Jessie Parks is fighting for his survival. The 17-year-old lives in Riverside, California, where he breathes some of the most polluted air in the country. In 2016, researchers that the long-term effects of breathing the region鈥檚 foul air sicken 1,416 and kill 808 people a year鈥攁 conservative estimate, and one that鈥檚 likely to rise given that higher temperatures risk making air quality . 鈥淚鈥檓 not freaked out by climate change in the future,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 freaked out about it right now.鈥
Parks is one of teenagers from nearly 100 countries across the world who took part in school strikes on March 15 to demand aggressive action on climate change. From California to Kolkata, they marched to protest against elected leaders who they say by not actively working to lower emissions and bowing to the pressure of oil, gas, and coal companies. 鈥淚t鈥檚 common sense that elected officials who are backed by fossil fuels . . . they鈥檙e not going to fight for us or our future,鈥 Parks says. 鈥淪o we have to create change ourselves.鈥
Today鈥檚 teens aren鈥檛 being shy about it. Last month Kentucky resident Destine Grigsby, 17, and several others of Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) in Louisville to ask him what he values more: the fossil fuel industry that has nearly $3.1 million since his first election in 1984, or the health and safety of the young people he represents in Congress. McConnell denies the science of climate change, 鈥渇or everybody who thinks it鈥檚 warming, I can find somebody who thinks it isn鈥檛.鈥
McConnell鈥檚 staffers told Grigsby that the senator wasn鈥檛 available. Undaunted, the following week she traveled to Washington, D.C., where she joined more than 100 members of the Sunrise Movement, a youth-led climate group, to occupy the Senate Majority Leader鈥檚 Capitol Hill office. After a series of speeches and chants of 鈥渨hich side are you on,鈥 Capitol Police tried to quell the rowdy crowd by issuing warnings, and then making arrests. Ultimately, 42 people were taken into custody鈥攁nd their arrests put climate policy in the .
Grigsby, who was not arrested, sees demonstrations like these as part of a longer-term political strategy. 鈥淲e鈥檙e focusing on Mitch鈥檚 [Senate] election in 2020,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to get him out.鈥 Grigsby typically feels 鈥渉opeless鈥 about politics; that day, she felt 鈥渦nstoppable鈥 instead.
Teens like Grigsby and Parks seem to be everywhere these days. They鈥檙e pursuing a novel legal strategy by suing the U.S. government for depriving them of their right to a safe climate. They鈥檙e instigating public confrontations that go viral, such as when Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) a teen鈥檚 pleas for climate action by saying 鈥測ou didn鈥檛 vote for me.鈥 (The backlash to her comments prompted her to that she heard them 鈥渓oud and clear.鈥) And in the case of Greta Thunberg, the Swedish 16-year-old who inspired the recent wave of school strikes, they鈥檙e being invited to the United Nations Climate Change Conference and for the Nobel Peace Prize.
These teens are terrified that climate change is making our world . They have no patience for denial, inaction, or incremental progress. They want bold, radical solutions. And they鈥檙e prepared to fight any fossil fuel executive or politician standing in their way.
鈥淚 think everyone, especially in older generations, thinks that someone else is going to pick this up, someone else is going to deal with it,鈥 says , a political scientist at University of California, Santa Barbara, who studies climate change and social movements. 鈥淎nd young people just realize that nobody else is picking up the mess, there are no adults in the room.鈥
Teens feel an urgency around climate change that largely appears lacking among political and economic leaders鈥攎ost of whom belong to, and are , older generations who won鈥檛 experience the worst impacts to come.
Even as rising global temperatures stoke larger hurricanes and more frequent wildfires, these teens know that truly catastrophic damages鈥攕uch as flooding of all the world鈥檚 coastal cities creating tens of millions of climate refugees鈥攃ould occur . They鈥檝e grown up with the knowledge that half of all fossil fuel emissions in the last 30 years, and that decades of stalled international negotiations and broken promises have failed to reverse the trend.
鈥淲e haven鈥檛 known a world where climate change isn鈥檛 an issue,鈥 Maxime, an 18-year-old who took part in the school strikes in London, told . 鈥淲e鈥檝e just watched people ignore it.鈥 Alexandria Villase帽or, a 13-year-old who is co-director of the group Youth Climate Strike, which helped organize the U.S. school walkouts, explained to that 鈥淲e don't have enough time to wait until we're in positions of power. We have to force the world leaders right now to start taking action.鈥
The Our Children鈥檚 Trust lawsuit is attempting to do just that. Oregon lawyer Julia Olson filed the suit in 2015 on behalf of 21 children, teens, and young adults. In their short lives, they鈥檝e already experienced a half-dozen hurricanes superpowered by warming oceans, two years of destructive West Coast wildfires, record , and many other extreme weather events.
