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Home > Jerome Ringo
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Jerome Ringo

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Climate: Hurricanes can’t force this 66 years die-hard climate activist to abandon His City

by Leading Reporters September 11, 2021
written by Leading Reporters
  • Jerome Ringo is 66 years old and he has lived in Lake Charles, Louisiana, his entire life. “We evacuated for Hurricane Katrina, Rita, Gustaf, Ike, Laura, Beta,” Ringo told us in a phone conversation. “We have been evacuated from storms all of our lives.”
  • “I’ve been asked, ‘Why don’t you leave? Why don’t you relocate?'” Ringo said. “There’s no place to run now. The United States of America is becoming a ground zero for climate change.”
  • His tenacity in addressing climate change comes from growing up facing racism. “The climate victory is attainable. The Civil Rights Movement proved that. The women’s movement proved that. That if you keep fighting you can win,” Ringo said.

Jerome Ringo is 66 years old and he has lived in Lake Charles, Louisiana, his entire life. He’s seen a lot of hurricanes come through.

“We evacuated for Hurricane Katrina, Rita, Gustaf, Ike, Laura, Beta,” Ringo told CNBC in a phone conversation on Tuesday. “So, since 2005, honestly, I would say about it’s eight to 10 times.”

Evacuating from storms has been a part of Ringo’s entire life. “It goes back to when we were kids for hurricane Audrey back in 1957,” he told CNBC.

But the orders to leave have become more frequent.

“Normally you evacuate once a year. Now we’re seeing where you evacuate several times a year, because the frequency of the storms has increased as the the intensity of the storms has increased as climate impacts have increased.”

Ringo has always returned to Lake Charles, but he knows many who left and “vowed never to return,” he said.

“I’ve been asked, ‘Why don’t you leave? Why don’t you relocate?'” Ringo said

Why he won’t leave: ‘I’m a front line warrior’

As Hurricane Ida approached the Gulf of Mexico, Ringo prepared to evacuate by boarding up his house, which had been devastated by Hurricane Laura a year ago. He had only moved back into his home following the lengthy reconstruction efforts about two weeks before.

“The problem on the Gulf Coast is whenever a storm hits, it takes forever to get your home repaired,” Ringo said. Between hurricane damage on the Gulf Coast, wildfire damage in California, flooding in Central and Tennessee Valley area, insurance companies “are having to pay out premiums like crazy now. And so the process of getting your property repaired is really difficult,” he said.

Jerome Ringo’s home after Hurricane Laura in 2020.Photo courtesy Jerome Ringo

“There are blue tarps on the roofs of houses all over the city still from Hurricane Laura.”

Ringo and his family left Lake Charles on Friday, two days before the storm made landfall on Sunday.

“Traffic was bumper to bumper,” Ringo said. “You are talking millions of people. Back to back to back traffic for miles.”

He went to Houston to stay in a hotel, which will be covered by insurance. He’s lucky to have insurance, he said. Many can not afford it.

Major storms leave a “domino effect” of bad conditions getting worse for vulnerable people, Ringo said.

“Because they don’t have money. They don’t have jobs because businesses were destroyed. So you can’t work. There’s no work. Restaurants are destroyed. So you can’t go out and get food…It’s not unusual that people are still getting free food from churches, from the Red Cross, and from whatever is available that might feed their families.”

“I can’t leave those people, Ringo said. “My God, I grew up poor.”

Ringo’s grandfather and parents hunted rabbits and fish. “We lived off the land,” he said. “If you didn’t have a hunter in your family, you, a lot of times, didn’t eat.”

Ringo is one of six brothers, and his father left when he was the eighth grade. “My mom pretty much raised us on our own,” Ringo said.

Jerome Ringo’s home after Hurricane Laura in 2020.
Photo courtesy Jerome Ringo

Now, Ringo is the co-founder and chairman of Zoetic Global, where he works to commercialize energy efficient technologies in the United States and internationally, particularly in Africa. He started his career on the opposite end of the spectrum, working in the petrochemical industry.

