I grew up with little food and without electricity near a
national park in Southeast Asia after a devastating war. From time to
time, the men in my village hunted wild animals like hogs, deer, and
porcupines to get some meat for the children. The forests quickly became
thinner as the local population grew fast. I had a typical third-world
childhood. The first time electricity, although intermittent and
expensive, came was in 1987, allowing us to enjoy the FIFA World Cup,
store food in fridges, read books in the evenings and sleep under a fan.
Some gold was found, shaking up the whole quiet town with its usual
environmental and social problems for a while. A third of my female
friends married quickly before finishing high school.
Life gave
me an opportunity to pursue university education abroad. When I arrived
in the West, I eagerly embraced what I thought was free and independent
media that constantly stuffed people with climate change problems and
the doom of earth and humanity. Little did I know about scientific
debates around the subject. I chose to study international public law
and environmental law at a well-known European center. I love justice as
much as forests and trees, and I even became an amateur mushroom hunter
in temperate climates.
It took me a long time to question the
official climate narrative. After graduation, I was busy with successive
jobs outside the environmental law field and founding a young family.
That experience in international forums and private philanthropy later
helped me understand how international conventions and consensuses were
influenced and reached....<<<Read More>>>...