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  • One teenager walked out of school

  • and made the world take climate change seriously.

  • Another wants the world to have all the facts on climate change.

  • I'm disappointed because we are not only mourning the loss of our planet,

  • but also the destruction of our futures.

  • We will show you why they are leaders in efforts to save the planet,

  • and how you can be too.

  • Greta Thunberg is arguably the world's

  • most famous campaigner on climate change.

  • At fifteen, she stopped going to school

  • and instead sat outside the Swedish Parliament

  • demanding politicians reduce carbon emissions.

  • Her strike caught on:

  • millions of people around the world began protesting

  • for more action to tackle climate change.

  • Greta has travelled by boat, rail and bus

  • to many parts of the world to raise awareness.

  • If we don't realise that it is an emergency,

  • we won't be able to do anything about it

  • and humans are social animals: we look...

  • we look to the people around us and we look to our leaders for...

  • for guidance and if they are not treating it as a crisis

  • and they are not behaving as if this was a crisis,

  • we won't understand that it is a crisis

  • and then we will just continue like before.

  • She has spoken at many global climate change events

  • and shamed world leaders into action.

  • She famously spoke at the United Nations,

  • telling leaders they had stolen her dreams

  • and her childhood with their empty words.

  • So, what can you learn from this teenager

  • who woke the world up to the climate change emergency?

  • She was very, very successful in disrupting the status quo,

  • because her message was very simple

  • and she was able to deliver it in very direct ways

  • in the... face of a lot of criticism.

  • So, she was very resilient.

  • She was able to be incredibly disruptive

  • in the face of world leaders.

  • Greta Thunberg had a simple message

  • and a direct way of delivering it,

  • both of which had a big impact.

  • She was other-directed and collaborative.

  • She was democratic.

  •   All she wanted was to raise awareness

  • and when people joined her, she wanted to be collaborative,

  • whether it was with politicians, scientists,

  • or... or schoolchildren.

  • Greta is collaborative:

  • she is willing to work with others who believe the climate is in crisis.

  • What other qualities does she show?

  • Knowledge is... is power

  • and she had facts that she was able to communicate

  • in... in very direct ways.

  • So, she was able to raise the status of science,

  • where, at the time, politicians and world leaders

  • were downplaying the role of... of facts

  • from... from scientists.

  • Greta knows the facts on climate change,

  • which gives her message authority.

  • This has put her in stark contrast to some world leaders.

  • What Greta Thunberg has shown us, time and time again,

  • is how ineffective and how...

  • how world leaders have been irresponsible

  • with... with climate action.

  • So, I guess the simple question is if...

  • if schoolchildren can show world leaders what the issues are,

  • what could world leaders with those world resources do,

  • if they truly wanted to?

  • Greta highlights how ineffective other leaders

  • and many adults have been.

  • So, if you want to be like Greta?

  • My advice is to...

  • to be persistent,

  • to continue to think about

  • how to keep that clear message,

  • to work through the barriers that you will face

  • on... on that journey

  • and to mobilise

  • and to grow your message and your movement

  • with... with like-minded people

  • across... across differences.

  • You should be persistent.

  • This quality will help you to carry on

  • even in the face of challenges and criticism.

  • Meet Sophia Kianni,

  •   another teen fighting climate change:

  • And like many of you here today, I'm disappointed.

  • I'm disappointed because we are not only mourning the loss of our planet,

  • but also the destruction of our future.

  • In 2020, Sophia set up Climate Cardinals,

  • a thousands-strong group of volunteer translators

  • trying to make the latest research on climate change

  • available in as many languages as possible.

  • I started Climate Cardinals because it really stemmed

  • from an experience that I had in Middle School,

  • when I took a two-month trip to Iran, which is my parents' home country.

  • While I was there, I realised that my relatives

  • knew very little about climate change and that's because

  • there was almost no information available in Farsi,

  • which is their native language.

  • And so, I worked to translate information to Farsi

  • to teach my relatives about climate change

  • and I wanted Climate Cardinals to continue

  • the work that I was doing on a larger scale,

  • which is why we use student volunteers to translate climate information

  • into over 100 languages.

  • From her own experience, Sophia had identified the need

  • for climate change facts to be available in different languages.

  • So, how did she get started?

  • First, I started with the basics:

  • coming up with the name, a logo, branding,

  • then finding a website, and then we also took legal steps necessary

  • to become an official non-profit

  • and then, finally, we launched using social media, primarily TikTok,

  • to reach hundreds of thousands of students

  • and recruiting thousands of them to sign up to volunteer with us.

  • Sophia began with the basics,

  • which included completing legal paperwork.

  • What else has she learnt about leadership?

  • I think that I've learned a lot as a leader throughout this process.

  • I'm the executive director of Climate Cardinals,

  • so I oversee our fifteen directors

  • and hundreds of different students on our teams,

  • as well as our translation branch.

  • And so, I think it's definitely been an experience for me,

  • learninghow do I manage large groups of people?

  • But how do I also give them the autonomy to do things on their own?

  • How do I learn to trust people and know that they know what they're doing

  • and that I don't need to micro-manage others?

  • And so, I think that I've learned that

  • leadership is a process of continual learning

  • and it's not so much about leading others,

  • as 'leaning' with others in order to get work done.

  • Leadership involves trusting your team

  • and collaborating with others.

  • Why are young people leading on climate change?

  • I think that young people play a very crucial role

  • in getting people mobilised, out onto the streets,

  • and really playing a role in furthering climate-change education.

  • I think we, as young people, have become very adept

  • at using social media and our platforms to spread these messages,

  • as well as having very difficult conversations

  • with people older than us, like our parents and our relatives,

  • in order to make sure that they're informed when it comes to voting

  • and making sure that we're getting climate-progressive candidates

  • into office.

  • Young people, who are adept at social media,

  • are good at getting the message out.

  • So, how do you become a leader on climate change?

  • The biggest advice I would give to other young people,

  • who are interested in getting involved in the climate space,

  • is put yourself out there:

  • reach out to people that you're inspired by.

  • I started out by just DM-ing random climate activists on Instagram

  • and sending them emails, and just asking how I could work with them

  • how I could contribute to the work that they were doing.

  • And that's how, initially, I got involved in Fridays For Future,

  • Extinction Rebellion, Zero Hour

  • a number of different climate organisations.

  • So, reach out: collaborate, work with others and make contact.

  • This is key.

  • So, what have we learnt about becoming a leader?

  • You need a clear, direct and simple message.

  • Social media can help get your message out.

  • It's also really important to collaborate with others.

One teenager walked out of school

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