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Hello! My Name is Athena Geer, and I am the Youth Climate Justice Coordinator here at Climate Generation.

I get the honor and immense privilege of co-facilitating our Youth Environmental Activist Program (YEA)!. YEA! is a network for and by young people. From weekly programming to our annual Youth Climate Justice Summit (YCJS), the leaders in our program are acting on systems perpetuating the climate crisis. We gather every Wednesday, and each meeting is a space for students to co-collaborate, plan, and lead. Each member runs a meeting, practicing in this space, so they can organize and lead in their own communities and schools. This year was full of co-mentorship and learning. We explored how climate justice connects with our individual lives and our communities, dove deep into policy, and learned with and from community leaders. YCJS brings all of this energy together in one place, a culmination of organizing by students to bring a network of young people from across the state to advocate for climate justice policies they care about. It has been incredible to collaborate with these changemakers. Their creativity, insight, and passion are helping move this movement forward. 

This has been a transformative year, and I invite you to follow along as I share a few highlights for each arc and stay tuned towards the end to witness some pieces from our students!

Climate Justice 101

We first started the programming year with our Climate Justice 101 Arc, where students got to understand and re-establish the current status of the climate movement in Minnesota, and also got to learn topics like Capitalism vs. The Climate Crisis, Intersectionality in Climate organizing, and The Root Cause, Tree Activity. The Root Cause Tree activity is taught at the beginning of the year to enable students to highlight the impacts of capitalism and its varied levels of structures to understand its further harm on the climate crisis. In this activity, students use a metaphorical tree to highlight how the Roots of the tree (capitalism, colonialism) then hold up the trunk (power structures) to then hold the branches (institutions), to then hold the leaves (interpersonal acts) that perpetuate the climate crisis. This tree correlates to our collective change efforts; the further down the tree we go, the more effective and long-term that change can be, but also the harder it can be, and vice versa. Students then learn in the end that, in order to create the most long-lasting change, we need big and bold climate solutions that address the root causes of the issue.

Students the following week, then got to watch that in action! Students watched “Youth v Gov,” a powerful story about 21 plaintiffs between the ages of 13 and 24 who sued the US Government for unsafe living conditions and perpetuating the climate crisis.

Fast Fashion

We then started our second arc: Fast Fashion. Students had the opportunity to explore how the current state of textile waste and cheap fast fashion is and are impacting the climate crisis. Students got to learn about greenwashing in the clothing industry, Learn about communities who are impacted by fast fashion, and students also got to learn how to mend the clothes to last longer from our friends at REuse MN! In addition to learning how to mend, Students then held a community clothing swap for friends and peers to join and share already existing clothes to help slow the spread of consumerism in fast fashion!

Human Migration

In spring, we transitioned to our third arc: Human Migration! Students dove into international conversations around human migration. We were joined by our friends at COPAL to have a conversation about the current narratives on human migration and its intersection with the climate crisis via on-the-ground work, community conversation, and understand what needs are truly needed when talking about migrations of people. Students also learned about climate displacement and migration work happening in the continent of Africa from our friends at the Mortensen Family Foundation. Margretta talked about how “Migration is not a NEW topic of conversation, but that climate is changing and it’s forcing people to move” and discussed with students about how this impacted the social impacts, the economic impacts, and also the cultural and emotional impacts of people having to move. Students also during this arc got the chance to attend a play on how the migration of people and the climate crisis are deeply linked, using themes like water, sacredness, and liberation.

Storytelling

Our final arc of the programming year was storytelling. Storytelling is a crucial and pivotal tool used to explain, invoke emotions, and pass down information. Students spent a few weeks working on individual pieces that they showcased these pieces at our end-of-year storytelling slam! Students got to put all their learning and thoughts throughout the year together in an assortment of art pieces to showcase to friends and family! Some students wrote personal climate narratives, while others drew and painted art pieces, some wrote poems, while others wrote climate stories. In the end, students were able to reflect on the year and celebrate the amazing learning space created together.

Made by Toby Stickels
Made by Toby Stickels

Beneath, still branches
the machine grinds through silence,
faces wet with grief.
Haiku, written by Spencer Snyder

After an amazing time during summer programming, we will be starting YEA! programming this fall. Learn more about our program and email yea@climategen.org, OR athena@climategen.org, OR ramiro@climategen.org for more information.

Athena Geer

Athena Geer is a Somali-American who grew up in the Cedar-Riverside/Phillips neighborhood. Athena came to YEA! 6 years ago and learned about the framework of climate justice, the importance of climate literacy, and the concept of youth agency. Athena hopes to give and aspire youth to take hands on their climate journey and that they are there to support them in that. Athena enjoys journaling, songwriting, and playing with their purfect roommate, Leona the kitten.

The post YEA! 2025 Updates appeared first on Climate Generation.

