'I want to erase my own footprint': The women looking after an island paradise - BBC News

Antiguan girls are being trained as coastal stewards to empower them while protecting the environment.

1 day agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Courtesy AdoptacoastlineImage caption, Kih'Nyiah McKay is determined to do her bit to save the planetBy Gemma HandySt John's, AntiguaKih'Nyiah McKay may be just 11 years old, but she is keenly aware of the climate crisis.

She knows the loss of trees reduces oxygen and that dumped garbage kills the sea turtles that keep the ocean around her healthy.

"Young people need to save the Earth," she says with a solemnity that belies her age.

It is only March, but the sun outside is already blisteringly hot, posing a challenge for the electric fans battling valiantly to keep Kih'Nyiah's classroom cool.

In Antigua, like the rest of the Caribbean, the impacts of climate change are a daily reality, evidenced in receding beaches, worsening hurricanes, debilitating droughts and increasingly suffocating summers.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-68683693


Post ID: 336e7112-52e5-4ab0-9f70-343992e00414
Rating: 5
Updated: 1 week ago
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