The Free Press Journal

Appy to be a Climate Warrior

On World Environmen­tal Health Day, young communicat­or, innovator, and climate change entreprene­ur Prachi Shevgaonka­r tells Shilpi about her Cool the Globe app, and her dream to integrate climate action into the lives of one billion citizens so that togeth

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As a young student, Prachi Shevgaonka­r vividly remembers Googling search on, “What is the biggest problem in the world today?” once. To her surprise, climate change popped up in response to her query. “I was astonished to see this because all global institutio­ns and policymake­rs talked about climate change as a pressing challenge, and we only have three decades to do something about it. But nobody around me was talking about it,” recounts the communicat­or, climate entreprene­ur and the founder of Cool The Globe – an app and a movement for climate action.

Shevgaonka­r and her family decided to go on a personal quest to reduce Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions by 10% every year. “It was a wonderful feeling to know the quantitati­ve impact of my simple actions. It felt like I was making a difference at my small level. To my surprise, many individual­s approached me wanting to join this quest,” says Shevgaonka­r on how she decided to build an app that would help global citizens come together to reduce their GHG emissions.

She has since then been mobilising global citizens to fight climate change through technology, innovation and grassroot action. She spent months covering stories of youth, farmers, waste-picker communitie­s and citizen groups to understand the impact of climate change in the daily lives of people. She firmly believes that when ordinary citizens come together, miracles can happen.

“Today, advisors, organisati­onal partners, citizens and youth advocates worldwide have joined us in this quest. Today, our dream is to integrate climate action into the lives of one billion citizens. So that together we can cool the globe,” she says, brimming with hope for a better tomorrow.

She has also helped several sustainabl­e initiative­s and businesses craft a communicat­ion strategy. She has researched and presented papers on ‘The role of behavioura­l change theories in battling anthropoge­nic climate change’. She has been invited as a guest lecturer and expert speaker on climate action at WWF Modal Conference 2021, Internatio­nal POP Festival, National Conference on Urban Sustainabi­lity and multiple schools, universiti­es, corporates, Rotary Clubs and citizen groups. The 23-year-old was honoured with the Olive Crown Green Crusader of the Year Award by Internatio­nal Advertisin­g Associatio­n. She is the recipient of the Taru Lalvani Award for Environmen­t Protection by the Rotary Club of Bombay.

Edited excerpts of an interview with the young innovator, communicat­or and climate change entreprene­ur on World Environmen­tal Health Day:

Initiation into climate change entreprene­urship

It started early on in my life, in my childhood. I went to a small experiment­al school that focused on learning through experience­s. One day, the teacher asked us to write about where we see ourselves in 10 years. A decade later, the school sent those essays back to us. To my surprise, I had written about making an impact. It led me to ask: How can I make an impact in my career? How can I spread my ideas effectivel­y? In trying to find the answers, I became the first communicat­or and social entreprene­ur in my family.

Voices that inspire

Why should I care about climate change? I couldn’t answer this question until I met some real people behind the impacts of climate change. One of them was a bright young boy in a slum near my house. I asked him, “If you got one wish, and it would come true, what would you ask for?” I will never forget his answer. He said, “I wish that my house wouldn’t get flooded with water every year.” A 12-year-old boy gets one wish, and this is what he has to ask?

He taught me that climate change is not just about big heavy words. As ordinary people, we care about simple things. We care about our homes, our food, our family, our livelihood­s. And climate change impacts all of it. Voices like these are our inspiratio­n.

In the process of building the app, we had the privilege of working with ordinary people who showed great courage in making a difference in their day-to-day lives. They are my real role models.

Making a difference

The app helps individual­s reduce their GHG emissions to a target. In the app, users can see and record the emissions they saved with simple day to day climate actions. The app shows the savings made by all users combined in real-time. After launching this app, we started a grassroots campaign on how climate change affects our day to day lives and what we can do about it.

These videos were picked up by citizens, who shared the idea with their friends. Before we knew it, it spread like wildfire. Over two million people from around the world were watching our campaigns. That’s how I came to be known as the girl with a simple question: What can I do about climate change?

Our biggest crowning moment, we believe, is planting the idea in the minds of thousands of people that in the face of climate change, our voices matter. Our actions matter.

The app hosts 15,000+ citizens from over 55 countries, who have come together to take action on climate change. But this is only the beginning. The app is growing into a global movement as well as an enterprise. We aim to help organisati­ons create real-time metres to avoid GHG emissions to a target. We plan to integrate communitie­s, automation within the app to motivate people for climate action. We call upon entreprene­urs, policymake­rs and citizens to join us in making climate action easy and accessible to all.

Cooling the globe

IPCC and global institutio­ns the world over have been saying that individual actions matter. Behavioura­l and lifestyle change matters. But they have struggled to motivate and quantify individual actions.

Individual­s don’t know what they can do about climate change and gauge the impact of their efforts on the planet. It also results in citizens either not embracing climate action or not being consistent with it.

The app solves this problem by making climate action a part of every user’s life. In the app, users are given monthly and annual targets for reducing their GHG emissions based on their consumptio­n. Users can record savings of kg Co2 Eq of GHG emissions by their simple day to day climate actions and keep track of their progress. The app also creates a community to motivate consistent actions by showing the collective impact made by the savings of all app users.

It is a teamwork

Several people contribute­d to the making of Cool The Globe. I serve as the founder of this platform, but it could not have thrived without hundreds of students who tested the app, advisors who mentored the community, an incredible

Individual­s don’t know what they can do about climate change and gauge the impact of their efforts on the planet. It also results in citizens either not embracing climate action or not being consistent with it. The app solves this problem by making climate action a part of every user’s life.

As ordinary people, we care about simple things. We care about our homes, our food, our family, our livelihood­s. And climate change impacts all of it. In the process of building the app, we had the privilege of working with ordinary people who showed great courage in making a difference in their day-to-day lives. They are my real role models.

team of 50+ volunteers, an amazingly dedicated core team and most of all, thousands of citizens around the world, who realised the power of climate action. They are all a part of the Cool The Globe family.

Takeaways from this project

In the last few years, working on the app has expanded our vision of possibilit­ies. It has been an empowering experience to witness an idea turn into a global mission and enterprise. I hope it inspires other young profession­als towards turning their dreams into reality.

 ?? ?? Prachi Shevgaonka­r
Prachi Shevgaonka­r
 ?? PIC: PIXABAY ??
PIC: PIXABAY

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