Africa: Five Climate Trailblazers – UNEP’s 2025 Champions of the Earth

Africa: Five Climate Trailblazers – UNEP’s 2025 Champions of the Earth


Global temperatures are projected to surpass 1.5°C (2.7°F) within the next decade, underscoring the urgency of the climate crisis.

As the world moves to slow climate change and create a more sustainable future, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) named five new climate visionaries on Wednesday as its 2025 Champions of the Earth — the UN’s highest environmental honour.

These five extraordinary leaders, who work on issues ranging from climate justice to sustainable cooling and forest protection, show that bold action can drive real change for people and planet.


Follow us on WhatsApp | LinkedIn for the latest headlines

“As the global impacts of the climate crisis intensify, innovation and leadership across every sector of society have never been more essential,” said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP.

“Young students demanding climate justice, subnational governments and architects leading on sustainable cooling and smart building design, research institutes slowing deforestation – and passionate individuals driving methane emissions reductions – this year’s Champions of the Earth show the kind of leadership that will inspire the world to face down the challenge of climate change.”

This year, the laureates are tackling some of the most urgent challenges of our time: climate justice, methane emissions, sustainable cooling, resilient buildings, and forest conversation, according to the UN’s environment agency.

UNEP’s 2025 Champions of the Earth are:

Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change – Policy Leadership

When Cynthia Houniuhi addressed the International Court of Justice in The Hague a year ago, she spoke plainly: climate change is devastating Pacific Island nations like her home, the Solomon Islands.

Through her youth-led NGO, which secured a landmark International Court of Justice (ICJ) opinion affirming states’ legal duties to prevent climate harm and uphold human rights, she is helping to reshape global climate law and empower vulnerable nations.

Supriya Sahu, Additional Chief Secretary, Government of Tamil Nadu – Inspiration and Action

Indian environmentalist Ms. Sahu is redefining how communities adapt to extreme heat – restoring nature to cool cities, redesigning schools for safety, and promoting climate-smart infrastructure.

Her sustainable cooling and restoration initiatives have created 2.5 million green jobs, expanded forest cover, and improved resilience for 12 million people.

Mariam Issoufou, Principal and Founder, Mariam Issoufou Architects, Niger/France – Entrepreneurial Vision