EarthxWomen: Women in the Environment

By Maria Gallucci
Apr 27, 2020 2:00 PM ET

EarthxWomen brought together youth climate leaders, creative activists, and seasoned advocates in a series of online discussions for Earthx2020. The virtual conference, held in partnership with the National Geographic Society, commemorated the 50th anniversary of Earth Day. Yet the COVID-19 pandemic was also high on the agenda during this year’s Women in the Environment summit.

Panelists drew parallels between the current health crisis and the climate change emergency, and discussed how communities and leaders can learn from the pandemic.

“If the industry knows how to shift from building a car to building a ventilator, they can also shift from building a power plant to renewable energy,” said Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, founder of the Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad. “And if the government knows how to take decisions to inject billions into the economy, they can inject these billions to Sustainable Development Goals.” Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, stressed the importance of collective action in solving global problems and the need to uphold scientific evidence. “Science matters. We listen to the health experts and we believe them. We need to listen to the climate experts and believe them,” she said.

Indigenous knowledge should help guide decisions both after today’s “Great Pause” and for building climate resilience. “We are realizing that the Earth is healing in the absence of our presence,” said Lyla June, an environmental scientist and musician of Diné (Navajo) and Cheyenne lineages. “But a lot of indigenous peoples created a way of interacting with the land that was so good that, if we were to leave, the Earth would actually miss us.” Tara Houska, who is Couchiching First Nation Anishinaabe and founder of the Giniw Collective, noted a return to mutual aid. “For Indian Country and our sustainability, and for all of us, it’s strengthening our local governance systems, our relationships with each other, our relationships to the Earth, and looking horizontally, instead of always vertically, for our liberation,” she said.

In conversations with long-time activists, including Jane Fonda, youth climate leaders discussed how their movement is evolving. Xiye Bastida, a climate activist and member of the Mexican Otomi-Tolmec Nation, said she hopes to grow the narrative beyond blaming fossil fuel companies and adults to foster more collaboration. “We started the movement saying, ‘You are stealing our future.’ That’s what got people’s attention,” said Bastida, who is a leader of the Fridays for Future climate strike campaign. “Now that we have the world’s attention…we need to reimagine what the future will actually look like so we can get there.” 

Creative activism can help develop such visions, artists and storytellers explained. The renowned playwright V, formerly known as Eve Ensler, read her letter “Losing the Birds,” which laments the loss of 2.9 billion birds in North America and ends with a pledge to protect Mother Earth. Erika Woolsey, a marine biologist and CEO of The Hydrous, said she uses virtual reality to “bring the ocean to everybody” and encourage empathy. Megha Agrawal Sood and Jess Search, co-founders of Climate Story Lab, shared how they’re working with women, girls, indigenous communities, and people of color — groups on the frontlines of the climate emergency — to transform the climate documentary genre. Agrawal Sood called for moving beyond well-worn messages of fear and hope to those of “ferocious love, inclusivity, and positivity.”

EarthxWomen also featured climate scientists from Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. Maureen Raymo took viewers inside a vast archive of deep-sea core samples, which document the Earth’s climate history. Chia-Ying Lee discussed her research on hurricanes and their connection to the changing climate. Galen McKinley described her work to understand how oceans absorb carbon dioxide, and how CO2 affects marine ecosystems. She encouraged young people to consider careers in science. “One of the ways you can help to promote a cleaner planet would be to...join us in creating these studies and lead the next generation,” she said.

Sylvia Earle, the esteemed marine biologist and National Geographic Explorer in Residence, spoke about the threat of deep-sea mining. Over half the Earth’s surface is deep international water, and companies are eager to dig for rare-earth minerals to make consumer electronics, batteries, and other devices. In July, the International Seabed Authority is set to vote on a Mining Code to facilitate such practices. Earle and Vasser Seydel, campaign director for the Oxygen Project, urged the audience to call for a 10-year moratorium on any decision-making.

 

“We can continue doing what we’ve been doing: taking, taking, taking from the natural world,” Earle said. “Or, we have the moment in time right now to move in a different direction.” 

