Earth Day Unites Millions Around The
World for Climate Action
EARTHDAY.ORG, the global organizer of Earth Day, today announced
initial results of Earth Day 2021: Exponential growth and the addition
of hundreds of millions of new activists to the movement, united
around a set of clear and concise demands presented to the Biden
administration and world leaders.
Among Earth Day’s demands are that countries aggressively reduce
their carbon emissions, that corporations be held accountable and set
ambitious paths to net zero emissions by 2040 or sooner, that all
primary and secondary schools globally adopt comprehensive climate
literacy and civic skill building to prepare students for a global
transition to green jobs, and that global leaders train existing and
future workers for the green economy.
Despite year two of the coronavirus pandemic, the Earth Day
movement surged ahead. Concurrent with the Biden climate summit,
millions participated in three parallel summits representing vast
networks of youth,
social
justice organizations, and educators.
In partnership with EARTHDAY.ORG, Education International,
representing 32.5 million members, organized the “Teach for the
Planet: Global Education Summit.”
“This Earth Day, we experienced a cultural shift comparable to the
first Earth Day in 1970,” said Kathleen Rogers, President of
EARTHDAY.ORG. “Millions around the world, angry and frustrated with
the pace of change, raised their voices and demanded comprehensive
climate action from governments and corporations around the world. The
environmental movement of 1970 has been reborn. We’ve entered into a
new phase of progress, a new barometer of sustainability requirements,
and a new chapter of activism. We must continue this momentum.”
Building on its position as the world’s most inclusive instrument
to drive the movement forward, Earth Day 2021 boldly staked out its
leadership. As the world’s environmental systems continue to collapse,
leaving a badly damaged planet, civil society is no longer agreeing to
be on the periphery of decision making, but rather is demanding a seat
at the table with governments and international institutions to
deliver solutions proportionate to the urgency of the climate
crisis.
Speaking to Denis Hayes, organizer of the first Earth Day, on the
Earth
Day Live digital stage, John Kerry, United States Special
Presidential Envoy for Climate said, “We have to make 2020 to 2030 a
critical decade of real decisions and real actions…The urgency of what
we need to do cannot be overstated.”
His Holiness Pope Francis reflected that the challenges we are
experiencing with the pandemic that are also manifesting in climate
change must drive us toward innovation and invention and to seek new
paths. “We become more resilient when we work together instead of
doing it alone,” Pope Francis affirmed, adding that there is still
time to act even though it is difficult to stop the destruction of
nature when it has been triggered.
Around the world, Earth Day 2021 brought massive action.
Over a dozen countries including Italy, Mexico and most recently
Peru, Argentina and Brazil committed to climate literacy.
As of Earth Day 2021, over 500 signatories representing over 100
countries around the world joined EARTHDAY.ORG’s Climate
Literacy campaign including groups such as International Labour
Organization, Education International and International Trades Union
Confederation.
In its second year, Schools
for the Earth, an EARTHDAY.ORG partnership with EDUCA, Educación
Ambiental Mundial EAM, enrolled nearly 4,000 schools across Mexico and
15 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. The program involves
over 800,000 teachers and students in rural communities, urban areas
and indigenous intercultural schools.
In the Middle
East and North Africa, women’s participation in Earth Day this
year increased to 60%.
Millions of people took part in volunteer activities including
planting trees, reforestation
projects and The
Great Global Cleanup.
Earth Day’s 2021 theme, Restore
Our Earth generated thousands of policy commitments and billions
of dollars in financial commitments around reforestation, regenerative
agriculture and investment in green carbon removal and decarbonization
technology.
Thousands of local government officials from across the planet
committed to environmental action for Earth Day.
Reflecting the power of Earth Day on social media, Earth Day
hashtags including #EarthDay, #RestoreOurEarth, #EarthDayLive and
#ClimateLiteracy reached over 400 million.
Millions tuned in to Earth
Day Live and committed to personal climate and environmental
action. Among the speakers were Prince Albert II of Monaco; Alexandria
Villaseñor, Founder of Earth Uprising; Mayor Frank Cownie of Des
Moines, Iowa and President of ICLEI; Gabriel Quijandría, Minister of
the Environment, Peru; Gina McCarthy, White House National Climate
Advisor; Greta Thunberg, Youth Climate Activist; Haldis Holst, Deputy
General Secretary of Education International; John Kerry, United
States Special Presidential Envoy for Climate; Dame Karen Pierce,
British Ambassador to the United States; Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms,
Atlanta, Georgia; Kevin O’Leary, Venture Capitalist; Mary Steenburgen,
Actor and Musician; Michael S. Regan, United States EPA Administrator;
Patricia Espinosa, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change; Patrizio Bianchi, Minister of Public
Education, Italy; His Holiness Pope Francis; Ricky Kej, Grammy® Award
Winner; Tom Lovejoy, “Godfather of Biodiversity” and Tom Steyer,
NextGen America Founder.
On Earth Day, EARTHDAY.ORG launched the “Earth
Definition” campaign aimed at encouraging individuals around the
world to learn more about their digital footprint and choose Earth
Definition, otherwise known as standard definition, while streaming to
reduce emissions. The campaign film has been chosen as a Vimeo
Staff Pick.
As a part of the partnership between EARTHDAY.ORG and Facebook,
Facebook Watch premiered “Earth
Day! The Musical!” on April 22 at 12PM ET which garnered nearly 5
million views. The special featured appearances from Bill Nye, Alexia
Akbay, Ben Platt, Charli and Dixie D’Amelio, Chloe Lukasiak, CNCO,
Cody Simpson, Desus Nice and The Kid Mero, Fortune Feimster, Gaten
Matarazzo, Idina Menzel, Jack Harlow, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Jerome
Foster II, Justin Bieber, Karamo, Maluma, Nick Kroll, Phoebe Robinson,
Retta, Steve Aoki, Tori Kelly, Xiye Bastida, Zac Efron and more.
For more information on EARTHDAY.ORG’s year-round campaigns and
programs, please visit: https://www.earthday.org
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