Women experience climate change with disproportionate severity because enforced gender inequality makes us more susceptible to escalating environmental stresses. Black girls, women, and gender-expansive people in particular, bear an even heavier burden from the impacts of climate change because of the historic and continuing impacts of colonialism, racism and inequality. Due to this proximity, Black women have a unique role to play as indispensable actors in the climate movement.

However, Black women continue to be underrepresented across the environmental and climate sectors and have the lowest retention rate of any demographic. Black Girl Environmentalist aims to address the pathway and retention problem in the climate movement for Black girls, women, and gender-expansive people through: community empowerment, green workforce development, and narrative change.

We follow the Black Women Best framework coined by Janelle Jones, Chief Economist at the Department of Labor. Black women have a long standing track record of creating and sustaining solutions representing social, economic, and political power. By empowering and resourcing Black girls and women across the climate movement, BGE is committed to realizing the full, collective power of Black girls, women, and gender-expansive people in climate leadership. Because we understand that the voices and visions of Black women& gender expansive people are inherently needed for all of us to cultivate a just climate future in which all people have power, security, dignity, and prosperity.

Our Story

In 2021, environmental justice activist Wawa Gatheru founded Black Girl Environmentalist to address the recruitment and retention problem of Black girls, women, and non-binary people in the environmental field.

Having been in the climate space for almost ten years, Wawa could not help but notice that while Black girls and women experience the brunt of environmental injustice, they were amongst the least resourced or platformed in the climate movement. It was clear - limited access to the climate movement for Black women and gender-expansive individuals was an environmental injustice.

Today, BGE is a national organization dedicated to empowering Black girls, women, and non-binary individuals across the climate movement. By empowering and resourcing our community through community empowerment, green jobs development, and narrative change we seek to help cultivate a climate movement made in the image of all of us.

We have worked with 55 corporate and non-profit partners and hosted 38 events across our 10 HUB cities. Our work has been recognized in Vogue, the New York Times, NPR, Forbes, Essence, Teen Vogue, and Axios.

We are collectively committed to centering Black women and gender-expansive folks in the environmental movement while shifting inequitable power structures that create barriers to access environmental disciplines.

Meet the Team

  • Wawa Gatheru

    Founder / Executive Director

  • Elsa Mengistu

    Director of Programs

  • Kwolanne Felix

    Fellowships & Community Manager

  • Janiah Miller

    HUB Coordinator

  • Cara Anderson

    Chicago HUB Lead

  • Autumn McNeill

    Atlanta HUB Lead

  • Bobbie Green

    New Orleans HUB Lead

  • Cori Johnson

    New York City HUB Lead

  • Madelyn Collins

    Knoxville HUB Lead

  • Wesleigh Wright

    Knoxville HUB Lead

  • Unique Vance

    Los Angeles HUB Lead

  • Olivia Wilson

    Olivia Wilson

    DC HUB Lead

  • Deja Newton

    DC HUB Lead

  • Jasmine Walker

    Jasmine Walker

    Columbus HUB Lead

  • Danielle Brito

    Bay Area HUB Lead

  • Zoie Bills

    Detroit HUB Lead

  • RenĆ© LaPointe Jameson

    Boston HUB Lead

  • Maura Javis

    Philadelphia HUB Co-Lead

  • Kiersten Adams

    Philadelphia HUB Co-Lead

  • Lorena James

    Lorena James

    Charlotte HUB Lead

  • Maya Espinosa

    Charlotte HUB Lead

  • Sydney Dubose

    Pittsburgh HUB Lead