Photo by Nycholas Benaia on Unsplash

Ease Rating: Ambitious

Carbon Emission Savings: N/A

Impact Rating (0-5): Impact = 0 (least) - 5 (most). This is a combination of a calculated scale and expert judgment in the absence of scientific data that directly quantifies the impact of a particular action.

5 - ~80% target progress (2,000+ kg CO2e)
4 - ~60% (1,000 - 2,000 kg CO2e)
3 - ~20% (500 - 1,000 kg CO2e)
2 - ~10% (100 - 500 kg CO2e)
1 - <10% (<100 kg CO2e)
0 - <1% (<30 kg CO2e)
5

No. of People Influenced Beyond You: thousands of people.

Amount of Savings: n/a

Resilience Benefit: Will this action help the user avoid, reduce, or recover from the impacts of (climate-driven) disasters, and, in some cases, enable the user to help others (e.g., in a family or community)?
no

Impacts: 🏛️ System Change

Categories: Family & Community



Description

Talk about it! One of the most impactful things we can all do in response to the climate emergency is talk about it.

While it is certainly good to talk casually to those you are with regularly, it is also great to give a formal, public talk. Local libraries, community centers, places of worship, schools, temples, workplaces, and many other venues would love to host your talk. The public is now hungry for knowledge. You can start the discussion.



Tips

• Get some inspiration from watching others talk about the topic. Just remember, everyone brings their own voice, so figure out what feels authentic to you.
• If slide presentations are your thing, great climate slide decks are easier than ever to find online.
• Consider speaking from different roles. For example, you can present some science, and then explain how it makes you feel (speaking as a human!) and then discuss some solutions (speaking as a citizen!). Climate science is not just for climate scientists anymore. It is your planet, too.
• Allocate half the time for your talk, and half the time for discussion with the audience.
• Q&A can be intimidating for inexperienced speakers. It is OK to say "That is a great question, but I do not know!" or "That is a great question, what do the rest of you think?" After a few talks you will realize Q&A is not scary, but is instead the most fun part of the evening.
• Bring your unique angle to your talk — whatever that is for you.
• Connecting with local climate action groups can help you prepare for a presentation. For example, the Climate Reality Project holds conferences globally that help people learn more about the climate emergency and prepare to give presentations. They have slides that you can use to craft your own presentation.
• Above all, express whatever it is that climate breakdown has you feeling. Do not suppress, express!

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