London: The House of Lords hosted Playing for the Planet — A Green Commonwealth Dialogue on Sport and Climate Action, convened by the Ramphal Institute, the London-based think tank accredited to the Commonwealth Secretariat, in partnership with Igniting Minds Organisation of India.
Held during London Climate Action Week, Europe’s largest climate festival, the dialogue brought together parliamentarians, diplomats, researchers, youth leaders, and sports advocates from across the Commonwealth to advance a single proposition: that citizen-led, measurable climate action proven in the Global South offers a replicable model for the world.
The evening marked a significant step in elevating community-driven climate delivery from aspiration to accountable, verifiable practice, and in positioning youth and the global sports community as engines of environmental transformation.
Opening the evening, Lord Uday Nagaraju expressed pride in supporting a movement powered by youth, sporting icons, and 44 million citizens, describing young people as the true agents of change in climate action. He affirmed his commitment to helping the movement travel from the Global South to the Global North, and to building the institutional bridges that allow proven community models to scale across continents.
Delivering the keynote, Her Excellency Karen-Mae Hill, High Commissioner of Antigua & Barbuda, highlighted the unmatched reach of the global sports community in shaping younger generations. She commended Igniting Minds for engaging icons from cricket, tennis, and other sports, and encouraged the involvement of the world’s leading sporting figures to inspire mass climate and tree-planting movements. She described “Playing for the Planet” as a timely and unifying theme capable of mobilising millions and underscored why small island and coastal nations must remain at the heart of climate action.
Representing the Commonwealth Secretariat, Suresh Yadav, Senior Director, Climate Change & Oceans, emphasised that the initiative taps a vast and underused reservoir of youth potential across the Commonwealth’s 56 member states. He noted the alignment of “Playing for the Planet” with Commonwealth priorities including the Commonwealth Blue Charter, the 56-nation agreement on ocean action and blue carbon and reaffirmed the Secretariat’s commitment to empowering youth-led institutions working to protect ocean ecology and strengthen climate resilience.
Pritpal Surj, Advocacy and Partnerships Manager at Commonwealth Sport, outlined an ambitious sustainability agenda ahead of the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games. He presented Commonwealth Sport’s commitment to delivering a Low-Carbon, Circular, and Zero Waste to Landfill Games, diverting 95% of Games-related waste from landfill and eliminating single-use plastics across all venues.
Surj also highlighted the King’s Baton Relay’s partnership with the Royal Commonwealth Society to remove one million pieces of plastic from Commonwealth waterways before the Games commence. Grounded in the principle that a love of sport is the one thing we all share, he affirmed that sport’s unparalleled global reach makes it one of the most powerful platforms available for driving measurable environmental and social change across the Commonwealth.
Dr David Gomez, Director of the Ramphal Institute, offered a striking measure of the movement’s scale, observing that Igniting Minds has mobilised more trees than many times the population of entire nations. He expressed strong interest in partnering with Igniting Minds on scientific research, sustainable development, and nature-based solutions, including seaweed and blue-carbon approaches, signalling a new chapter of Commonwealth-wide research collaboration.
The Special Guest of Honour, Senator Kathuri Murungi, MGH, MP, Deputy Speaker of the Senate of Kenya, led a distinguished delegation of Kenyan parliamentarians: Senator Moses Kajwang’, CBS, MP — Convener and Chairperson, Parliamentary Caucus on Climate Action Hon. Charity Kathambi Chepkwony, MP — Chairperson, Parliamentary Conservation and Climate Change Caucus Senator Faki Mohamed Mwinyihaji, CBS — Chairperson, Senate Committee on Land, Environment and Natural Resources Senator Hamida Kibwana, MP — climate-action advocate and Chairperson Emeritus, Kenya Women Senators Association
Praising the initiative as a noble and globally relevant movement, members of the delegation paid tribute to Shri Joginipally Santosh Kumar, stating that his citizen-led climate action makes him worthy of nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize. In a significant gesture of partnership, the delegation expressed their interest in inviting Shri Santosh Kumar to serve as a Green Ambassador for Kenya — to help replicate the people-led climate action movement across the nation. The delegation further expressed a concrete interest in collaborating with Igniting Minds on rewilding and afforestation programmes in Kenya, positioning the country as a leading partner in climate restoration and South–South cooperation.
In his keynote, Shri Joginipally Santosh Kumar, Chairman of Igniting Minds Organisation and former Member of the Rajya Sabha, traced the movement’s journey from a village in Telangana to the House of Lords — from a single idea to engage youth in climate action, to one of the world’s largest citizen-led environmental movements. He reaffirmed his commitment to working closely with Commonwealth nations, and especially Small Island Developing States (SIDS), to accelerate climate resilience and youth-driven environmental action, carrying the spirit of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam — the world is one family.
The Green India Challenge, founded in 2018 and delivered through Igniting Minds Organisation, has achieved measurable, independently monitored outcomes: 196+ million saplings mobilised, with geo-tagging introduced from 2024 and impact monitored through satellite-based assessment, 44 million citizens engaged across communities
21,000+ water conservation structures across 33 countries, saving an estimated 3.57 TMC of water annually
Recognised by the President of India; holder of UNFCCC COP29 and UNCCD COP16 Observer status (accredited via Cornell University, USA, and APSWDP respectively)
The dialogue closed with a shared commitment to carry the movement forward — to the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games, to CHOGM 2026 in Antigua and Barbuda, and to Hyderabad Climate Action Week 2026, positioned as the Global South’s premier climate-delivery platform under the promise From Ambition to Delivery.
Igniting Minds and its partners extended an open invitation to intergovernmental and global institutions — including UN bodies, Commonwealth climate and ocean mechanisms, research universities, and corporate sustainability leaders — to collaborate on scaling a transparent, verifiable, and investable model of nature-based climate action aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals (notably SDG 6, 13, 14, 15 and 17).
The evening reaffirmed a simple truth: when youth, policymakers, scientists, and sporting communities unite around measurable action, climate progress becomes unstoppable.
The organisers thanked moderators Ashraf Nehal and Itoro Victor-Akpan; coordinator Sanjeev Raghava; Mr M. Karunakar Reddy; Mr Samuel Dyas (FCDO); and Mr Gurdit Singh Vohra (Commonwealth Youth Council).
About Igniting Minds Organisation Igniting Minds Organisation is a Hyderabad-based non-profit advancing community-led climate action, water security, and youth empowerment, guided by the vision of Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam. Through the Green India Challenge, Walk for Water, and Climate Action Campus Talks, it has mobilised 196+ million saplings and 44 million citizens across 33 countries.
www.ignitingminds.org