YEA! 2025 Updates

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Greenpeace urges governments to defend international law, as evidence suggests breaches by deep sea mining contractors

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SYDNEY/FIJI, Monday 9 March 2026 — As the International Seabed Authority (ISA) opens its 31st Session today, Greenpeace International is calling on member states to take firm and swift action if breaches by subsidiaries and subcontractors of The Metals Company (TMC) are established. Evidence compiled and submitted to the ISA’s Secretary General suggests that violations of exploration contracts may have occurred.

Louisa Casson, Campaigner, Greenpeace International, said: “In July, governments at the ISA sent a clear message: rogue companies trying to sidestep international law will face consequences. Turning that promise into action at this meeting is far more important than rushing through a Mining Code designed to appease corporate interests rather than protect the common good. As delegations from around the world gather today, they must unite and confront the US and TMC’s neo-colonial resource grab and make clear that deep sea mining is a reckless gamble humanity cannot afford.”

The ISA launched an inquiry at its last Council meeting in July 2025, in response to TMC USA seeking unilateral deep sea mining licences from the Trump administration. If the US administration unilaterally allows mining of the international seabed, it would be considered in violation of international law.

Greenpeace International has compiled and submitted evidence to the ISA Secretary-General, Leticia Carvalho, to support the ongoing inquiry into deep sea mining contractors. This evidence shows that those supporting these unprecedented rogue efforts to start deep sea mining unilaterally via President Trump could be in breach of their obligations with the ISA.

The analysis focuses on TMC’s subsidiaries — Nauru Ocean Resources Inc (NORI) and Tonga Offshore Mining Ltd (TOML) — as well as Blue Minerals Jamaica (BMJ), a company linked to Dutch-Swiss offshore engineering firm Allseas, one of TMC’s subcontractors and largest shareholders. The information compiled indicates that their activities may violate core contractual obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). If these breaches are confirmed, NORI and TOML’s exploration contracts, which expire in July 2026 and January 2027 respectively, the ISA should take action, including considering not renewing the contract.

Letícia Carvalho has recently publicly advocated for governments to finalise a streamlined deep sea mining code this year and has expressed her own concerns with the calls from 40 governments for a moratorium. At a time when rogue actors are attempting to bypass or weaken the international system, establishing rules and regulations that will allow mining to start could mean falling into the trap of international bullies. A Mining Code would legitimise and drive investment into a flagging industry, supporting rogue actor companies like TMC and weakening deterrence against unilateral mining outside the ISA framework.

Casson added:Rushing to finalise a Mining Code serves the interests of multinational corporations, not the principles of multilateralism. With what we know now, rules to mine the deep sea cannot coexist with ocean protection. Governments are legally obliged to only authorise deep sea mining if it can demonstrably benefit humanity – and that is non-negotiable. As the long list of scientific, environmental and social concerns with this industry keeps growing, what is needed is a clear political signal that the world will not be intimidated into rushing a mining code by unilateral threats and will instead keep moving towards a moratorium on deep sea mining.” 

—ENDS—

Key findings from the full briefing:

  • Following TMC USA’s application to mine the international seabed unilaterally, NORI and TOML have amended their agreements to provide payments to Nauru and Tonga, respectively, if US-authorised commercial mining goes ahead. This sets up their participation in a financial mechanism predicated on mining in contradiction to UNCLOS.
  • NORI and TOML have signed intercompany intellectual property and data-sharing agreements with TMC USA, and the data obtained by NORI and TOML under the ISA exploration contracts has been key to facilitating TMC USA’s application under US national regulations.
  • Just a few individuals hold key decision-making roles across the TMC and all relevant subsidiaries, making claims of independent management ungrounded. NORI, TOML, and TMC USA, while legally distinct, are managed as an integrated corporate group with a single, coordinated strategy under the direct control and strategic direction of TMC.

Greenpeace urges governments to defend international law, as evidence suggests breaches by deep sea mining contractors

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Climate Change

After a Decade of Missteps, a Texas City Careens Toward a Water-Shortage Catastrophe

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Officials in Corpus Christi expect a “water emergency” within months and fully run out of water next year. That would halt jet fuel supplies to Texas airports, fuel a surge in gasoline prices and trigger an “economic disaster” without precedent, former officials said.

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas—The imminent depletion of water supplies in Corpus Christi threatens to cut off the flow of jet fuel to Texas airports and other oil exports from one of the nation’s largest petroleum ports, triggering potential shockwaves through energy markets in Texas and beyond.

After a Decade of Missteps, a Texas City Careens Toward a Water-Shortage Catastrophe

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Is the FBI Investigating Environmental Activists?

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A recent visit by an FBI agent to a climate activist hints at a broadening Trump administration effort to target political opponents.

NEW YORK CITY—The group in the Brooklyn studio seemed harmless. There was a graduate student, a Yiddish teacher, a hairdresser. Fifteen people had gathered on a Wednesday night for a training offered by Extinction Rebellion NYC and Climate Defiance, two climate activist groups that engage in nonviolent civil disobedience and theatrical protest.

Is the FBI Investigating Environmental Activists?

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