But he eventually left and became an environmental and sustainability leader, where he’s led organizations like the National Wildlife Federation and the Apollo Alliance Project, written books, and testified before Congress “about 40 times,” he said. He’s also an ordained minister and occasionally preaches at the nondenominational church his wife runs and is the main preacher for.Chief Business Officer of BARD Holdings Inc. Jerome Ringo (L) and Executive Director of Bold Nebraska Jane Kleeb (R) testify during a hearing before the Subcommittee on Energy and Power of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce December 2, 2011 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.Alex Wong | Getty Images News | Getty Images

As such, Ringo has a platform that he knows many members of his local community do not have.

“Somebody is going to be on the front line and fight the war or you don’t win the war. And so I’m one of these front line people,” Ringo said.

He had a place in Washington D.C. for 11 years. He knows he could leave Louisiana.

“I’m a front line warrior. So front line is not DC. Front line is on the coast of Louisiana, where the storms are hitting, where the people are being evacuated, where the homes are being destroyed. That’s the front line,” he said.

Where Ringo’s hope comes from

Ringo, well into his sixties, knows that climate change most likely will not be resolved in his lifetime. But he takes solace and gets courage from being a link in the chain.

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“If I believe that we had no hope in facing this, I guess that’s when you throw down your weapon and you surrender. I believe that we can fix this problem — whether we can fix it in my lifetime, probably not,” Ringo said. “But my generation can be the catalyst of a solution that is more of a generational solution.”

He believes that when people become educated about climate change and what is causing it, they will change.

Part of his faith in change comes from another social justice movement he has had born witness too: racism.

He remembers Ku Klux Klansmen burning a 13-foot cross in the front yard of his family home. They were trying to intimidate Ringo’s family out of attending primarily white schools, “but we went anyway,” Ringo said.

“When you experience some victories, it gives you a can-do spirit,” Ringo said. “In spite of challenges, in spite of adversity, if you keep fighting, you can win. You know, I’d never imagined that when I was going through what I went through in eighth grade, with crosses burned in our yards, in the the early 1960s and middle of 1960s, I never knew that … the civil rights movement would be signed and passed … that would be equal rights for women, equal rights for the gay community and the LGBTQ communities.”

“You just never imagined that there could ever be victories in those areas. But because people continued the fight, they continue to march, they continued to advocate, then successive eventually comes,” he said. “The climate movement is no different. We can win this. The only thing that guarantees us to lose it is to quit.” News Credit: cnbc.com

September 11, 2021 0 comments
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Headlines

Nigeria becomes first African country to receive climate clock… As FG reiterates effort to mitigate impact of climate change

by Leading Reporters April 28, 2021
written by Leading Reporters

Kenny Folarin, Abuja

In furtherance of the actualization of the Sustainable Development Goal 13 on Climate Action, Nigeria has become the first African country to receive the climate clock which aim at creating awareness and mitigating the impact of Climate Action in the country.

Nigeria becomes first African country to receive climate clock

Alhaji Mohammed Alhaji Danjuma received the clock on behalf of the His Excellency Muhammadu Buhari GCFR and the federal government.

Founder and Chairman Zoetic Global, U.S.A Amb Jerome Ringo

Founder and Chairman Zoetic Global ltd, U.S.A, Amb Jerome Ringo presented the climate clock to the Alhaji Mohammed Alhaji Danjuma, during the ‘High Level Presentation Ceremony of the Climate Clock to Nigeria in Abuja.

In her remarks, Dame Tallen, reiterated that the federal government is continuously pulling efforts to fight climate change in the country.

She also reaffirmed that the federal government is working with the local, national and global climate community towards meeting the set climate target.

