Two Seventh-day Adventists, Pelenise Alofa and Patrick Pikacha, have received international recognition for their significant environmental achievements in the South Pacific.
Climate awareness award
Pelenise Alofa, from Kiribati, has been honored with a Commonwealth Points of Light award by the United Kingdom Prime Minister’s office for her work helping communities respond to climate change and raising awareness of the issue at an international level.
“In 2008, I started advocating to the world to save Kiribati and the Pacific from the impacts of climate change,” Alofa said. “I am not a scientist, but I do live, see, and feel the impacts of climate change.
“As Christians, we need to care for our environment, resources, and the people. If the world is not sure about climate change, what is more important is to help people live a sustainable and happy life.”
Originally from Fiji, Alofa studied locally at Vatuvonu Adventist High School and Fulton College. She attended Pacific Adventist University (PAU) in Papua New Guinea and Avondale University in Australia. She also taught at PAU and has worked at the University of the South Pacific.
For more than 13 years Alofa has run the Kiribati Climate Action Network as a volunteer. The network helps communities develop and build freshwater tanks and shelters and provides vocational training to better prepare people for potential migration in response to rising sea levels.
“I was surprised to receive the Points of Light award,” she said. “It is a great honor to my organization, family, country, and to my church, and especially to all the people who have taught me Christian values.”
The Points of Light award recognizes outstanding individual volunteers — people who are making a change in their communities.
British High Commissioner to Kiribati George Edgar congratulated Alofa on her award, which he said recognizes “her work to raise awareness of the existential threat that climate change poses to her country.”
“I thank God I came to Kiribati,” Alofa, who attends Anrae Seventh-day Adventist Church, said. “Living here helping my people has given me the greatest satisfaction. Having grateful smiles is the best reward for anyone. I pray every day that God shines His face on me so that I can bring peace and joy to anyone I meet.”
Conservation award
Vertebrate ecologist and field biologist Patrick Pikacha has been honored with the National Leadership in Environmental Sustainability and Conservation Award by the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP).
Pikacha is a senior lecturer in ecology in the School of Science and Technology at PAU. Before that, he was an associate lecturer in International Programs with the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Queensland, Australia.
“I’ve been working with community conservation organizations in the Solomon Islands for more than 20 years,” Pikacha, who attends Koiari Park English Seventh-day Adventist Church, said.
“I have a passion for community resource management initiatives that help maintain ecosystems and services while meeting human needs. As you know, Melanesians have an innate connection to place and land. Yet within our land and seascapes, we have seen unsustainable exploitation of our natural resources.
“This has been a cause of concern for me and the local organization I am associated with on the ground — Ecological Solutions Solomon Islands.”
Pikacha said he is humbled by the recognition. “As Pacific islanders who live on tiny islands, resource management is everyone’s business,” he said.
“I only represent a fraction of the individuals and like-minded organizations such as Ecological Solutions Solomon Islands, who work tirelessly to ensure our natural resources are sustainably managed in the Pacific Islands.”
SPREP is a regional organization established by the governments and administrations of the Pacific, charged with protecting and managing the environment and natural resources of the Pacific. Its head office is in Apia, Samoa.
The original version of this story was posted by Adventist Record.