CEO Sandy Luk: We are joining young people in calling for action, not words
2 minute read
Marine Conservation Society CEO Sandy Luk looks back at three decades of climate talks and how an impassioned speech from a young conservationist highlights the desperate need for action, not words.
On a day with beautiful clear skies overhead, and a deep blue sea on my left, travelling home on the train from Edinburgh feels very different to my journey up to Glasgow for the first week of COP26 last Sunday.
Then, high winds and fallen trees on the train line caused travel chaos - in my case, 12 hours on many different, cancelled trains. A well-timed message from nature that we really must act now.
The time for action is now
A message echoed powerfully by Dejea Lyons on Saturday during Nature Day at COP26. “The environment is dying, and with it parts of culture, heritage and history,” she said. “There is no more time to plan for the future. The future is now.”
I heard many powerful, urgent statements from countless speakers during the first week of COP26, but this is the one that is on a loop in my head.
Dejea is a youth climate activist and sustainability student from the Cayman Islands. She spoke knowledgably, urgently, passionately and so eloquently.
For her and for so many others from small island (or big ocean) states and coastal communities, the time for action is NOW – not in 2030 or 2050.
We must invest in our ocean, for our future
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Three decades of climate change talks
I remember clearly how excited and hopeful I felt for nature and people as a student in 1994. The Earth Summit had just happened in Rio in 1992, the Montreal Protocol was looking as if it might be a success in curbing ozone emissions.
Young people are rightly angered by years of inaction
Dejea, and my own children, do not have that benefit of time, and it is right that young people are angry and that they are demanding action not words, and confronting decision-makers and businesses with the consequences of all those years of stalling and inaction.
I don’t think that we would be where we are now without the last few years of youth marches and action.
While I had the privilege of hearing Dejea speak, some of our team was busy on the Glasgow Climate March. Together with our partners at Whale & Dolphin Conservation, they demanded that governments WAKE UP and #ListenToTheOcean by playing beautiful and haunting whale and dolphin music (loudly!) for all to hear.
Because we desperately need world leaders to recognise the powerful role that the ocean has to play in combatting the climate and nature crises.
Members of our team joined the Glasgow Climate March
We’re committed to fighting for urgent ocean investment
We hope that the COP26 negotiations will finally yield the ambition, commitments and significant investment and support that is required to urgently tackle the climate emergency.
This must include ocean-based and other nature-based solutions. We want world leaders to recognise and invest in the unsung hero in combatting the climate and nature crises – the ocean. We will continue to fight for them to listen, with the help of our supporters.
Find out more about the outcome of COP26 .