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A Girl Guide's Perspective on Climate Change

Posted: 22/12/11 11:57

Leah Parsons, 19, a Guide Leader with 1st Ivybridge Guide Unit represented Girlguiding UK at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa. Here she talks about her experience.

I was at the United National Climate Change Conference in Durban with a delegation of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts from across the world (The World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts - WAGGGS), 17 of us from 13 different countries. We spent our days at the conference spreading the message of what guiding across the world is about and how we are tackling climate changes, as well highlighting the work we do promoting gender equality.

Before I went to the conference I was expecting it to be very formal and strict, with meetings and lots of men in suits. Instead it was crazy! We were busy running activities and talking to people who were really interested in what we had to say. All of our delegation took part in direct action actions to draw attention to climate change and how it affects us. Our action was based on the dance song, the Cha Cha slide, where we altered the lyrics and actions to be climate change related. It was great fun and so many people stopped to take pictures and ask us about what we were doing.

Having the opportunity to express what girls and young women feel about the whole situation was brilliant. Before I left I ran an Apprentice-style Climate Change Challenge with Guides from the group I lead. I asked them to look at maps to work out how they could change their travel plans to cut their carbon footprint, we also made footballs from recyclable material and looked at how they could be greener.

All my Guides feel very strongly about climate change and it would seem they are not alone. Research into the attitudes and opinions of girls and young women conducted by Girlguiding UK shows that this feeling is widespread. Girlguiding UK's annual Girls' Attitudes Survey investigates girls' opinions on a range of subjects, including the environment. This year 55% of 11-21-year-olds agreed with the statement 'I am angry that adults have damaged the environment, and our generation will have to deal with this'. This is up from 38% last year which is a huge leap.

Overwhelmingly, the girls I work with want to make a difference, but they don't how. This is again reflected in the Girls' Attitudes Survey, with 64% of 11 to 21-year-olds disagreeing with the statement "There's nothing I can do that will have any effect on global warming." Clearly they want to do more but getting that message across is difficult because in this country climate change doesn't directly affect us.

That's why it was so great to be able to take the opinions of my Guides to the conference and show how seriously girls take climate change, and to hear the experience of other girls and young women from around the world.

Ultimately, I think it will be women who make the difference as it became clear to me that at the moment climate change affects women more than it does men. One of our delegates - Beatrice Nyambeki - is from Kenya, gave a speech about how climate change affects girls and young women in Kenya. She spoke of how, because of the water shortages, she spends all her evenings collecting water and when it comes to dinner time, she will often give up a portion of her food to her brothers so they can be strong enough to work.

During her speech, people were crying and at the end got a standing ovation. This is why it is so important for WAGGGS to be there, so we can join together and highlight what is happening to women around the world.

I was extremely proud of the youth and their impact at the conference, and it shows that the young voice is just as important as the adult voice.

I plan to share my experience not just within Girlguiding UK but with local councils and schools. I want to show that we can all make a difference no matter where we come from. In the future I hope that at the COP conferences youth are taken more seriously and that there is more youth participation in decision making, I know and have seen how passionate youth from all over the world are about climate change and think that this enthusiasm should be used more widely. I think that decisions are also being made too late on an issue that we are running out of time on and so in the future I hope that this is sped up.

 
Leah Parsons, 19, a Guide Leader with 1st Ivybridge Guide Unit represented Girlguiding UK at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa. Here she talks about her experience. ...
Leah Parsons, 19, a Guide Leader with 1st Ivybridge Guide Unit represented Girlguiding UK at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa. Here she talks about her experience. ...
 
 
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Marchmont
15:44 on 24/12/2011
So glad you enjoyed the latest climate jolly in Durban. There will be another one along soon, just as thought-free but filled with the same self-righteousness.
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22:21 on 22/12/2011
I admire your passion Leah, but in my opinion what your Kenyan friend needs is more development, not less. I doubt that her homeland is drier than Arizona, but no one there is suffering for lack of water.
If Kenya had efficient water storage and transport systems there wouldn't be a problem. That means more development, not less.
13:02 on 22/12/2011
Your heart is in the right place, your energy and enthusiasm are admirable, but you have been misled about climate change. The climate always changes and always will. Humans will have an impact and always have, along with everything else in the complex climate system. Given that nothing out of the ordinary has happened to any weather phenomena during the period when some people have told us that human generated CO2 has taken over control of our climate, there really is no evidence that humans have a strong, or even a detectable, influence on global climate. Please drop that aspect of your activities. As for damaging the environment, almost every measure you care to mention about air, land, water, and bio-quality has improved in recent decades. Things have been going pretty well. Not perfect, but clearly getting better.
17:29 on 23/12/2011
What an incredibly patronising comment and, at risk of opening a can of worms, I would suggest that it is perhaps you that has been misled about climate change. Views such as yours have led to the world being at risk of locking itself into an inefficient and high-carbon energy system, which will no doubt impact our future generations. The measures you mention are not improving: atmospheric nitrous oxide is 20% higher now than it was in the pre-industrial era and you cannot deny that previously stable permafrost and ice sheets are melting. Through concern for our generation throughout the world, and future generations, WAGGGS takes this seriously. I think it's great that the UN recognises this and the real impact that our 10 million members across 145 countries can have. Not many organisations can boast that.
10:54 on 01/02/2012
What alternative energy source are you suggesting to fossil fuels?

Solar: Only works during the daytime, most energy use is at night
Wind: Noise pollutant and obviously only works where it's windy and not subject to turbulence.

That leaves Nuclear or a return to "Year Zero". I get the distinct impression, the Greens favour the latter solution.

There is no science behind the global warming hypothesis. They can't provide reliable short or long term predictions, which is what's required to turn a hypothesis in to a theory.

The earth has warmed since the ice age, so it's no surprise that permafrost is reducing. Ice melts in the Arctic every summer. I note that Al Gore and Richard Branson are currently heading to the Antarctic? How come. Well a cynic might say it's because Antarctic sea ice is increasing, whereas a trip there in the summer will generate lots of pics of the ice melting, which will be used as propaganda against sceptics who point out it's actually increasing.
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18:58 on 25/12/2011
Aren't you the same guy who thinks the moon violates the laws of physics?