New face emerges as vocal powerhouse of global youth movement: 'As we grow, so does our impact'
As Forbes reported, Ocaña leads youth in 178 countries and participates in United Nations Climate Change Conferences to share his message.
Through the organization, he is working to create a world of youth-led innovation and intergenerational collaboration to address climate issues. The coalition's work involves training, campaigning, creating digital content, and representing young people at major climate negotiations.
Ocaña, based in Hong Kong, launched a training program with the University of Oxford, and it has received 20,000 applicants in the past. The coalition focuses on climate, energy, and climate finance.
Ocaña's coalition has sent delegates to annual United Nations conferences to ensure youth voices are heard. This year, it will send delegates to the conference via ship across the Atlantic Ocean, from Portugal to Brazil.
Meanwhile, Ocaña was appointed chair of The Earth Prize 2025 Adjudicating Panel and is collaborating with Asia Pacific Tennis to further its sustainability work in youth sports.
Ocaña's efforts stand out because of their widespread reach, multifaceted approach, and prominence.
In addition to the work already highlighted, Ocaña is collaborating with Reforesting4Peace, an ecosystem regeneration program. The core of his coalition's mission is an initiative called the Avocado Framework, which works to hold stakeholders accountable for actions through nature-based solutions, clean energy, and youth empowerment.
Since first coming together around shared sustainability goals in 2022, Ocaña's Global Youth Coalition now involves more than 12,000 young leaders. However, he says that with additional funding, they could empower many more youths.
Do you worry about air pollution in and around your home?
Yes — always
Yes — often
Yes — sometimes
No — never
Click your choice to see results and speak your mind.
To help these and other young leaders, consider donating to climate causes. Taking local climate action requires significant passion and support from those who care about the future of our planet.
You can get directly involved with the Global Youth Coalition by becoming a member or a Patreon.
Since young people will inherit our steadily overheating planet, youth voices must be considered in policy changes and the promotion of sustainable practices.
"We equip the next generation with the tools, knowledge, and network to lead the fight against climate change," Ocaña said to Forbes. "As we grow, so does our impact, proving that the youth are not just the leaders of tomorrow, we are leading today."
Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
6 hours ago
- Forbes
Samsung Makes New 5 Year Credit Offer To Galaxy Z Fold 7 Buyers
The Galaxy Z Fold 7 can be bought through Samsung's new trade-in scheme. Samsung Samsung wants to capitalize on its trade-in pricing supremacy with a standalone trade-in program that isn't directly linked to buying a new phone. But how do these static valuations compare to Samsung's recent deals? This story was updated on July 27th with new U.S. trade-in pricing. The new U.K.-based scheme is fairly straightforward. If you want to trade in your phone (it will only accept Galaxy S and Galaxy Z models at this time) without buying a new handset, you can do it through this portal. Samsung will then gift you store credit that lasts for up to five years and be used to buy anything Samsung sells. Forbes Samsung Makes $963 Offer To Galaxy Z Fold 7 Buyers By Janhoi McGregor There is also an option to trade-in and instantly buy a new device. Samsung will accept more brands through this route, including Xiaomi, Realme, Oppo, Sony, and other devices it doesn't normally accept. Typically, when trading-in to buy a new phone, Samsung will group any handsets not made by Apple, Google, or itself under a single 'any other Android' category, which comes with a single price, so this is a clear change of strategy. While we're on price, Samsung's valuations fall short of previous deals if you're swapping in a Samsung phone. The news is much better for Apple handsets, though. More on that shortly. For now, here's a selection of what the new trade-in scheme is offering for 512GB used phones. Forbes A New Samsung Galaxy S26 Design Upgrade Makes Perfect Sense By Janhoi McGregor Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 - £665 ($893.49) (up to £735 for the 1TB model) Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra - £453 ($608.65) Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 - £402 ($540.13) Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra - £340 ($456.82) Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra - £216 ($290.22) Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra - £181 ($243.19) Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max - £615 ($826.31) Apple iPhone 14 Pro Max - £455 ($611.34) Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max - £335 ($450.11) Google Pixel Fold - £290 ($389.64) Google Pixel 8 Pro - £256 ($343.96) Pixel 7 Pro - £110 ($147.80) The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7 smartphone is displayed at a Samsung store in Seoul on July 10, 2025. ... More Samsung unveiled on July 9, the new generation of its foldable smartphone, the Z Fold7, dramatically slimmed down in an attempt to jumpstart this still-niche market. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP) (Photo by JUNG YEON-JE/AFP via Getty Images) AFP via Getty Images In a promotion last month, Samsung U.K. suddenly raised trade-in prices that competed with Samsung U.S. valuations. For the unaware, U.K. and European trade-in pricing has historically been poor. Instead, the Korean company prefers to bundle free hardware in its British promotions, like a free tablet, earbuds, or a chromebook. That changed in June with an offer that raised trade-in prices to the highest I have ever seen them on this side of the pond. Here's a selection of those prices up against Samsung's new trade-in scheme. Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra June price: £581 ($784.06), new scheme price: £453 ($608.65) Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra June price: £449 ($449.39), new scheme price: £340 ($456.82) Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max, June price: £230 ($310.39), new scheme price: £335 ($450.11) Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max, June price: £500 ($674.75), new scheme price: £615 ($826.31) As you can see, the new scheme won't pay as much for some Samsung handsets, but it will pay more (than the last major promotion) for Apple phones. The new scheme's pricing also appears to be based on the current pre-order deal for the Galaxy Z Fold 7, which makes me wonder if Samsung's valuations—for this scheme—will change based on whatever offer the company is running that day. If they broadly stay as they are, this is a solid good option for people looking to lock in a decent trade-in price to use later (as store credit). That's important because these valuations do change as the phones age and lose software support, which was the case with the Galaxy S20 Ultra earlier this year. But always check if Samsung is running a promotion on its site, or the Samsung Shop app, because there's a decent chance you will find a better price for your used phone. July 27th update: Galaxy Z Fold 7 buyers in the U.S. haven't been ignored when it comes to trade-in discounts. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 pre-order period is over, but Samsung still has inflated trade-in prices on its site. There are some solid prices here for older phones that rival some of the better promotions we have seen from the Korean company. Here are a couple of realistic trade-in options. Galaxy Z Fold 5 - $900 Galaxy S24 Ultra - 800 Galaxy Note 20 Ultra - $600 Galaxy S22 Ultra - $500 Galaxy S21 Ultra - $400 Clearly, the best price here is $600 for the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra, which was released five years ago in 2020. You can buy a Note 20 Ultra on eBay for far less than this—in some cases for under $200—if you don't have anything to trade-in and want that discount. Samsung wants you to handover a Galaxy phone because the trade-in prices for Apple handsets, and other Android devices, are nothing to write home about. For example, a realistic Apple trade-in, such as the iPhone 13 Pro Max, is priced at $300. Depending on the condition, you could get slightly more than that on the secondary market. Google Pixel phones are poorly priced, too. With exceptions of the Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro Fold ($600), numbers dramatically dip with the Pixel 8 Pro ($250) and crater with the Pixel 7 Pro ($150).


Forbes
18 hours ago
- Forbes
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Clues And Answers For Sunday, July 27th
Looking for help with today's NYT Mini Crossword puzzle? Here are some hints and answers for the ... More puzzle. In case you missed Saturday's NYT Mini Crossword puzzle, you can find the answers here: Another day, another Mini Crossword to solve! Saturday's is always the biggest and most daunting crossword of the week, but oddly enough the New York Times releases the Sunday crossword on Saturday afternoon, giving puzzle-solvers even less time to solve the most challenging one. It's peculiar, but here we are. Ours is not to wonder why. Ours is to solve puzzles. Let's knock out today's Mini! The NYT Mini is a smaller, quicker, more digestible, bite-sized version of the larger and more challenging NYT Crossword, and unlike its larger sibling, it's free-to-play without a subscription to The New York Times. You can play it on the web or the app, though you'll need the app to tackle the archive. Spoilers ahead! FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™ Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase Pinpoint By Linkedin Guess The Category Queens By Linkedin Crown Each Region Crossclimb By Linkedin Unlock A Trivia Ladder Before we get to the answers, here's the first letter for each word in today's Mini. Across 1A. In addition – A 5A. Psithurism, n. 'The sound of ___ rustling through the trees' – W 6A. Like scones and stoners – B 7A. Retail chain with an average store size of 300,000 square feet – I 8A. Work station – D Down 1D. Up – A 2D. Social media currency – L 3D. Tiptoe around – S 4D. Like 2025, but not 2026 – O 6D. Contractor's offer – B Okay, onto the answers! Remember, spoilers ahead! Across 1A. In addition – ALSO 5A. Psithurism, n. 'The sound of ___ rustling through the trees' – WIND 6A. Like scones and stoners – BAKED 7A. Retail chain with an average store size of 300,000 square feet – IKEA 8A. Work station – DESK Down 1D. Up – AWAKE 2D. Social media currency – LIKES 3D. Tiptoe around – SKIRT 4D. Like 2025, but not 2026 – ODD 6D. Contractor's offer – BID Today's Mini Crossword I almost used PLUS for 1-Across, which would have been unfortunate since the 'L' might have thrown me off later, given it's the same in both words. But I changed course and went with ALSO, and that really set me on the right path. 2-Across was clearly WIND and then I knocked out 1-Down (yes, 'up' and AWAKE are the same in the right context) and 2-Down (LIKES are certainly the dreadful currency of social media) and three and four Down before knocking out DESK and IKEA and finally BAKED, for stoners eating scones. This went quick, and I had it wrapped in 1:03 today. How did you do? Let me know on Twitter, Instagram or Facebook. If you also play Wordle, I write guides about that as well. You can find those and all my TV guides, reviews and much more here on my blog. Thanks for reading!


