DARLING MAGAZINE SW LONDON WINTER 21/22

Page 18

My 2 weeks at COP26 What went on outside the Blue Zone? By Mary Hanover

I

am on the train back from COP26 after two weeks working in PR for a youth climate conference - The Extreme Hangout. The fringe events, many said, eclipsed the main event known as COP26, Blue Zone. Climate activists of all ages, from all over the world, congregated, discussed and networked. I met Diwigdi from remote islands off the coast of Panama, who showed me videos on his phone of extreme flooding, water gushing through homes and what living on the front line of climate change is really like. Others, some dressed in bright indigenous clothes, the proverbial “canaries in the coal mine” of climate change. I met youth Climate Ambassadors sponsored by NGO’s from Hawaii, Maldives, Seychelles, Barbados, Bahamas all sounding the alarm bell for urgent action. The message? Anything above 1.5°C spells an end to their nation. Sometimes it was hard to determine whether this was a political climate conference or a festival: topics ranged from “Words are pretty Blah Blah Blah” to “Why everyone hates 18

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vegans”. There were youth activists, eco-social media influencers, fashion models turned environmentalists, NASA astronauts, Polar explorers, Olympic athletes, football stars, musicians, artists, filmmakers, and famous faces like Bear Grylls, Idris Elba, Ellie Goulding, Leonardo Di Caprio speaking on panels. Away from our fringe venue along the River Clyde was the Blue Zone at the Armadillo building; the feeling? A dystopian film set: XR protestors in red robes, painted white faces, drums, chanting, urgent banners and signs. Sheets of fabric, painted by children, “Stop Killing Us”, indigenous activists in circular rituals, groups of XR rebels, police, metal railings, security guards, against a brittle backdrop of industrial grey-skied Glasgow. The Green Zone, a short walk across the bridge, was open to the public but barely lived up to its name. Held in an unnatural Star Trek building, the Glasgow Science Centre had futuristic displays of soil-free lettuce and artificial rainforests. I started to get eco-anxiety and left.


Articles inside

Fighting fire with fire – Kathryn Duncan

4min
pages 48-49

Want a ‘no fuss’ funeral?

2min
page 47

Suzanne Mynors’ happy work-life at Russell-Cooke

4min
pages 44-45

Property investing – start when you’re young

2min
page 43

Mental health programmes in schools

1min
page 39

Russell-Cooke tackles abusive relationships

4min
pages 36-38

The wisdom of winter with Sophie Lutz

2min
page 41

Spotlight on the fabulous Jamie Wilson

3min
pages 30-32

Perfect artworks for you from Ad Lib Gallery

1min
page 40

State-of-the-art spa retreat at David Lloyd

1min
page 29

We’re talking pelvic prolapse

2min
pages 27-28

No nonsense, no toxins with Shelly

1min
pages 25-26

Multitasking for your skin at Nakedhealth

2min
pages 23-24

Feeling lonely? Breathe Café is open to talk

1min
page 15

Teaching kids values this Christmas. Elaine Halligan

4min
pages 12-14

The other side of COP26 with Mary Hanover

4min
pages 18-19

Women of the World festival is back

3min
pages 16-17

Good feasting this season

5min
pages 20-22

Oath Home making positive impacts

1min
page 11

Shelly Palmer - woman of many talents

4min
pages 4-6
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