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[The video starts. A question appears on a grey background asking, are you worried too? The first person appears in the frame. They have short dark hair and are wearing a grey collared shirt.]

They say:

Damn, how does it make me feel?

[The next person comes to the frame. They have curly brown hair and are wearing a patterned shirt.]

They say:

The truth is that it makes me anxious.

[The frame shifts to a third person. They have long dark hair and are wearing a black shirt.]

They say:

Because you suddenly start crying one day for what you see.

[A fourth person enters the frame. They have short dark hair and a beard and are wearing a light blue collared shirt.]

It makes you think and frightens.

[The next person appears in the frame. They have short brown hair and are wearing a pink shirt with a patterned scarf around their neck.]

They say:

I mean it’s shocking, this is so shocking.

[The frame shifts to the next person. They have wavy brown hair and are wearing a white shirt.]

They say:

For the first time.

[The frame changes to the next person. They have long brown hair and are wearing a dark shirt.]

They say:

Yes, I think it was when I was in primary school.

[The frame returns to the first person wearing a grey collared shirt.]

They say:

Many years ago, back in the 80’s.

[The person with curly hair enters the frame.]

They say:

I remember very well that I was very young when I first heard about climate change.

[The frame moves on to two children sitting side by side. They both have brown hair. The child sitting on the left side of the frame is wearing a white shirt and glasses, while the child sitting on the right side of the frame is wearing a yellow shirt.]

The one on the left says:

When I go to the forest I look and see lots of rubbish.

[The person with short brown hair and a black shirt enters the frame again.]

They say:

Every year you feel more heat during longer periods of time.

[The person in a pink shirt enters the frame.]

They say:

The great droughts, the dryness that remains in the land, which is totally broken, and you see these little kids that they can’t feed them. All this breaks your heart.

[The frame returns to the person wearing a grey collared shirt.]

They say:

The people who have contributed the least to climate change will be the first to suffer its effects, or who are actually already suffering them.

[The frame returns to the person in a white shirt. They nod. Then the frame shifts to the person with curly hair.]

They say:

We can’t close our eyes and say, this doesn’t affect me, nothing happens and I’m going to keep on buying my bags of tomatoes and plastic and everything else in the supermarket.

[The frame returns to the person wearing a light blue collared shirt.]

They say:

I think we are burdened with a model of society burdened with this wild capitalism that has exploited the planet.

[The frame returns to the person with long dark hair.]

They say:

The economic interest is to blame.

[The person with curly hair comes into the frame again.]

They say:

Rather than guilt, I think it is a sense of responsibility.

[The person wearing a grey collared shirt returns to the frame.]

Responsible is the word I like. Yes, I do have a share of the responsibility.

[The person in a white shirt comes into the frame.]

They say:

Those who can do the most are those who do the least.

[The person in a pink shirt enters the frame.]

Because they don’t think, they don’t think. Those who have to think they do not.

[The person wearing a light blue collared shirt enters the frame.]

They say:

We are living in a moment of uncertainty not knowing where the world is going. And also of impotence when we see that the big corporations, governments, the EU, the UN, have not made real and effective decisions.

[The person with short brown hair and a black shirt appears in the frame. They scratch their forehead and sigh deeply. Then the frame shifts to the person with long brown hair and a black shirt.]

They say:

I identify with eco-anxiety.

[The person in a pink shirt enters the frame again.]

They say:

An anxiety of eco. What is eco?

[The frame shifts to the two children.]

The one on the right says:

To feel very nervous, worried about the planet and not knowing what to do.

[The person with curly hair enters the frame.]

They say:

I think it’s a sense of anxiety to see that we’re heading for the abyss.

[The frame shifts to the person in a white shirt.]

They say:

In my case, it would be eco-anxiety mixed with anger. It provokes me anger to think about all this.

[The frame returns to the person in a pink shirt.]

They say:

I would not recommend a very strong eco-anxiety to anyone.

[The person with long brown hair enters the frame.]

They say:

I think it is essential to surround yourself with people who share your concerns.

[The frame returns to the person with curly hair.]

They say:

In order to have a debate and to be able to talk to people who are concerned about this issue.

[The person in a pink shirt enters the frame.]

They say:

And go ahead, do not get tired, do not get tired of what you are doing, do not ever get tired of it.

[The frame shifts to the person wearing a light blue collared shirt.]

They say:

I think it is essential that these spaces exist to create awareness to put pressure, to lobby governments. I think it is fundamental. The great changes in humanity have always been made from below by the social movements, the citizen and I think it is fundamental and important.

[The person in a pink shirt returns to the frame.]

They say:

It is the young people, like you, who are moving it, not only young people from here, but from all over the world.

[The two children enter the frame.]

The one on the right says:

Very important.

The one on the left says almost at the same time:

Yes.

[The person in a pink shirt comes into the frame.]

They say:

You have to be optimistic and trust in your own strength and that is the best you can do. Keep going, that is what I can tell you.

[At the end of the video, nine people who have not previously appeared in the video are shown. They are all wearing green shirts with the word Greenfluencers on them.]

A voice in the background says:

We are also shocked by the situation but we believe that by working together we can make suggestions, take action and making improvements to the city. Are you joining us?

[The following people are thanked in the closing credits of the video.]

Emma Flotats Muñoz

Mireia Anglada Soriano

Jordi Ballart Pastor

Miquel Armengol Sucarrats

Txell Balada Armengol

Isabel Serracanta Còdol

Marc Silvestre i Claros

Gemma Giró

Nil Casas Jiménez

Roger Casas Jiménez

[In addition, the following Greenfluencers participants are thanked in the closing texts.]

Maria Sánchez

Àngela Saula

Carla Bueno

Anastasia Margouta

Marina Pérez

Oswaldo Corrado

Michal Masow

Carolina Tito

Ferran Pauls

Clara Cazorla

Léa Laffitte

[Finally, the closing texts thank the partners of the Greenfluencers project. The video ends.]