8 May 2026
PeakED Project Stakeholders Explore the Complexity of Environmental Challenges in Mountain Ecosystems
8 May 2026
A diverse group of 18 youth workers, environmental advocates, economists, and social enterprise representatives participated in an interactive environmental dialogue simulation organized by Deseret Bloom as part of the PeakED Project dissemination activities.
Held under the title “The Lithium Peak Paradox: Between Sacred Nature and Global Clean Energy Needs,” the workshop explored one of today’s most urgent ethical and environmental dilemmas through a fictional yet highly realistic crisis scenario.
At the center of the simulation was Emerald Mountain—a protected and spiritually sacred natural site discovered to contain one of the world’s largest lithium reserves. Lithium is a critical mineral used in electric vehicle batteries and renewable energy storage technologies, making it essential to the global green energy transition.
Through immersive role-play, debate simulations, and collaborative negotiation exercises, participants examined the complex relationship between climate action, economic development, biodiversity conservation, and cultural heritage protection.
Participants were divided into three stakeholder groups representing different perspectives:
The workshop created a dynamic space for critical thinking, dialogue, and constructive disagreement. Participants negotiated competing priorities while working together to develop practical policy recommendations.
Key discussions focused on pressing global issues, including climate justice, ethical mining, renewable energy transitions, indigenous and local community rights, and sustainable economic development.
Facilitators emphasized that the purpose of the exercise was not to reach a single “correct” solution, but rather to help participants better understand the complexity of real-world decision-making in a time of environmental and economic uncertainty.
One participant reflected on the experience, stating:
“A powerful reminder that sustainability is not only about technology or economics, but also about identity, ethics, spirituality, and the human relationship with nature.”
The workshop concluded with participants presenting hybrid policy proposals that combined environmental safeguards, technological innovation, community participation, and long-term economic planning.
Organizers highlighted the value of interactive educational tools in empowering young people to engage with global sustainability challenges through dialogue, empathy, and evidence-based decision-making.
This event forms part of wider efforts to promote environmental awareness, conflict-sensitive dialogue, and youth engagement in shaping fair and inclusive approaches to the global energy transition.
The PeakED Project (2023-1-EL02-KA220-YOU-000159297) is co-funded by the European Union under the Erasmus+ Programme. The project aims to empower young people and professionals through Living Laboratories, enabling them to co-create innovative conservation and socio-economic solutions for mountain ecosystems.