Hello everyone,
Here to remind you about educating girls! When you think of climate solutions, you probably think of renewable energy or electric vehicles. But while we need these kinds of innovations, there are other powerful solutions we are not paying proper attention to.
There exists an environmental solution that can reduce inequality, build resilience to the climate crisis and reduce emissions all at the same time. It’s called educating girls and young women, and it needs to happen now.
If we are to limit global heating to 1.5°C above preindustrial levels, then educating girls is one of the best tools we have. According to nonprofit group Project Drawdown, investing in universal education and family planning in low- and middle-income countries could reduce
emissions by 85.42 gigatons by 2050. That’s about a decade’s worth of China’s emissions.

Girls who have been to school grow up to be empowered women. They are not forced into early marriage, and they tend to have healthier, smaller families,
reducing emissions well into the future.

Girls who have been to school have the tools they need to be more resilient to climate disasters. They are economically empowered, are empowered in their communities and know how to respond to extreme weather.
Girls who have been to school can grow up to be women leaders, who have been shown to be more likely to ratify environmental treaties. Think of Christiana Figueres, the U.N. diplomat who led negotiations for the Paris Agreement.
Or Hilda Heine, the former President of the Marshall Islands, who has shown the world the impact climate change is having in the Pacific. Look too at the female leaders of the youth climate movement.
Educating a girl will give her a brighter future; educating girls will provide us all with a lifeline.

Read my op-ed at time.com/5953417/vaness…
Please follow the @TheRiseUpMovem1 and help us #StopEACOP

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More from @vanessa_vash

11 Mar
Hello everyone,
Here to tell you that the climate crisis is not a PR opportunity for governments, but a real threat. Developing countries need funding now to help them cut emissions, before the point of no return
Thread
#Riseupmovement
#FaceTheClimateEmergency
Five years on from the Paris Agreement, people have asked questions like “What has been achieved?” Privilege allows you to to reflect on achievements.

For me, I have not seen any success in the last five years!
#Riseupmovement
#FaceTheClimateEmergency
In January 2019, I started a protest demanding for Climate Justice. I was driven to act by what I was witnessing around me: people in my country losing their homes, their incomes and their lives to extreme weather.

#Riseupmovement
#FaceTheClimateEmergency
#NoMoreEmptyPromises
Read 15 tweets
10 Mar
Hello everyone,
Here to remind you of the fact that the Global South is not on the front page but it is on the front line of the climate crisis!
Thread
#Riseupmovement
#FaceTheClimateEmergency
Photo credit: @DeLoviePhotos
When I was cropped out of the photograph in Davos, I started to question why I was erased from climate coverage. At that time, there was a lot of agony, a lot of pain. But now I’m on a journey to ensure that this doesn’t happen to anyone else.
#Riseupmovement
I am happy to use my voice and use my platform to always demand for the inclusion of marginalised voices and Indigenous voices. A lot needs to change in the media. Because if we do not tell the stories of those affected the most, how will we get justice and solutions for them?
Read 10 tweets
9 Mar
A Rise of 1.2 Degrees Celsius is Already Hell for many people who are experiencing the impacts of Climate change right now!

We cannot eat COAL and we cannot drink OIL!
#Riseupmovement #FaceTheClimateEmergency
Thread Image
In 2021, I want our world leaders to treat the climate crisis like a crisis. It’s not something that’s going to happen in the future, it’s an issue that’s already affecting millions of lives around the world. We need drastic action now. #Riseupmovement #FaceTheClimateEmergency
The Paris Agreement aims to keep temperatures below 1.5 degrees Celsius—but I want people to understand that a rise of 1.2 degrees Celsius is already hell for me and other people living in Uganda and on the African continent.  #Riseupmovement #FaceTheClimateEmergency
Read 10 tweets
8 Mar
Hello everyone,
Here to remind you about educating girls! Educating young women is the climate fix no one is talking about.
Educating young women across the world could stop tens of billions of tonnes of greenhouse gases from being released into the atmosphere
Thread

#IWD2021
What springs to mind when someone says ‘climate change solution’? Probably wind or solar farms, maybe meatless burgers or ‘moonshot’ technologies. These are all important if we are going to urgently cut our carbon emissions in line with the science!
#IWD2021
In fact, there are a wide range of climate solutions with huge potential. We have been talking more about restoring nature, but what about educating girls? Universal education can start improving people’s lives right away, as well as stabilising our climate.

#IWD2021
Read 13 tweets
10 Aug 20
Tsavo National Park in Kenya is on fire.
We don't see any media coverage. Alert people about what is happening. It has been burning and these are the animals in danger: the aardwolf, yellow baboon, bat, Cape buffalo, Senegal bushbaby, bushbuck, caracal, African wildcat, 

THREAD
southeast African cheetah, African civet, Kirk's dik-dik, African wild dog, African dormouse, blue duiker, bush duiker, Harvey's red duiker, common eland, African bush elephant, bat-eared fox, northern greater galago, Grant's gazelle, rusty-spotted genet, common genet, gerenuk,
giraffe, African savanna hare, springhare, Coke's hartebeest, Hunter's hartebeest, East African hedgehog, spotted hyena, striped hyena, yellow-spotted rock hyrax, southern tree hyrax, impala, black-backed jackal, side-striped jackal, klipspringer, lesser kudu, leopard, lion,
Read 7 tweets
22 Feb 20
Last year, I started a project that involves installation of institutional stoves and solar system in schools.

I was very blessed to find someone who offered to finance the first school:

I was able to do the installation. I will do a brief explanation about this

1/4
Why this stove?
1. It cuts down the use of firewood to almost 3/4
2. It greatly reduces the cutting down of trees
3. It greatly reduces CO2 emissions
4. It conserves the environment
5. It protects the health of the chefs
6. Ensures clean cooking
@UNDP @cleancooking

2/4
Why the solar?
1. Now is the time to transition to a more sustainable way of life.
2. To make renewable energy easily accessible for schools and at zero cost.
3. Solar is pollution free
4. Renewable energy is the way to go!

3/4
Read 4 tweets

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