USA Today
21 hours ago
- USA Today
Trump's golf trip to Scotland reopens old wounds for some of his neighbors
BALMEDIE, Scotland − Long before talk of hush-money payments, election subversion or mishandling classified documents, before his executive orders were the subject of U.S. Supreme Court challenges, before he was the 45th and then the 47th president: on a wild and windswept stretch of beach in northeast Scotland, Donald Trump the businessman was accused of being a bad neighbor. "This place will never, ever belong to Trump," Michael Forbes, 73, a retired quarry worker and salmon fisherman, said this week as he took a break from fixing a roof on his farm near Aberdeen. The land he owns is surrounded, though disguised in places by trees and hedges, by a golf resort owned by Trump's family business in Scotland, Trump International Scotland. For nearly 20 years, Forbes and several other families who live in Balmedie have resisted what they describe as bullying efforts by Trump to buy their land. (He has denied the allegations.) They and others also say he's failed to deliver on his promises to bring thousands of jobs to the area. Those old wounds are being reopened as Trump returns to Scotland for a four-day visit beginning July 25. It's the country where his mother was born. He appears to have great affection for it. Trump is visiting his golf resorts at Turnberry, on the west coast about 50 miles from Glasgow, and at Balmedie, where Forbes' 23 acres of jumbled, tractor-strewn land, which he shares with roaming chickens and three Highland cows, abut Trump's glossy and manicured golf resort. On July 28, Trump will briefly meet in Balmedie with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer to "refine" a recent U.S.-U.K. trade deal, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said. Golf, a little diplomacy: Trump heads to Scotland In Scotland, where estimates from the National Library of Scotland suggest that as many as 34 out of the 45 American presidents have Scottish ancestry, opinions hew toward the he's-ill-suited-for-the-job, according to surveys. "Trump? He just doesn't know how to treat people," said Forbes, who refuses to sell. What Trump's teed up in Scotland Part of the Balmedie community's grievances relate to Trump's failure to deliver on his promises. According to planning documents, public accounts and his own statements, Trump promised, beginning in 2006, to inject $1.5 billion into his golf project six miles north of Aberdeen. He has spent about $120 million. Approval for the development, he vowed, came with more than 1,000 permanent jobs and 5,000 construction gigs attached. Instead, there were 84, meaning fewer than the 100 jobs that already existed when the land he bought was a shooting range. Instead of a 450-room luxury hotel and hundreds of homes that Trump pledged to build for the broader community, there is a 19-room boutique hotel and a small clubhouse with a restaurant and shop that sells Trump-branded whisky, leather hip flasks and golf paraphernalia. Financial filings show that his course on the Menie Estate in Balmedie lost $1.9 million in 2023 − its 11th consecutive financial loss since he acquired the 1,400-acre grounds in 2006. Residents who live and work near the course say that most days, even in the height of summer, the fairway appears to be less than half full. Representatives for Trump International say the plan all along has been to gradually phase in the development at Balmedie and that it is not realistic or fair to expect everything to be built overnight. There's also support for Trump from some residents who live nearby, and in the wider Aberdeen business community. One Balmedie resident who lives in the shadow of Trump's course said that before Trump the area was nothing but featureless sand dunes and that his development, carved between those dunes, made the entire landscape look more attractive. Fergus Mutch, a policy advisor for the Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce, said Trump's golf resort has become a "key bit of the tourism offer" that attracts "significant spenders" to a region gripped by economic turmoil, steep job cuts and a prolonged downturn in its North Sea oil and gas industry. Trump in Scotland: Liked or loathed? Still, recent surveys show that 70% of Scots hold an unfavorable opinion of Trump. Despite his familial ties and deepening investments in Scotland, Trump is more unpopular among Scots than with the British public overall, according to an Ipsos survey from March. It shows 57% of people in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland don't view Trump positively. King Charles invites Trump: American president snags another UK state visit While in Balmedie this time, Trump will open a new 18-hole golf course on his property dedicated to his mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, who was a native of Lewis, in Scotland's Western Isles. He is likely to be met with a wave of protests around the resort, as well as the one in Turnberry. The Stop Trump Coalition, a group of campaigners who oppose most of Trump's domestic and foreign policies and the way he conducts his private and business affairs, is organizing a protest in Aberdeen and outside the U.S. consulate in Edinburgh. During Trump's initial visit to Scotland as president, in his first term, thousands of protesters sought to disrupt his visit, lining key routes and booing him. One protester even flew a powered paraglider into the restricted airspace over his Turnberry resort that bore a banner that read, "Trump: well below par #resist." 