributing, consumption–are often overlooked in the climate conversation. 

I wrote this blog post with the goal of understanding the links between climate change and VGI’s work in building communities that grow their own food. I hope it provides you with solace and a sense of purpose as you go about cultivating your own food garden. 

 

The Need for Urban Agriculture: Feeding a Growing Population While Confronting Climate Change

The United Nations predicts that, by 2050, the world population will be 9.8 billion, increasing to 11.2 billion by 2100 (United Nations, 2017). By 2030, two-thirds of the global population will be living in urban centers (Lederer, 2016). The global food system that will need to feed this growing number of people currently produces 19-29% of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, with agriculture contributing 80-86% of those emissions (Vermeulen, Campbell, and Ingram, 2012). 

Climate change will affect industrial agriculture’s ability to feed these hungry mouths due to increasing temperatures, droughts, and excessive rainfall (RUAF Foundation). Considering the large number of people to feed in metropolitan areas coupled with climate change’s ongoing threat to conventional agriculture and food chains, there is an opportunity to rebuild localized, sustainable food systems within increasingly dense cities. Populations that are most vulnerable to the effects of climate change and an undemocratic industrial food complex must be at the forefront of any substantial conversations around change within the food system. In developed countries like the United States this means historically marginalized communities of color suffering from injustices like food insecurity and agricultural pollution. Community-based urban agriculture constitutes an equitable solution to these issues. 

 

The Benefits of Urban Agriculture: Adapting to and Mitigating Climate Change

Producing food in urban centers provides climate resilience for cities ranging from interconnected issues such as environmental sustainability to food security. 

Urban agriculture cultivates an alternative to the environmentally unsustainable production practices used by the modern industrial food complex. Permaculture, a type of regenerative agriculture that works with nature instead of against it, is used by Victory Garden Initiative at its urban farm and through its programming. Instead of the chemical and energy intensive monoculture schemes common in modern agriculture, urban agriculture systems like permaculture promote a diverse array of crops and sustainable resource management. Victory Garden Urban Farm, for example, promotes ecological sustainability by reducing food waste–a potent source of greenhouse gases–and improving biodiversity, erosion control, soil health, and water quality–environmental qualities that are vulnerable to climate change–through the application of permaculture principles in an urban setting. 

Urban agriculture also shortens food supply chains linked to dense urban centers. In the case of a major climate disruption to rural agricultural lands such as a flood or drought, in which prices for staple foods rise, sustainable urban agriculture can provide a safety net. Communities that currently experience food insecurity and spend a large percentage of their income on food, such as Milwaukee’s Harambee neighborhood where VGI is located, will be disproportionately affected by an increase in price levels due to decreases in agricultural yields from climate change. When urban areas such as Harambee grow their own food, the core mission of Victory Garden Initiative’s transformative work, food price volatility from climate change is less disruptive. Food sovereign communities are not as beholden to the market forces leading to food insecurity. These communities will also experience greater availability of fresh fruits and vegetables during the growing season, as well as greater transparency over the foods they eat. Increasing the consumption of agricultural products produced in urban centers also reduces greenhouse gases emitted by the importing of these same goods from rural areas. Food sovereignty is food justice, as urban agriculture can empower communities that, due to institutional factors, have been historically discouraged from growing their own food. 

Urban agriculture helps a city achieve greater environmental sustainability in other ways, simultaneously improving public health measures. Urban agriculture increases vegetation cover, thus decreasing urban heat island intensity. Urban heat islands suffer from high air conditioning costs, air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, heat-related illness and mortality (Environmental Protection Agency, 2019). The same vegetative cover that maintains cooler temperatures in urban environments also helps with stormwater management. The greening of urban areas through agriculture, such as food gardens–like the raised beds installed during the annual Great Milwaukee Victory Garden BLITZ–and urban farms like VGI’s on Concordia Ave., can act as a rain catchment system. This type of green infrastructure will become critical as cities cope with increasing annual rainfall and flash floods due to climate change, which can overwhelm the local water management system and lead to a decrease in water quality from stormwater pollution and runoff (Denchak, 2019).

This post is by no means an exhaustive list of the climate benefits provided by urban agriculture. Given climate change’s complexity, we are still trying to understand how we can best mitigate its effects through changes both big and small. Who knows how climate change will affect Victory Garden Urban Farm’s crop production in 10 or 20 years. What is clear is that encouraging people, especially in cities like Milwaukee, to grow their own food will be a powerful weapon of collective action in the climate fight. For this reason, VGI is committed to engaging with people on the connection between climate change and urban agriculture through all of our programs and community-based work.

 

Cheers,

Will

will@victorygardeninitiative.org

 

Sources:

https://onedrive.live.com/View.aspx?resid=AC95BE3DFDE921E7!3786&wdSlideId=1303&wdModeSwitchTime=1563288279529&authkey=!AFTueVEck_Zfhhc

https://apnews.com/40b530ac84ab4931874e1f7efb4f1a22

https://www.epa.gov/heat-islands

https://www.un.org/development/desa/en/news/population/world-population-prospects-2017.html

https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-environ-020411-130608

https://www.nrdc.org/stories/green-infrastructure-how-manage-water-sustainable-way#important