"Everyone who thinks that a small child cannot bring a change, I just want to remind them that a 4-mm seed has the potential to grow into a 400-foot tall tree," 10-year-old Prasiddhi Singh tells National Geographic.
Singh is an environmentalist and social entrepreneur in India, where she has planted more than 100,000 trees as founder of the Prasiddhi Forest Foundation, CNBC reports.
The foundation, which Singh launched at the age of 6 and has connected with people in more than 20 countries, is dedicated to conserving the environment.
Singh tells National Geographic she started the foundation after a Cyclone Vardah struck India in 2008.
"I felt so gloomed (sic) and doomed," she says.
"The entire road was flooded, trees were getting uprooted.
And I felt that I had to do something about it."
She says she learned how to plant seeds, how to maintain a nursery, and how to deal with weeding, watering, fencing, and more from students at the age of 6.
Singh says she wants to be an explorer "as every second new innovations keep happening."
In India, she says, "I have done plantations in Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, Maharashtra, and small plantations in Kerala and Kerala," and she
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