Seeds of Renewal

Seeds of Renewal: How Young People Are Restoring Our Earth, One Community at a Time

Across the world, young people are rising like green shoots after a spring rain—driven by passion, purpose, and a deep understanding that the health of our ecosystems is inseparable from the well-being of their communities. In Saskatoon and São Paulo, Nairobi and Nunavut, youth are not just dreaming of a better future—they are actively restoring it, with hands in the soil, eyes on justice, and hearts aligned with both tradition and innovation.

Thu, May 22, 2025 International Day for Biological Diversity the theme “Harmony with nature and sustainable development”

Local Roots, Global Vision

Young people are uniquely equipped to lead locally driven restoration efforts because they often inherit intimate knowledge of place. In many cases, they are the ones returning to ancestral practices of stewardship, listening to Elders, and blending traditional ecological knowledge with modern science. Whether it’s planting native trees in an urban prairie, rewilding schoolyards, or rehabilitating wetlands once used for stormwater runoff, youth understand that real change starts where they live—and that respecting nature, culture, and community needs is not optional but essential.

They see that restoration isn’t just ecological—it’s cultural renewal, too. It means making space for Indigenous land practices, for community-led decision-making, for equity in environmental care. When youth lead, they often bring everyone to the table.

What’s Driving Ecosystem Degradation?

Despite this energy and hope, we face deep-rooted challenges. The root causes of ecosystem degradation are interwoven and complex, but five key drivers stand out:

  1. Unsustainable Land Use – Clearcutting forests, draining wetlands, overgrazing grasslands, and sprawling urbanization break ecological processes and fragment habitats.
  2. Pollution – Industrial, agricultural, and plastic pollution choke soils, poison water, and unbalance microbial life critical to ecosystem health.
  3. Climate Change – Rising temperatures, altered precipitation, and extreme weather stress ecosystems already weakened by other pressures.
  4. Loss of Biodiversity – The disappearance of keystone species unravels entire ecological webs.
  5. Economic and Policy Failures – Short-term profits and weak environmental governance often override the long-term health of ecosystems.

The Solutions: Education, Technology, and Policy

To reverse degradation, we must deploy the tools of the present and the wisdom of the past.

  • Education gives rise to ecological literacy. When students learn how watersheds function, how prairie roots hold carbon, or why native bees matter, they grow into informed stewards.
  • Technology, from AI-powered mapping of invasive species to low-cost soil sensors and citizen science platforms like iNaturalist, empowers young people to monitor, measure, and act with precision and scale.
  • Policy plays the vital role of institutionalizing change. Youth climate activists are demanding—and drafting—policies that protect natural areas, fund restoration projects, and ensure that environmental justice is enshrined in law.

Toward Regeneration

The path forward must be regenerative. It must involve co-creation, where youth work alongside scientists, city planners, farmers, and traditional knowledge holders. It must invest in green jobs that allow youth to restore ecosystems while building livelihoods. And it must acknowledge that healing the Earth is inseparable from healing our relationships with one another.

On this path, young people are not waiting to be invited. They are already leading.

As one youth environmentalist recently said, “We are not just planting trees. We are planting futures.”

UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration. Take the Pledge.

Preventing, Halting and Reversing Loss of Nature

Using Nature as a Classroom

Giving our Environment a Voice!

Engaging the youth of today to protect the planet of tomorrow!

This International Day for Biological Diversity, May 22, 2025, has the theme “Harmony with nature and sustainable development”

IUCN Ecosystem Restoration Webinars

Where Have All the Birds Gone and What Can We Do to Help?

Buzz and Bloom: Celebrating Pollinators, Native Plants, and Community Action in Saskatoon

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

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Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

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Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

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Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”

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