CLEAN ENVIROMENT --- Restoring the beautiful environment of childhoods
Two young people who are restoring the beautiful environment of their childhoods
Some people want to protect our living planet because they are passionate about social justice. Others envision a future of clean technology and renewable energy. But Forbi Nyosai from Cameroon and E Wen Wong from New Zealand are driven to preserve nature by memories of the beautiful environments they grew up in.
Forbi Nyosai is a final year student of environmental science at the University of Buea, Cameroon, who was first inspired to act on climate when revisiting a beach he had played on as a child. "I went back to that same beach and saw there was a lot of plastic there. Moving around my community, I realised plastic was a big problem, and I had to do something about it."
Inspiration also came from other sources for
Forbi: “I come from a middle-income home; my dad was a chef, so we could afford
TV. I'd watch National Geographic Discovery channels. I wanted to learn more
about the problems around me that led me to doing more research online. I would
also say the works of others who were not in my country also inspired me, as I
didn't have anyone to look up to within my community."
This curiosity led Forbi to create SMS Club, a
programme to introduce local schools to environmental projects. "2018 was
when I began sharing on social media, connecting people, and that was the
beginning of my real work on the ground. I think I reached out to all the
schools in my town, but I had a good link with about 15 schools. The number of
students I have affected directly is about 3,000. We ran eco competitions with
the schools and came up with micro projects for them.”
Life below water
Forbi also serves as the Environmental Science
association president at his university and is involved with local and
international non-profits, where his focus has been on UN Sustainable
Development Goal 14: Life below water. He says: "The ocean ecosystem is
the most diverse, and we are losing it daily. Many fish are lost each day
because of our habits."
Forbi is working to support SDG 14 by
campaigning to stop marine plastic, doing beach clean-ups, educating coastal
communities, carrying out further outreach in school and organising workshops
with different stakeholders.
Due to the restrictions of COVID-19, in 2020
Forbi and his team launched a campaign to distribute a colouring book to
hundreds of households, that explained the plastic journey. He said "These
households had more than two kids per household and most kids were at home and
not in school. They could sit back at home and colour in this book and learn
more about plastic pollution, the ocean, and the journey that plastic takes
before it goes into the ocean. We provided 300 households with colouring
pencils and books.”
Sustaining a healthy
ocean
Another young person working to redress the
balance in our ocean ecosystem is E Wen Wong. Like Forbi, she was also
influenced from an early age by the beautiful nature and landscapes of her
surroundings in New Zealand, which she is keen to protect.
Today E Wen is studying Law and Environmental
Science at the Australian National University. But E Wen started working on
environmental issues at just 10 years old, when she got involved in a
research-based, academic program called Future Problem Solving.
While competing in the 2013 National Finals, she was exposed to the issue of marine pollution. The topic involved researching plastic pollution issues and solutions, triggering further research that profoundly affected E Wen: “As I delved deeper, I became increasingly shocked by the effects of plastic pollution on our communities and ecosystems”.
Cleaner beaches
In response to her experience, in 2016 E Wen
started working with environmental non-profit organisations in her hometown of
Christchurch, New Zealand. She also established a Sustainability Council at her
school through which she started, among other initiatives, recycling materials
in partnership with TerraCycle Depot.
After seeing a need for more youth-focused and
led environmental projects in her community, she was driven to establish a
charity, Plastic Solution Charitable Trust (P.S. Our Beaches).
E Wen and her friends carried out beach
clean-ups and other projects to address local plastic pollution issues. She
explained: “Practical action events like clean ups are a big part of what we
do.
"Not only are we having a direct impact
on the environment, these events provide an opportunity to educate young people
about environmental issues and to inspire individual action against these
issues. At the same time, it fosters deeper understanding that assists in the
push for more systemic change”.
In 2019, through P.S. Our Beaches, E Wen
launched the EnviroPAST (Plastic and Sustainability Talks) initiative.
EnviroPAST is a two-day conference which aims to inspire, educate, connect, and
challenge young people through talks by expert speakers in the plastics and
sustainability space, hands-on workshops, and a practical action event.
In Enviro PAST and all other P.S. Our Beaches
initiatives, E Wen and her team aim to use creativity, art and technology to
amplify impact.
Community
collaboration
So far E Wen has convened the EnviroPAST
conferences through grants and funding from local and regional councils, local
organisations and other charities, notably the Wright Family Foundation. She
says that while partnerships have been critical in the success of the
initiative, community activism is a collaborative effort.
She advises building a passionate team
alongside local support: “Make sure that you have a good community
around you, with diverse skills and backgrounds but also shared values and
passions.
“Tap into your strengths and the strengths of
your team as well. In my case, I have used poetry as a vehicle to communicate
environmental topics, converging my passions for both poetry and our
environment. Know what you are good at and find out how you can tie that into
your activism as well.”
While young people like both E Wen and Forbi
have unique creative, strategic and mobilising talents, everybody has the power
to create change.
Together, each Commonwealth citizen who is
proud of their beautiful natural.



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