Transcribe your podcast
[00:00:04]

Hey, y'all, it's Penn Badgley I'm guest hosting today, I'm crouching underneath a blanket like I'm six years old, hiding from myself. It's a metaphor for how much of the world is dealing with climate change right now.

[00:00:15]

I'm just up here for quiet sound. If you want to learn how to take real lasting climate action like I do, I want to invite you to join Countdown Ten's new global initiative to accelerate solutions to the climate crisis. Now, here's a talk from the countdown global launch event given by mayor of Freetown, Sierra Leone, Yvonne Akis Soyer. To hear more of these ideas and get involved, check out Countdown Dot.com and subscribe to the Countdown podcast wherever you are listening to this.

[00:00:46]

It was December, twenty fifteen a month since the end of the Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone, and I was driving along the Grafton Road on the outskirts of our capital city, Freetown. Driven along that road so many times over the past 18 months. But honestly, I've been so preoccupied. I didn't notice my surroundings. But that afternoon I wasn't distracted and I took it all in. I was shocked. So much of the once lush green forest cover had simply disappeared.

[00:01:22]

I felt physically sick as I parked my car and looked at the barren hills around me. I wasn't just witnessing and mourning the loss of beauty crushing, though that was. I was witnessing and mourning the very real impact of climate change, which is felt in ways both large and small in my city, my country and on my continent. Sierra Leone now regularly experiences extreme weather patterns, particularly abnormally heavy rainfall or delayed rains, both of which can lead to crop failures and in turn fuels the migration of people from rural areas to cities in Freetown, a city of one point two million people.

[00:02:16]

The pressure for housing and the absence of development control has led to the establishment of over 70 informal settlements in the past 20 years. This, combined with the sale of forested land to house builders, has resulted in the deforestation which came into sharp focus for me that afternoon. Less than two years later in August, twenty seventeen, a massive landslide near that area led to the loss of about a thousand lives in less than five minutes. This is not an abstract crisis.

[00:02:56]

The loss of our forests is not just about the loss of some shade. It's about the loss of our ability to live. Wanting to do something about this was one of the factors that led to my decision to run for mayor of Freetown, a position that held since twenty eighteen. And one of my favorite initiatives is to make Freetown a tree town once again. Our goal to increase vegetation cover by 50 percent in Freetown by the end of my term in twenty twenty two.

[00:03:35]

That means we will plant a million trees within the next two years and we start by planting the first five hundred thousand seedlings this rainy season. For this to work, we need to involve everyone. We need to make our city collectively proud of what we can do together to protect ourselves and our homes. For nearly a year now, 15 different species of trees have been nursed on 11 sites across the city. And now each tree will be planted in a home, a school, an office, a public space on a hillside or in a mangrove by a tree steward.

[00:04:25]

Anyone in Freetown can opt to be a tree steward, and the growth of the trees will be tracked by our community base. Growing teams using our custom made tree tracker app. This isn't just about planting trees, it's about growing trees, and it's about ensuring that each one of us is part of the process. A million trees will not fix climate change. But they will reduce the risk of landslides and flooding and they will reintroduce biodiversity, I've already seen the butterflies back in the park and they will protect our water catchments.

[00:05:10]

A million trees is our city's small contribution to increasing the much needed global carbon sink. Perhaps you should plant some trees to. Thank you. PR ex.