Crashing the party by sailing into the eventΒ
Itβs only right that young people make their voices be heard by any means necessary.
Despite warnings of no-entry from port authorities, a group of activists from Namibia, Uganda, Mexico, and Bangladesh boarded Greenpeaceβs ship The Rainbow Warrior, and sailed along the River Clyde toward the port nearest to COP26.
The group has been in online contact for two years but had never met in person. Maria Reyes, 19, from Mexico said: βEven if itβs the first time weβve met, thereβs something thatβs connecting us. Itβs powerful for us coming from the most affected regions because we live it.β
Twenty-four-year-old Namibian activist Jakapita Kandaga echoed the same sentiment, saying: βWeβre tired of not being listened to and weβre tired of being ignored. We are from the most affected areas, and you cannot discuss and decide on our futures without us being present.β
Scotland Police overruled port authoritiesβ warnings and allowed the boat to continue to its destination, in a move that the young activists called βimportantβ and βpositive.β
Taking a new tone
But getting into the βexclusive zoneβ where official talks are taking place has proved difficult.
Young activists have expressed feeling βtokenisedβ by leaders, without being given a prominent voice in decision making and negotiation processes.
We know itβs not because young people arenβt informed enough about climate to make demands. One of the key requests of young activists is for politicians to stop ignoring the science, which has driven youth passion surrounding climate matters.
Greta Thunberg, who wasnβt officially invited to the event, showed up anyway with a fiery message for leaders in attendance, saying: βyou can shove your climate crisis up your arse.β
In recent months, Miss Thunberg has expressed her disdain for COP events at liberty, noting that most discussions have never really materialised into substantial action.
βChange is not going to come from inside there, that is not leadership. This is leadership. This is what leadership looks like,β Greta said, in reference to the crowd of young people standing up for the climate outside the COP venue.
Looking on the bright side
While the frustrations of young climate activists outside of this yearβs climate summit are one hundred percent valid, the silver lining is that world leaders have led the discussion with our future in mind.
Boris Johnsonβs opening statement stressed that any form of failure at this yearβs COP (and in following through with their commitments) would be unforgivable, especially in the eyes of future generations.
So far, weβve heard from one 15-year-old activist called Vinisha Umashankar. Awarded the Earthshot Price by Prince William for her solar-powered ironing cart to cut coal usage in India, her speech touched on the urgency of preserving Earth for current and future generations.
We hope to hear from many more amazing young activists at COP26 this week – and for now, you can watch Vinishaβs inspiring speech here.