February 22, 2014 AOL
You remember Koko the gorilla, right?
Koko was born in the ’70s at the San Francisco Zoo. Francine (Penny) Patterson, then a Ph.D. candidate at Stanford, started studying young Koko’s linguistics capabilities and eventually taught her a rudimentary version of sign language.
Over the years, Koko has become a gorilla celebrity and spokes-ape for global conservation efforts. She adopted a kitten (several, actually), helped sell an award-winning children’s book, befriended a ton of celebrities, and Dr. Patterson went on to start the Gorilla Foundation.
At 44 years old, Koko is still thriving. And spokes-ape-ing.
In this video compilation created by Noé Conservation and produced for the 2015 COP21 climate change meeting outside Paris, Koko is shown signing directly to the public. (Note: Koko was coached for this and followed a script, and the video is heavily edited to portray her as able to comprehend these issues. While she may be extraordinarily intelligent and talented, gorillas do not understand environmentalism.)
In the video, Koko tells us she loves people, and she loves the Earth.
But then the tone of her message changes.
But, Koko! I thought we were friends…
And Koko ends her message with a gorilla-sized request.
Here is this gorilla — kind, tender, and clearly intelligent — asking not just her handlers, but all of us to clean up our act. Whether it’s protecting biodiversity (like rare gorilla species), stopping poachers, limiting deforestation, or any of the myriad of issues gorillas and other endangered species face.
Koko would do it herself, but she can’t … at least not until the (increasingly likely) gorilla uprising happens. So, for now, she’s doing what good friends (human and gorilla alike) do best: Call each other out on their b.s.
She’s right. We need to fix Earth. We need to help Earth. Right this second.
Nearly 200 nations answered Koko’s call at December’s COP21 meeting on climate change.
196 nations adopted an agreement that set the ambitious goal of curbing the world’s rise in average temperature to below 2 degrees Celsius. Since studies show we may already be halfway there, this agreement couldn’t have come at a better time.
Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Christiana Figueres, Secretary General of the United Nations Ban Ki Moon, Foreign Affairs Minister and President-designate of COP21 Laurent Fabius, and France’s President Francois Hollande celebrate after the adoption of the climate pact. Photo by Francois Guillot/AFP/Getty Images.
Each country’s government still needs to seal the deal. But if they don’t, they’ll have to deal with millions of angry citizens, and one gorilla who’s had it up to here with their inaction.