Culture

Era of Action

Waterbear launches campaign and youth script writing competition

WaterBear today launched its ambitious ‘Era of Action’ campaign, marked with a video that aims to mobilise its members to protect our planet.

Running until the end of the year, the campaign will see the pioneering content and documentary platform provide clear steps across its communication channels for members to take action each week. Actions will span driving petition signatures to support the Big Cat Public Safety Act; donations to specific NGO campaigns, educational and behavioural change suggestions to energise the environmental movement, and launching a global script writing competition with the Aegean Film Festival to mobilise youth generations, among many more.

https://youtu.be/mLoXxmuJAZg

Launched in December 2020, WaterBear Network is an innovative video on demand platform that is home to award-winning documentaries and inspirational original content - facilitating awareness, education and action. With content and curated documentaries inspired by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), WaterBear members are able to stream video at any time, and on any device.

WaterBear Network and the Aegean Film Festival has launched a script writing competition running through 2021 to engage UK students from the ages of 13-24, encouraging them to submit short film script ideas and engaging stories about the world and the environment around them. The winner from each category will have their script turned into a film for WaterBear, to be shown at the Aegean Film Festival in 2022.

As part of the Era of Action campaign, the platform also announced an exciting selection of new solutions-focused content from their NGOs partners aimed at making action feel aspirational and inclusive:

* Beaver Man’ - examines Derek Gow’s journey to bring life back to Devon’s landscape through introducing Beavers.

* ‘Building Europe's Yellowstone’ - documents Foundation Conservation Carpathia’s journey to restore the largest unfragmented forest of Europe and establish National Park status.

* Synchronicity Earth’s ‘The Queen of Ecuador's Canopy’ - Primatologist Citlalli Morelos-Juarez leads a conservation project in the Ecuadorian region of the Choco rainforest; empowering local women to learn about sustainability to benefit their communities and the forest's delicate ecosystem.

* Tusk’s ‘The Anti-poaching Dog Squad’ - following fearless Southern African Wildlife College tracker dogs as they endure thick bush in high temperatures, wild animals, dehydration and poachers to patrol the Kruger National Park, Africa.

* Wildlife Conservation Network & Endangered Wildlife Trust’s ‘Hero Rats’- Documenting the widely unappreciated APOPO trained rats as they deter poaches and save the world’s most trafficked mammal - the pangolin.

* Whitley Fund for Nature’s Sumatra's Forest Guardian - tells the incredible story of 24 year old, Acehnese eco-activist Farwiza Farhan who launched a citizen lawsuit to save Indonesia’s Leuser Ecosystem - resulting in palm oil barons being fined US $26million and new protections enshrined in Indonesian law.

WaterBear also revealed new partnerships with the E. O Wilson Foundation, Space for Giants, Break Free from Plastic Movement, Ocean Unite, The Leap and World Animal Protection with many more in the pipeline, taking their network of highly effective NGOs over 100.

2021 could be a major turning point in the protection of all life on Earth as the UN is hosting big decision making meetings on Biodiversity and Climate Change this year. The WaterBear community will be pushing for urgent action in the lead up to these key events through supporting international campaigns including the UN Race to Zero, Count Us In and the Global Deal for Nature.

Stephanie Sluka Brauer, Director of Global Funding, Space for Giants said, "If ever there was a moment calling for bold action, it is now as we write a new narrative of planetary health. If we don't take action today, we continue to lose incredible natural landscapes and all the life they support - including our own. Once they are lost, we simply won't be able to get them back. All of us connected on WaterBear - conservationists, artists, photographers, filmmakers, scientists, entrepreneurs, travelers, technologists, students, friends from all walks of life - have the power to be regenerative as we build a more sustainable future. Only together can we ensure a #AHealthyEarth."

Whitley Fund for Nature’s Director, Danni Parks said, “As Whitley Award winners show us, grassroots wildlife conservation can make a global impact. 2021 has been coined the ‘environmental super-year’ and we have a window of opportunity to reverse biodiversity loss and stop global warming, by transforming our scientific knowledge into on-the-ground action. The Whitley Fund for Nature is proud to be collaborating with WaterBear to inspire audiences to support charities, like WFN, that are making a tangible difference.”

Lisa Rose, WaterBear Head of Impact said: “As we emerge from the COVID crisis this year, we have the chance to ‘build back better’ and restore nature that we can’t afford to waste. WaterBear’s Era of Action campaign is designed to reach new audiences with compelling world-class storytelling and energise the sustainability movement with the motivation and tools for action that can truly make a difference”

Actor and activist Rainn Wilson is sitting down with WaterBear’s Head of Strategy Sam Sutaria for this month’s episode of ‘The Bear Hug’ - WaterBear’s podcast style interview series - to discuss climate risk in the Arctic.

www.eraofaction.com