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'Fall back in love with nature': A climate forum's call to lead with heart

Climate panel at the 2025 Right Here, Right Now plenary session in 51传媒

Left to right: Graduate student听Naia Zulueta, moderator and journalist Lakshmi Singh, Sheila Watt-Cloutier, graduate student听John Ecklu and Professor听Amanda Carrico. Photos by Casey Cass/CU 51传媒.

When asked what she would do if every government around the world became aligned on climate action, with unlimited resources for one year,听Sheila Watt-Cloutier, longtime advocate for the rights of the Arctic鈥檚 Inuit peoples and Indigenous groups worldwide, didn鈥檛 hesitate.听

鈥淚 would continue doing what I鈥檝e been doing for 30 years but in much more of a full force,鈥 said Watt-Cloutier. 鈥淚 would build a team and get the younger generation mobilized in bigger ways than we have. They're the ones who have given me a lot of inspiration, and they're fighting for their future.鈥 听

Watt-Cloutier delivered a powerful plenary keynote Thursday in 51传媒. She was also a featured speaker at the inaugural Right Here, Right Now Global Climate Summit held at CU 51传媒 in 2022.听

The day鈥檚 conversation centered on climate change鈥檚 disproportionate burden on women, youth, Indigenous people and communities who are historically unseen鈥攁nd the need to ensure solutions focus on those most affected. NPR Newscaster Lakshmi Singh moderated the discussions.听

Watt-Cloutier said she believes that educating people about the human impacts of climate change can bring the world together, even in times of political uncertainty and conflict.听

鈥淲e're all in this together as a common humanity,鈥 Watt-Cloutier said.听

Joined by three other members of the CU 51传媒 community, including environmental studies professor听Amanda Carrico, environmental human rights graduate student听Naia Zulueta and environmental engineering graduate student听John Ecklu, Watt-Cloutier and the group outlined three ideas to guide the work toward climate solutions.听

鈥淒o things that bring you back to nature, and you will start to protect what you love.鈥澨

Turn research data into tools for change

Around the world, about 3.6 billion people are living in areas highly susceptible to climate change. Despite contributing minimally to global emissions, those in low-income and marginalized communities bear most of the impact. 听

A persistent problem is the lack of data for these communities. Zulueta noted that over a third of countries worldwide still lack routine indoor air quality monitoring.听

鈥淣o data means no visibility, and no visibility means no accountability,鈥 she said.

At the same time, the panelists emphasized that the world has enough data to understand the scale of the climate crisis and to mobilize action. An important step is making that information accessible and actionable.

Ecklu at CU 51传媒鈥檚听Mortenson Center in Global Engineering & Resilience has been working on water well monitoring in Kenya. Prolonged droughts have forced local people to rely heavily on deep water wells called boreholes. But frequent breakdowns in Kenya鈥檚 boreholes are severely threatening water access for the communities.听

To address the issue, Ecklu and team installed sensors that can detect signs of borehole failure and alert local engineers before wells completely collapse.听

鈥淲e need to be more intentional about how the data we are collecting can better serve local communities,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ccessible data is helping communities become more resilient.鈥澨 听

Put a human face to the issues听

But statistics alone are not enough. More than once during the event, the group returned to the idea that reframing climate change as a human rights issue is essential.听

鈥淲e can no longer just think our way through these issues of climate change,鈥 Watt-Cloutier said. 鈥淲e have to feel our way through, and we've got to connect as a common humanity.鈥 听

Sheila Watt-Cloutier gives keynote remarks

Sheila Watt-Cloutier gives keynote remarks at the 2025 Right Here, Right Now Global Climate Summit plenary event in 51传媒.

She described how melting Arctic sea ice isn鈥檛 just an environmental loss. It鈥檚 the disappearance of an entire way of life for Indigenous communities. 鈥淭he ice is our life force. It鈥檚 our highway that brings us out to the supermarkets. It鈥檚 our organic farms, which bring us highly nutritious food we need.鈥澨

For Watt-Cloutier, one solution is leadership rooted not in anger and force but in empathy and connection.听

鈥淲e can never underestimate the impact when we take a big action toward something that we feel is so important to us. Don鈥檛 let the politics of things stop us,鈥 she added.听

She will be speaking more about conscious leadership in her upcoming podcast,听.

Embrace nature-based solutions

Finally, speakers urged a shift away from carbon-heavy, industrial responses to climate change to solutions from听nature. 听

Ecklu highlighted a Colorado-based example along the Yampa River, where restoring wetlands is helping to filter water runoff from nearby farms before it reaches the river. Nature-based solutions like this improve water quality while supporting biodiversity and ecological health.听

Watt-Cloutier echoed the importance of reconnecting with nature, which holds the wisdom needed to sustain it.听

鈥淚n the Arctic, we just absolutely love our land, and Indigenous peoples around the world are the same. We love nature because of what it gives us, and the love allows us to be stronger in our fight to defend our way of life,鈥 she said.

She urged city dwellers to rediscover that bond.听

鈥淒o things that bring you back to nature, and you will start to protect what you love.鈥澨