Pacific island nations are ground zero for climate change impacts, and their plight embodies the sweeping environmental damage that is the hallmark of the era of humans, the Anthropocene
Her distant ancestors paddled canoes across the Pacific Ocean to settle what became the island nation of Tuvalu, but now climate change means Grace Malie and her generation may live to see those islands swallowed by the sea.
Pacific island nations are ground zero for climate change impacts and their plight embodies the sweeping environmental damage that is the hallmark of the era of humans, the Anthropocene.
Confronted with a warming world that could engulf her home forever, Malie said it would be easy to think she and her people have "no future". Â
But the 24-year-old climate campaigner said young people are determined to chart their own destiny—even if they cannot stop planet-heating emissions on their own. Â
"I remain hopeful," she told AFP in an interview. "My generation is really taking matters into their own hands."