In her words: “Climate change is a global issue, impacting different parts of world and at varying degrees. However, developing countries like Nigeria have less capacity to adapt to climate change impacts. In that order, women and the vulnerable groups have the least capacity to adapt to the impacts. So, when you are looking for the face of climate change- look at the face of the women.

“This is quite evident in our communities in Nigeria, where over 60 per cent of the workforce in agriculture sector are women.

“The impact of climate change in Nigeria is huge. The drying up of Lake chad to 10 per cent of its original size has caused undue hardship to the lives in that region. It has adversely affected lives and livelihoods and increased vulnerability of our young ones to restiveness and militancy.

“Nigeria is losing about 5 kilometers a year to desertification, causing force migration, loss of farm lands and untold hardship to communities and families. Women and children are most impacted by this hardship.

“Flooding has become a yearly event in Nigeria, I recall news items where mothers have helplessly watched their homes overtaken by flood, farmlands lost and in some cases, like in Akwa Ibom State, a mother struggled to save her toddler from the wave of flood but she lost out to the flood.

“It is therefore a great pleasure that today, the Climate Clock is being launched in Nigeria, the first African nation to have it and women are well represented”. She added.

Speaking in the same vein, Founder and Chairman Zoetic Global Ltd., Jerome Ringo, stated that the decision on which African country to present the climate clock was decided in two seconds.

He said that Nigeria and Nigerians have potentials to create or possibly solve climate change problems; therefore he called on the federal government to lead well and harness these potentials.

“I recognize that Nigeria is the largest economy on the planet and a lot of innovative youths roam the country. But what really drove me the most about bringing the clock to Nigeria is not where the country is now, but where it is going.

“Nigeria is on a threshold of being the catalyst to begin the movement like no other country in the world. Why, because you suffer the most adverse effects to climate change, it is not the fault of the African people, it is a call to rise and take action towards climate change,” he added.

Chief Executive Officer, Ecologistics Integrated Services Ltd Dr. Paul Abolo

Also speaking, Chief Executive Officer, Ecologistics Integrated Services Ltd. and African Clock Initiative, ACCI, Dr. Paul Abolo, noted that the presentation of the climate clock is a Strategic approach to creating awareness for climate action.

He said, “The climate clock happens to be one of those strategies through which we need to draw awareness, sensitisation, about climate action. However, we have decided in Nigeria that the presentation of the climate clock has to go through a strategic approach.

“Regularly, a top down approach is usually adopted but Nigeria said no, we have to adopt a bottom up approach.

“We adopted an approach whereby this clock will go through a climate champion where our youths, women, will have opportunities to see the clock and understand the imports of the clock; until it gets to the presidency, that is the approach Nigeria has adopted to distribute this clock.”

In her goodwill message, President, Women in Renewable Energy Association, WIRE-A, Chief Mrs. Anita Okuribido, explained that the climate clock is a graphic to demonstrate how quickly the planet is approaching 1.5℃ of global warming, given current emissions trends.

She added that it also shows the amount of carbon dioxide (CO₂) already emitted, and the global warming to date; stressing the need for Nigeria, Africa and the world to arise to the rising challenges of climate change.

“Climate change is a global issue, impacting different parts of the world at varying degrees. Climate change will be the greatest threat to humanity and global ecosystems in the coming years.

“There is a pressing need to understand and communicate the impacts of this change, and make active actionable commitments and contributions to mitigating this crisis”. She added.

April 28, 2021 0 comments
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Headlines

First “African Climate Clock” to be received in Nigeria

by Leading Reporters April 27, 2021
written by Leading Reporters

Watch Virtual Event here:  http://bit.ly/africanclimateclock

Abuja, Nigeria. — The first CLIMATE CLOCK to be received by an African nation will be presented in a high level official presentation ceremony of the Government of Nigeria in Abuja on Tuesday.

Alhaji Mohammed Danjuma, social activist and Climate Champion

The handheld clock will be presented to Alhaji Mohammed Danjuma, social activist and Climate Champion,  by Jerome Ringo, former chair of the National Wildlife Federation, and currently Goodwill Ambassador to the Pan African Parliament.  

