First News: The Climate Challenge with message from HRH Prince Charles

Prince of Wales gives his message about saving the planetPrince of Wales gives his message about saving the planet
Prince of Wales gives his message about saving the planet

THE CLIMATE CHALLENGE

With First News

The UK’s only children’s newspaper, First News, and JPI are working together to get the voices of UK children heard at COP26.

We are inviting children to send in questions to be asked at a Downing Street press conference just for kids, focused on the climate challenge the world faces.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

And we will be publishing their comments, messages for world leaders and ideas for solutions in First News and JPI newspapers during next month’s COP26 conference in Glasgow, when world leaders will gather to make decisions about action that must be taken for the future of the Earth.

We are also partnering with Sky Kids, who have already heard from six children on each of the six inhabited continents across the world, about how their lives are already being affected by climate change. In the documentary, COP26: In Your Hands, they ask world leaders: “Are you listening?”

HRH The Prince of Wales introduces the film. In a message to children, he says: “I’m old enough to have a grandson who might read First News.

Like you, he’s learning about how climate change is causing the big storms, the floods, the droughts and food shortages we are seeing around the world.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“When I was his age, people had no idea about the damage they were doing. By the time I was a teenager, I started to see that, if we didn’t stop polluting out planet, we would face a very dangerous future indeed. This is why I’ve spent so much of my life trying to warn that we have to operate in ways which make nature thrive, not suffer.

“Nature’s systems are beautifully complicated. Things like oxygen and sunlight enable billions of tiny creatures in the soil and sea to sustain the lives of every animal, plant and person. It’s one big, joined-up system where different cycles work together to keep the whole system healthy. And, nothing is wasted. In nature, what we call waste becomes food for the next cycle. But, if you break the cycle, it cannot turn and that is what we have done.

“We have forgotten that we have to put back into nature as much as we take out – that we have to sustain nature so that nature can sustain us.

“If you take a look at my big plan for nature and the planet, which I published recently, you’ll see what I mean. It’s called the Terra Carta and it’s a set of principles and actions that people and businesses can follow to help nature restore its balance, so that all those cycles turn properly again long into the future.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“And, you have an important part to play in this. That’s why I’m delighted that, in this film, we’ll be hearing from six young climate activists from six different continents who have all seen the impact of climate change where they live, and have ideas about what needs to be done to help the planet become healthy again. Their voices matter and so does yours. Your future depends upon the future of the planet. But, only if we all work hard now to make our planet healthy again will your future be healthy, too.”

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is keen also to hear from young people in the UK. He says: “At COP26, leaders from around the world will come together to tackle the threat of climate change before it’s too late. But we need your help. So, I want to hear what young people across the country, and around the world, think needs to happen in the fight for the future of your planet. It’s in your hands and we’re all listening.”

Send in your questions, messages for world leaders and ideas to solve the climate challenge, to first.news/YoungUK.

COP26: IN YOUR HANDS

The teenagers representing the world’s six inhabited continents in the Sky Kids documentary are:

Hide Ad
Hide Ad
ASIA -Kynan, aged 16, from Indonesia: "My country is chopping down forests. Are you listening?"ASIA -Kynan, aged 16, from Indonesia: "My country is chopping down forests. Are you listening?"
ASIA -Kynan, aged 16, from Indonesia: "My country is chopping down forests. Are you listening?"
AUSTRALIA -Tamsyn, aged 16, from Australia: "My country is on fire. Are you listening?"AUSTRALIA -Tamsyn, aged 16, from Australia: "My country is on fire. Are you listening?"
AUSTRALIA -Tamsyn, aged 16, from Australia: "My country is on fire. Are you listening?"
EUROPE -Hannah, aged 17, from the UK: "My country needs to stop burning coal. Are you listening? This is our last chance."EUROPE -Hannah, aged 17, from the UK: "My country needs to stop burning coal. Are you listening? This is our last chance."
EUROPE -Hannah, aged 17, from the UK: "My country needs to stop burning coal. Are you listening? This is our last chance."
AFRICA -Queen, aged 17, from Cameroon: "Global warming is not something we fear. It is something we are experiencing right now."AFRICA -Queen, aged 17, from Cameroon: "Global warming is not something we fear. It is something we are experiencing right now."
AFRICA -Queen, aged 17, from Cameroon: "Global warming is not something we fear. It is something we are experiencing right now."
SOUTH AMERICA- Darielen, aged 15, from Brazil: "I think it's really unfair. They [world leaders] are not talking to us."SOUTH AMERICA- Darielen, aged 15, from Brazil: "I think it's really unfair. They [world leaders] are not talking to us."
SOUTH AMERICA- Darielen, aged 15, from Brazil: "I think it's really unfair. They [world leaders] are not talking to us."
NORTH AMERICA- Sophia, aged 15, from Canada: "Our future is in your hands.NORTH AMERICA- Sophia, aged 15, from Canada: "Our future is in your hands.
NORTH AMERICA- Sophia, aged 15, from Canada: "Our future is in your hands.

First News is a 28-page weekly newspaper for young people, delivered into homes across the

UK every Friday. Find out more and try for free at firstnews.co.uk/1free.

COP26: In Your Hands can be seen now on Sky Kids, Now TV, or on First News Education TV from Monday 25 October at first.news/educationTV. Schools will be able to access classroom resources from First News Education TV, too, for activities during COP26.

News you can trust since 1858
Follow us
©National World Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.Cookie SettingsTerms and ConditionsPrivacy notice