Chatelaine

The activists helping young people rewrite climate change policy

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ANA GONZALEZ GUERRERO and Dominique Souris met as students at the University of Waterloo and became energized by grassroots environmen­tal projects and UN climate meetings with student delegation­s. Together, they launched Youth Climate Lab, an organizati­on that helps young people around the world pilot environmen­tal projects with government­s and businesses and brokers relationsh­ips between the boomers and Gen-Xers who are often directing climate policy and the millennial­s who will be affected by it. So far, they’ve tested 10 projects and joined two court cases in Saskatchew­an and Ontario that argued for the constituti­onal right to price carbon. “We want to prepare young people for a future where work will be impacted by climate and business models,” Guerrero says. “We need to create the jobs and the economy that will engage with climate realities.” The Climate Lab has consulted on youth environmen­tal projects in the Seychelles and recently worked with the United Arab Emirates to host a dialogue series between young activists and government ministers. In Canada, it partnered with Student Energy and the Global Green Growth Institute on Greenprene­urs, a 10-week accelerato­r program for early-stage green start-ups. Their goal isn’t to engage young people in climate change— millennial­s are already involved—but to empower them to do something about it. “There’s a huge sense of urgency,” Souris says. “We need ambitious targets, and government can’t do it alone.”

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Ana Gonzalez Guerrero, 27 Dominique Souris, 26
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