Climate intervention: an option for Global South to reduce near-term climate risk?
There seems to be a greater lack of awareness, contribution and expertise among the Global South populace about climate intervention’s potential.
Joshua Amponsem is a Ghanaian climate activist and Co-Director of the new Youth Climate Justice Fund initiative. He is the former Climate Lead at the Office of the UN Secretary General’s Envoy on Youth. He has over 8 years of experience working with young people on Climate Action, Disaster Risk, and Resilience Building.
He founded Green Africa Youth Organization (GAYO), served as a member of the IRENA Global Council on Enabling Youth Action for SDG 7, and has been an Adaptation Fellow at the Global Center on Adaptation(GCA). In the past two years, Joshua has focused on supporting grassroot youth-led organizations and is continuously engaged in the advocacy to shift climate philanthropy to youth and locally-led organizations. He has initiated locally-led projects like the Water for Adaptation, and Sustainable Communities Project in sub-Saharan Africa which is creating jobs for over 100 people and he is championing the establishment of Youth Climate Councils across the Global South.
There seems to be a greater lack of awareness, contribution and expertise among the Global South populace about climate intervention’s potential.
A global plastic pollution treaty would help to hold polluters accountable and reduce the waste that clogs up oceans and contributes to climate change.