'Terrific guy': The Trump-Epstein party boy friendship lasted a decade, ended badly Trump's course in Turnberry has triggered less uproar than his Balmedie one because locals say that he's invested millions of dollars to restore the glamour of its 101-year-old hotel and three golf courses after he bought the site in 2014. Trump versus the families Three families still live directly on or adjacent to Trump's Balmedie golf resort. They say that long before the world had any clue about what type of president a billionaire New York real estate mogul and reality-TV star would become, they had a pretty good idea. Forbes is one of them. He said that shortly after Trump first tried to persuade him and his late wife to sell him their farm, workers he hired deliberately sabotaged an underground water pipe that left the Forbes – and his mother, then in her 90s, lived in her own nearby house – without clean drinking water for five years. Trump International declined to provide a fresh comment on those allegations, but a spokesperson previously told USA TODAY it "vigorously refutes" them. It said that when workers unintentionally disrupted a pipe that ran into an "antiquated" makeshift "well" jointly owned by the Forbeses on Trump's land, it was repaired immediately. Trump has previously called Forbes a "disgrace" who "lives like a pig." 'I don't have a big enough flagpole' David Milne, 61, another of Trump's seething Balmedie neighbors, lives in a converted coast guard station with views overlooking Trump's course and of the dunes and the North Sea beyond. In 2009, Trump offered him and his wife about $260,000 for his house and its one-fifth acre of land, Milne said. Trump was caught on camera saying he wanted to remove it because it was "ugly." Trump, he said, "threw in some jewelry," a golf club membership (Milne doesn't play), use of a spa (not yet built) and the right to buy, at cost, a house in a related development (not yet constructed). Milne valued the offer at about half the market rate. When Milne refused that offer, he said that landscapers working for Trump partially blocked the views from his house by planting a row of trees and sent Milne a $3,500 bill for a fence they'd built around his garden. Milne refused to pay. Over the years, Milne has pushed back. He flew a Mexican flag at his house for most of 2016, after Trump vowed to build a wall on the southern American border and make Mexico pay for it. Milne, a health and safety consultant in the energy industry, has hosted scores of journalists and TV crews at his home, where he has patiently explained the pros and cons − mostly cons, in his view, notwithstanding his own personal stake in the matter − of Trump's development for the local area. Milne said that because of his public feud with Trump, he's a little worried a freelance MAGA supporter could target him or his home. He has asked police to provide protection for him and his wife at his home while Trump is in the area. He also said he won't be flying any flags this time, apart from the Saltire, Scotland's national flag. "I don't have a big enough flagpole. I would need one from Mexico, Canada, Palestine. I would need Greenland, Denmark − you name it," he said, running through some of the places toward which Trump has adopted what critics view as aggressive and adversarial policies. Dunes of great natural importance Martin Ford was the local Aberdeen government official who originally oversaw Trump's planning application to build the Balmedie resort in 2006. He was part of a planning committee that rejected it over environmental concerns because the course would be built between sand dunes that were designated what the UK calls a Site of Special Scientific Interest due to the way they shift over time. The Scottish government swiftly overturned that ruling on the grounds that Trump's investment in the area would bring a much-needed economic boost. Neil Hobday, who was the project director for Trump's course in Balmedie, last year told the BBC he was "hoodwinked" by Trump over his claim that he would spend more than a billion dollars on it. Hobday said he felt "ashamed that I fell for it and Scotland fell for it. We all fell for it." The dunes lost their special status in 2020, according to Nature Scot, the agency that oversees such designations. It concluded that their special features had been "partially destroyed" by Trump's resort. Trump International disputes that finding, saying the issue became "highly politicized." For years, Trump also fought to block the installation of a wind farm off his resort's coast. He lost that fight. The first one was built in 2018. There are now 11 turbines. Ford has since retired but stands by his belief that allowing approval for the Trump resort was a mistake. "I feel cheated out of a very important natural habitat, which we said we would protect and we haven't," he said. "Trump came here and made a lot of promises that haven't materialized. In return, he was allowed to effectively destroy a nature site of great conservation value. It's not the proper behavior of a decent person." Forbes, the former quarry worker and fisherman, said he viewed Trump in similar terms. He said that Trump "will never ever get his hands on his farm." He said that wasn't just idle talk. He said he's put his land in a trust that specified that when he dies, it can't be sold for at least 125 years.