Licypriya Kangujam

Licypriya Kangujam, born 2 October 2011) is a child environmental activist from India. One of the youngest climate activists globally, she addressed world leaders at the 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Madrid, Spain, asking them to take immediate climate action. Licypriya has been campaigning for climate action in India since 2018, to pass new laws to curb India's high pollution levels, and to make climate-change literacy mandatory in schools. She has been regarded as India's Greta Thunberg, though she does not like the usage of this term.

Quotes

 * Finally I met my mentor Nobel Laureate & the next President of East Timor 🇹🇱 Sir Jose Ramos today. He will be taking oath (President's Inauguration) tomorrow. Despite his busy schedule, he personally came down to meet me in my hotel. I'm deeply touched by his gesture &humbleness.
 * Indian climate activist, 10, invited to East Timor inauguration ALJazeera (19 May 2022)
 * Usually at such big events, only foreign presidents and prime ministers are invited as special guests. I feel this invitation is very special and has a great message on how small island countries like East Timor are threatened by climate change,
 * Indian climate activist, 10, invited to East Timor inauguration ALJazeera (19 May 2022)
 * “The inclusion of climate activists in every field and decision-making process is quite important.
 * Indian climate activist, 10, invited to East Timor inauguration ALJazeera (19 May 2022)
 * I will listen to their stories and will also tell the world about the problems they are facing. We will talk about long-term peace and development and how we can fight climate change together,
 * Indian climate activist, 10, invited to East Timor inauguration ALJazeera (19 May 2022)
 * My voice will represent the unheard voices of the millions of people of the world and also for the countless, voiceless animals.Licypriya.jpg
 * Indian climate activist, 10, invited to East Timor inauguration ALJazeera (19 May 2022)
 * I was born in a small village of Manipur in North East India surrounded by lush green mountains and an alluring atmosphere. I never realized what I’m doing is activism until 2018 when people started calling me a climate activist. In 2016, I came to Delhi for the first time for my schooling, but my life became very messy due to the high air pollution level. Later, I moved to Bhubaneswar, Odisha, in the same year for my schooling. Again my home in Odisha was hit by Cyclone Titli in 2018 and Cyclone Fani in 2019. These incidences in my life turned me into an outspoken child that talks about the impact of climate change to our leaders when they failed to act on it.
 * Survival for the Future: Interview with Climate Activist Licypriya Kangujam Harvard International Review (7 December 2020)
 * Indigenous people are playing a crucial role in protecting our planet. We are not on  front covers, but we are the first line of defenders. Due to rising violence against Indigenous communities around the world, it’s an alarming situation for all of us along with the bigger challenges of protecting our forests and the environment. Even in my home state, the government has given licenses to big foreign companies based in the Netherlands to exploit our indigenous forest for oil exploration while local people are opposing it. Many Indigenous activists are in jail or are even murdered in several places across the world. Denial of the climate crisis by our leaders increases the threat to us. As both the climate movement and Indigenous rights movement are fighting for the common cause, it’s time to come together to strengthen our movement with one common voice to protect our rights and to defend the defenders. We are interconnected and interdependent. The climate movement will fail without indigenous people.
 * Survival for the Future: Interview with Climate Activist Licypriya Kangujam Harvard International Review (7 December 2020)
 * Climate change has no border. India is also equally responsible for the global carbon emissions. Developed nations should invest more for a green economy as compared to developing ones, but India can lead and be a role model in fighting the climate crisis because we have full potential to do so. Besides the EU and the United States, two of the highest global carbon emitters like China and India are two giant neighboring countries and they’re not doing enough. They are still giving huge subsidies to fossil fuel companies, which are responsible for massive carbon and greenhouse gases emissions globally.
 * Survival for the Future: Interview with Climate Activist Licypriya Kangujam Harvard International Review (7 December 2020)
 * Climate education is very important if we really would like to fight the climate crisis. Adults are not doing enough already, and I don’t have much faith in them to come to the frontline and save our planet and future. The last hope is children. If we include climate education in schools, then we can fight climate change from the grassroots. It will help to educate adults and our leaders via their children and grandchildren, so that we altogether can support each other to save our environment and our planet. This also increases environmental consciousness among the people in addition to a love and respect for nature. I am even preparing to go to court to direct the government to include it as mandatory in all national curriculums of various school boards. I trust it will be a very successful mission.
 * Survival for the Future: Interview with Climate Activist Licypriya Kangujam Harvard International Review (7 December 2020)
 * Our leaders need political willpower to cut down emissions and become a net-zero, carbon-neutral country by 2035 or 2050. I understand developing countries have a bigger challenge. India also is a big country with a large population; our government faces a lot of challenges to set a deadline to achieve global commitments, but we need to increase the speed. I’m very much optimistic that if developed countries stand together with those developing countries, we can easily achieve the Paris Climate Agreement before the deadline. The biggest problem is that our leaders don’t trust each other. If they trust each other, we can easily fight the global climate crisis with a concrete action plan.
 * Survival for the Future: Interview with Climate Activist Licypriya Kangujam Harvard International Review (7 December 2020)
 * "Your action today will decide our future tomorrow. We are already the victim of climate change. I don’t want my future generations to face the same consequences again. Sacrificing the lives of the millions of innocent children for the failures of our leaders is unacceptable at any cost…After thinking many times, I decided to do this protest. Even my mom tried to stop me but I convinced her that ‘Everything will be alright.’ I am taking the risks of my life because I want to save our Planet and our Future. My voice deserve to be heard by the world. Let's stand together by uniting, instead of dividing.”
 * 12-year-old Indian activist Licypriya Kangujam interrupts COP28 stage in Dubai YohooǃNews (December 13, 2023)
 * This will bring transparency and accountability to our leaders. This will benefit people, especially millions of poor people in the country,
 * Meet the 8-Year-Old Climate Activist Cleaning Up India Global Citizens (April 30,2020)
 * I’m pressuring the government to ensure the health of every child in India. I will continue to put more pressure on our world leaders," Kangujam said. "The future is the children. The world needs to make a better planet for us. Our leaders need to act now before it’s too late."
 * Meet the 8-Year-Old Climate Activist Cleaning Up India Global Citizens (April 30,2020)
 * I have come here to tell world leaders that this is the time to act, and it is a real climate emergency,” she began confidently. “When I was born, our leaders had already met 16 times in the COP and already knew about the bad effects of climate change.... So why should I come here, why should I speak here? I have to go back to my school, I have to play, I have to study….”
 * Indian 8-year-old challenges world leaders to act on climate change at COP25 in Madrid The Hindu (December 11, 2019)