Effective climate leadership requires not only environmental action but also ensuring that communities most affected by climate challenges have meaningful participation in decision-making processes, as demonstrated by Michelle Lima's journey from local environmental initiatives to advocating for climate governance and international climate diplomacy.
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Youth for Climate ActionAñadido:
I believe that climate leadership is measured by the impact we leave in our communities.
Hello, this is Michelle Lima and I've been working to transform environmental challenges into opportunities [music] for education, participation, and local action.
>> [laughter] >> My understanding of climate leadership began by seeing how climate challenges affected communities around me.
Growing up near rural territories, I saw droughts and flooding damage homes and access to essential services.
And I began [music] asking myself, "Why are the communities most affected often the ones least represented in decisions about their future?"
That question shaped my path.
Seeing those realities pushed me to act.
I became involved in environmental education, ecosystem restoration, water [music] protection, and youth participation, developing initiatives that have impacted in more than 1,000 people, especially women, youth, indigenous communities, and persons with disabilities.
That commitment also led me to create the first green employment [music] school, promoting environmental education and sustainable opportunities for communities [music] that have limited access to these spaces.
Because I believe climate action should not only respond to crisis, it should also create opportunities.
One of the most [music] significant experiences in my journey came after severe flooding affected communities and neighborhoods. In response, I led the ecological corridor project, focusing on restoring ecosystems, [music] protecting water resources, and reducing vulnerability to future environmental [music] risks.
Through these experiences, I learned something important. Creating projects is not enough if communities [music] lack long-term protection and representation in decisions shaping their future.
That understanding [music] pushed me beyond local initiatives and toward governance, contributing to actions such [music] as supporting the approval of a municipal water protection law.
However, that told me something. That local action alone cannot close the distance between vulnerable territories and international [music] climate decisions.
That is why I am applying to this program.
Because I want to strengthen my capacities in climate diplomacy, governance, [music] and negotiations, and to return with a stronger tools to transform knowledge into action, and to help build a future [music] where communities most affected by these challenges are no longer excluded from decisions [music] shaping our future.
Because for me, climate leadership is about creating pathways so others can participate, lead, and defend [music] their territories, too.
Thank you for the opportunity.
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