The case alleges that the federal government has knowingly contributed to climate change by issuing mining permits for coal on federal land, for instance, and granting leases for offshore oil and gas exploration. Therefore, the plaintiffs argue, the United States has failed to protect the constitutional rights of its young people.
Vic Barrett, a 19-year-old plaintiff, by supporting fossil fuel development, federal officials have prioritized the 鈥渋nterests of a few over the future stability of generations of young Americans.鈥 The Trump administration , and failed, five times to get the case dismissed. The lawsuit is currently tied up in legal skirmishes and is considered a long-shot by legal experts. Even if it fails, the case is already causing a high-level debate about how the legal system should respond to climate change. A ruling in favor of Barrett and the other plaintiffs, meanwhile, could result in federal courts forcing the government to take aggressive action on lowering greenhouse gas emissions.
Exactly what this aggressive action would entail is unclear. One possibility is something akin to the Green New Deal, a climate plan pushed by Sunrise youth activists that could, invest trillions of dollars into renewable energy and low-carbon infrastructure while creating green jobs.
It鈥檚 also currently the only federal policy vision on the United Nations鈥 warning that global emissions must be halved within 12 years to keep warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius鈥 of the recent U.S. school strikes. 鈥淣ationally that鈥檚 what we鈥檝e agreed on: We all want to support the backing of a Green New Deal,鈥 Parks, the striker from Riverside, says.
That the Green New Deal is on the political agenda at all is due to the activism of teens and millennials. Sunrise activists gained national attention shortly after the November midterm elections by occupiying the Capitol Hill office of House Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA). When newly elected Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) showed up, the protest , and with the 29-year-old鈥檚 support, the idea of the U.S. government intervening in the economy to rapidly shift energy production away from fossil fuels rocketed onto the national stage.
Already, the Green New Deal has inspired a flurry of counter-proposals from both sides of the aisle, all more aggressive than any federal climate policy in a decade. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) is calling for a 鈥渘ew Manhattan Project for clean energy.鈥 Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) a 鈥淕reen Real Deal.鈥 Rep. Paul Tonko (D-NY) is writing his own proposal鈥攁nd these are just the start. 鈥淲e should let a thousand climate proposals bloom,鈥 Tonko .
And that鈥檚 been the point all along: to force politicians to grapple with climate change in a meaningful way, whether through a Green New Deal or another similarly ambitious policy. 鈥淲e鈥檝e shifted the entire terrain,鈥 says Matthew Miles Goodrich, a 25-year-old writer and Sunrise organizer.
The recent explosion of teen climate activism is about more than a single piece of legislation. The movement is bringing stark moral clarity to an issue that has long been defined by the technocratic language of markets, diplomacy, and technology. 鈥淔or climate in particular, young people have the moral authority to say, 鈥榳e are the ones who are going to have to live with the growing crisis, the worst impacts in our communities,鈥欌 says Carina Barnett-Loro, a senior program manager with , a climate advocacy research group founded in 2015.
This moral authority allows young people to call out political and business leaders and be taken seriously. Take Thunberg, the Swedish climate activist, who addressed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland in January. 鈥淪ome people, some companies, some decision-makers, in particular, have known exactly what priceless values they have been sacrificing to continue making unimaginable amounts of money,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I think many of you here today belong to that group of people.鈥
Establishing clear moral principles is only the first step. Young activists will need to figure out how to translate their current momentum and visibility into political organizing and policy while staving off attacks from the fossil fuel industry and its allies (which have been in the U.S. so far).
Parks acknowledges that the political and economic changes necessary to avoid catastrophic climate change are 鈥渘ot going to just start with one day of action.鈥 That鈥檚 why he鈥檚 working with the Sierra Club to pass legislation to in his community, and across California, less deadly to breathe. 鈥淲e have to continue with the same energy,鈥 he says.
Grigsby is looking forward to casting her first vote in the 2020 federal election. With many leading Democratic presidential candidates supporting the Green New Deal, she鈥檒l be working to 鈥済et one of those people elected as president,鈥 she says. She鈥檒l also be helping register Kentucky voters. 鈥淚t鈥檚 making sure we get good turnout so we can get [Senator McConnell] out of office,鈥 she says.
These are daunting goals for anyone, much less for people who haven鈥檛 graduated high school; some can鈥檛 yet drive. But the University of California鈥檚 Stokes believes today鈥檚 teenage climate activists could have a long-lasting influence. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a moral authority that they are just unlocking in a really powerful way,鈥 she says.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think this a one-off; the problem doesn鈥檛 go away tomorrow,鈥 Stokes says. 鈥淭hese kids want to feel like there鈥檚 going to be a future for them.鈥
We鈥檒l be hearing more from them shortly: Teen climate organizers are already planning another massive school walkout for May 3. 鈥淲e strike again,鈥 their website . 鈥淪tay tuned.鈥