Pacific Islanders are among a group of children petitioning the UN Committee on the rights of the Child about the lack of government action on the climate crisis.
The group of 16 alleges that under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the Committee should order member states to act to protect all children from the devastating impacts of climate change.
UNICEF hosted the teens including Sweden's Greta Thunberg in a press conference at the UN headquarters in New York this week.
Listen to the full press conference at the UN headquarters
Ranton Anjain, aged 17 from Ebeye in the Marshall Islands, was one of the speakers.
He said his country is open for people to come and see the effects of climate change up close for themselves.
"And I would also show you my old house that was destroyed by a storm in the summer of 2015. And yeah, our sea walls that we built, they're, even though we built them they're not useful."
Other members of the group urged young people around the world to work collectively, continue in their efforts to raise consciousness of the climate crisis and not to lose hope for more effective action from adults and governments.
UNICEF supports the child petitioners exercising their right to bring their complaint via the Third Optional Protocol but plays a neutral role in the process and outcome.
Adopted on 20 November 1989, the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) is an international human rights treaty outlining the civil, economic, social, political and cultural rights of children - without discrimination.
It is the most widely ratified human rights treaty in history. Complaints filed under the CRC's Third Optional Protocol are adjudicated upon by the Committee on the Rights of the Child - a group of independent experts.
The Committee is able to receive complaints from children, groups of children or their representatives against any State that has ratified the Protocol.
The list of children involved petitioning the UN Committee about the climate crisis
Name: Chiarra Sacchi
Home: Haedo, Argentina
Age: 17
"There are no walls with climate change."
Name: Catarina Lorenzo
Home: Salvador, Brazil
Age: 12
"It will be the kids who pay the consequences"
Name: Iris Duquesne
Home: Bordeaux, France
Age: 16
"The world is going to be sad"
Name: Raina Ivanova
Home: Hamburg, Germany
Age: 15
"That really scares me when I talk about it with my little sister"
Name: Ridhima Pandey
Home: Haridwar, India
Age: 11
"I sued my government because I want a better future"
Name: Ranton Anjain
Home: Ebeye, Marshall Islands
Age: 17
"I don't want to be underwater"
Name: Litokne Kabua
Home: Ebeye, Marshall Islands
Age: 16
"And the waves are eating up my islands"
Name: David Ackley III
Home: Majuro, Marshall Islands
Age: 16
"I feel lost. I like to keep my mind off it because it scares me, but it still pops up a couple of times a day"
Name: Deborah (Debby) Adegbile
Home: Lagos, Nigeria
Age: 12
"It depends on the way we start caring about our environment"
Name: Carlos Manuel
Home: Koror, Palau
Age: 17
"We all have the right to enjoy our planet and we should all protect that right"
Name: Ayakha Melithafa
Home: Cape Town, South Africa
Age: 17
"People who are older aren't paying as much attention because they will not be as affected"
Name: Ellen-Anne
Home: Karesuando, Sweden
Age: 8
"I like to go up into the mountains with the reindeer because they are such beautiful creatures"
Name: Greta Thunberg
Home: Stockholm, Sweden
Age: 16
"The climate crisis is not just the weather. It means also, lack of food and lack of water [and] places that are unliveable and refugees because of it. It is scary."
Name: Raslen Jbeli
Home: Tabarka, Tunisia
Age: 17
"Unfortunately, governments are ignoring us. They are careless about climate change in general"
Name: Carl Smith
Home: Akiak, Alaska
Age: 17
"Because if I have kids, I want them to live like I did - to hunt, fish, gather. I want to teach them"
Name: Alexandria Villasenor
Home: New York, United States
"I've been forced to organize a revolution instead of doing normal kid things"