Young environmental leaders’ resolve to solve long-entrenched problems offers hope for a better tomorrow.
News of the world environment
NEWSLETTER | OCTOBER 20, 2023
Power of Persistence
The island of Vieques is picturesque — it features white sand beaches, snorkel-friendly waters, and the world’s brightest bioluminescent bay. But its beauty belies a toxic reality. On top of the injustices of colonialism and marginalization faced by all of Puerto Rico, the people of Vieques have shouldered a unique burden: In the 1940s, the US Navy seized control of much of the island for military training exercises. The war games they conducted there, which continued until 2003, displaced communities and left Vieques’s soil and waters dangerously contaminated with toxic chemicals, heavy metals, and unexploded munitions.
As local activist Katherine Martínez Medina, 21, puts it, “Being from such an idyllic paradise island comes with a high price.”
One of six young people who received Earth Island’s annual Brower Youth Award for environmental leadership at a ceremony in Berkeley earlier this week, Medina isn’t shirking from Vieques’s challenges. Rather, she’s investing her energy and passion in building a brighter future through her work with La Colmena Cimarrona, an agricultural collective working towards food sovereignty on the island.
“No one will displace us from Vieques,” she said during a rousing speech made in Spanish at the awards ceremony. “We are creating economic opportunities for those who plant sustainably in Vieques, offering spaces for care and healing that ensure our permanence.”
Her work is a reminder that environmental issues never occur in a vacuum; that they are intimately connected to racial, economic, and social ones. And along with her fellow awardees — who, among other things, are pushing to increase diversity in outdoor spaces, restore much-needed coastal mangroves, and transition schools to green energy — Medina is creating real change.
As the cycle of war and suffering ramps up in the Middle East and slogs on in Ukraine, as storms and wildfires and heatwaves wreak havoc on communities around the world, it was inspiring to be in the presence of these young leaders, feel their energy, and hear about their dedication and drive to solve problems that were seeded far before they were born. For me, at least, these young people offered hope that a more just, peaceful, and regenerative future is possible.
Zoe Loftus-Farren
Managing Editor, Earth Island Journal
P.S. Listen to two of this year's Brower Youth Award winners talk about what sets youth leadership apart on our latest podcast.
Photo of Vieques by Ethan Jameson
TOP STORIES
Abandoned Threats
Tens of thousands of old mine shafts, pits, tunnels, trenches, and other abandoned mining features litter California’s public lands. But there’s not enough money in the coffers to even identify all these dangerous sites, let alone clean them up.
READ MORE
Tinkering with the Sun
Solar geoengineering continues to be touted as a climate solution, despite the uncertainties around it and the risks it poses to both communities and the environment. Dr. Carl Schleussner, head of science at Climate Analytics, offers a critique.
READ MORE
As a nonprofit, Earth Island Journal is driven by purpose, not profit. We have no billionaire benefactors. We rely on the support of people like you. Can we count on you to donate to the Green Journalism Fund?
Count me in!
Taking on Plastic Polluters
Big food and beverage companies like Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and Nestle continue to generate massive amounts of plastic waste while making deceptive statements about their plastic recycling capabilities. Earth Island Institute, which publishes the Journal, has renewed its legal push to force them to clean up their act.
READ MORE
ICYMI
Garbage Clothes
If you needed any further reason to eschew fast fashion: Ropa americana, mostly unsold merchandise from used clothing stores and charity consignment organizations in the United States, is ending up is Chile’s Atacama Desert.
READ MORE >>
Photo Abby / Flickr
Resisting Avocados
In one small Mexican community, “what started as a public safety initiative has become a radical oddity, a small arcadia governed by militant environmentalism in the heart of avocado country.”
READ MORE >>
Photo Lance Chung / USDA
Did a thoughtful friend forward you our newsletter? Keep up with the latest from Earth Island Journal!
SIGN UP TODAY
Follow
Follow
Subscribe
You are receiving this email newsletter because you signed up on our website.
If this newsletter was forwarded to you, you can sign up to the email newsletter here.
Support our work by subscribing to our quarterly print magazine.
Copyright © 2023 Earth Island Journal, All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
Earth Island Journal
2150 Allston Way Ste 460
Berkeley, CA 94704-1375
Add us to your address book
Want to change how you receive these emails?
Update your preferences