Nigeria will be the first African nation to receive a CLIMATE CLOCK. Ringo received the clock at an event in New York City on Monday, April 19 where Ringo delivered a clock to UN Ambassador from ECO WAS, which represents 15 West African nations, including Nigeria. Ringo plans to take a number of clocks to several other African nations. The presentation of the Climate Clock to Alhaji Mohammed Danjuma in Abuja on Tuesday would be followed, at a later date by a high-power delegation to present the clock to the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, His Excellency Muhammadu Buhari .

WHAT: First climate clock to be received by an African nation

WHEN: Tuesday April 27, 2021, 1.00pm to 3.00pm (WAT), 8:00am to 10:00am (EST) USA

WHO: Jerome Ringo presenting to the Government of Nigeria, delivered to Climate Champion Alhaji Mohammed Danjuma. With H.E. Pauline K. Tallen Minister of Women’s Affairs, and Dr. Paul Abolo, Ecologistics, African Climate Clock Initiative.

WHERE (Physical): Bon Hotel Elvis, #2 Monrovia Street, Wuse II, Abuja.

WHERE (Virtual): http://bit.ly/africanclimateclock

The Climate Clock project is known for the giant clock in New York’s Union Square, as well as portable handheld clocks that climate leaders took to the front of the White House and projected onto the Department of Energy in DC earlier this week.

Ringo stated: “This clock is a call to action. Future solutions are great, but we need NOW solutions. Solutions that create green jobs that can replace the fossil fuel economy.”

The CLIMATE CLOCK shows the deadline before our global Carbon Budget runs out, i.e. the time left before we emit enough carbon into the atmosphere to set the world on a course to exceed 1.5 C warming, which scientists say is a critical tipping point. The now famous giant clock recently added a sign of hope. The Deadline that has been displayed since it’s launch in September is now joined by a new “Lifeline” that displays the percentage of global energy currently supplied from renewable sources — 12.2 percent, and going up, but it needs to be going up much faster to meet our deadline. The world must do whatever it can to raise our lifeline to 100% before the deadline runs out. For more information on the science behind the clock: https://climateclock.world/science.

Ringo used the shift in the clock to speak to  the different responsibilities that different nations had for meeting our climate deadline. “Africa, like other developing regions who suffer climate impacts from CO2 historically released by industrialized nations, deserves a lifeline. They need countries like the US, that are the greatest contributors to the problem, to contribute the most to this renewable lifeline that is on the clock. The United States is only 5% of the world’s population but is responsible for 25% of the world’s carbon emissions.”

“The CLIMATE CLOCK says we must do what the science demands, and pursue solutions that leave no one behind.” said Laura Berry, research director for CLIMATE CLOCK.

The original prototype for the handheld clock was built in partnership with Ayodomola Okunseinde.

Earlier this week, the iconic CLIMATE CLOCK in New York’s Union Square added a “Lifeline” to show the percentage of global energy currently supplied from renewable sources — 12.2 percent, and going up, but nowhere near fast enough. Handheld “action” clocks were unveiled and distributed to youth leaders, who carried them to their own respective events.

Light-projected clocks were launched simultaneously in DC and Glasgow this week. 

Light-projected clocks were launched simultaneously in DC and Glasgow this week. In DC, on the Dept. of Energy. In Glasgow, on the landmark Tolbooth Steeple. The Glasgow Climate Clock will run continuously every night for the six months from Earth Day until the COP26 begins, turning the eyes of the world to the upcoming UN Summit in November.

Climate justice groups brought a clock to a rally in front of the White House on Wednesday, April 21.

Jerome Ringo, the Founder and Chairman of Zoetic Global is taking climate clocks to the heads of state of Nigeria, Ghana and other African nations to promote energy efficient and renewable energy solutions throughout the African continent.

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