 

“What we do to take care of the planet means what we’re doing to take care of ourselves,” she added.

 

LIST OF SPEAKERS:

Thursday, April 23

Beverly Camhe, producer of EarthxWomen

Trammell S. Crow, founder of EarthX

Kathy Eldon, founder of Creative Visions

Xiye Bastida, Mexican climate activist; director of Fridays for Future New York

Ellen van den Honert, film director, “There is a Place on Earth”

Erika Woolsey, CEO and co-founder of The Hydrous; National Geographic Explorer

Slater Jewell-Kemker, director/editor/writer/videographer

Emma Carrasco, senior vice president of global engagement for National Geographic Society

Karen Maurice-O’Leary, creative strategist for Facebook and Instagram

Marlow Baines, co-youth director of Earth Guardians

Isha Sesay, journalist and author, “Beneath the Tamarind Tree: A Story of Courage, Family, and the Lost Schoolgirls of Boko Haram”

Kehkashan Basu, Canadian youth activist; founder and president of Green Hope Foundation

Arielle Martinez-Cohen, youth activist; music director of Zero Hour

 

Friday, April 24

Pat Mitchell, media executive; curator of TEDWomen; author, “Becoming a Dangerous Woman: Embracing Risk to Change the World”

V (formerly known as Eve Ensler), playwright and activist; founder of V-Day; best-selling author, “The Vagina Monologues,” “In the Body of the World,” “The Apology”

Mary Robinson, Chair of the Elders; former President of Ireland and United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and Climate Envoy

Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, founder of the Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad; National Geographic Explorer

Katharine Wilkinson, lead writer, “Drawdown”

Tara Houska, tribal attorney; founder of Giniw Collective; former advisor on Native American affairs to Bernie Sanders

Laura Turner Seydel, director of the Turner Foundation; chairperson of Captain Planet Foundation; co-founder of Mothers and Others for Clean Air

Tokata Iron Eyes, youth climate activist; member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe

Xiye Bastida, Mexican climate activist; director of Fridays for Future New York

Jane Fonda, actor-activist; founder of Fire Drill Fridays

Jess Search, founder of Doc Society and Climate Story Lab

Megha Agrawal Sood, co-founder of Climate Story Lab; director of programs at Exposure Labs

 

Saturday, April 25

Sally Ranney, president and co-founder, Global Choices & American Renewable Energy Institute

Xiye Bastida, Mexican climate activist; director of Fridays for Future New York

Sarah Johnson, member of Columbia University’s Earth Institute; president and founder of the Lozen Foundation; co-CEO of Green Hummingbird Entertainment

Karenna Gore, founder and director of the Center for Earth Ethics at Union Theological Seminary

Lyla June, environmental scientist; musician and healer of Diné (Navajo) and Cheyenne lineages

Robin Bell, president-elect of the American Geophysical Union

Maureen Raymo, interim director of Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

Galen McKinley, oceanographer and climate scientist; professor at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory 

Chia-Ying Lee, atmospheric scientist at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory 

Ruth Defries, professor of ecology and sustainable development at Columbia University

Elisabeth Nebie, human ecologist; post-doctoral research scientist at Columbia University’s Earth Institute

Catherine Coleman Flowers, founder of Center for Rural Enterprise and Environmental Justice

Seneca Johnson, youth climate activist; steering committee member of the nonprofit Youth United for Climate Crisis Action; from the Muscogee and Seminole Nations of Oklahoma

Sylvia Earle, renowned marine biologist; founder of Mission Blue; National Geographic Explorer in Residence

Vasser Seydel, campaign director for the Oxygen Project; Global Choices Arctic Angels

Osprey Orielle Lake, founder of Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network

Justin Winters, co-founder and executive director of One Earth

Sally Jewell Coxe, founder of the Bonobo Conservation Initiative

Astrid Determan, youth activist; Global Choices Arctic Angels and EPIC Animals

Beverly Camhe, producer of EarthxWomen

Trammell S. Crow, founder of EarthX