United Kingdom
Mikaela Loach is a Jamaican-British climate justice activist, author, and organiser based in the United Kingdom.
Total Followers -0.2%
319K
Across Instagram, TikTok
Primary Platform
279K followers · 87% of audience
Engagement
4.4%
vs. 1.5% category median
Sponsorship Tier
Mid
Est. $4.2K–$9.8K / IG post
The middle-grade book (ages 8–12) earned a Junior Library Guild Gold Standard selection, a starred review from Booklist, and was named a Booklist Best Book of the Year. It was also selected for the 2026 MASL Dogwood Readers Award.
The accolade added to the book's growing list of honours shortly after its March 2025 publication.
The marine-conservation-focused Safina Center recognised Loach's work in climate justice with a fellowship appointment.
| Window | TikTok | Combined | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last 7 days | -84 -0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | -84 |
| Last 30 days | -502 -0.2% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | -502 |
| Last 90 days | -697 -0.3% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | -697 |
| Last 365 days | -697 -0.3% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | -697 |
Daily follower snapshots from CreatorDB's longitudinal index.
Mikaela Loach is a Jamaican-British climate justice activist, author, and organiser based in the United Kingdom. She built her public profile through a distinctly intersectional approach to environmental advocacy — arguing that climate change cannot be separated from racial justice, colonialism, and economic inequality. Her debut book It's Not That Radical became a bestseller, translating her online following into a broader readership, while a legal challenge she brought against the UK government over fossil fuel licensing drew significant mainstream attention. She also co-founded Awethu, a community organisation aligned with her justice-led framework.
On Instagram and TikTok, Loach blends direct advocacy, book promotion, and solidarity campaigns — including sustained commentary on Palestinian rights and Jamaican beach-access issues — reflecting an audience that skews young, majority female, and concentrated in the UK and United States. Her well-above-median engagement rate signals a highly activated community rather than a passive one. With a second book, Climate Is Just The Start, adding to her publishing profile, she is consolidating a durable position at the intersection of climate, politics, and social justice — a fit better suited to progressive publishers, ethical consumer brands, and advocacy organisations than to mainstream commercial sponsors.
Mikaela Loach reaches an audience concentrated in United Kingdom primarily through Instagram, and is best activated via Instagram Reels and Stories, TikTok branded content. Their sponsorship history skews toward Climate Justice / Social Impact, a clear signal of fit for brands in those categories. Demonstrated partners include Awethu. Engagement on Instagram runs around 4.4%, pointing to an audience suited to category-relevant, mid-funnel brand campaigns rather than pure-reach buys.
Benchmark estimates for a creator at Mikaela Loach's tier (Mid, 319K combined followers, United Kingdom). Pulled from CreatorDB's category benchmarks.
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Yes — Mikaela Loach describes herself in her own TikTok bio as a "climate justice activist who sued the UK gov." The legal challenge targeted the UK government's continued licensing of North Sea oil and gas extraction, which she and fellow claimants argued was incompatible with the UK's own stated climate commitments. The case received wide media coverage and established her as one of the UK's most prominent frontline climate litigation figures.
"It's Not That Radical" is Mikaela Loach's bestselling debut book, which argues that tackling the climate crisis requires confronting racism, colonialism, and economic inequality — not just switching to clean energy. She pushes back against the idea that the systemic changes needed are extreme or impractical, framing them as both urgent and achievable. The book has become a staple recommendation in climate justice and intersectional activism communities.
"Climate Is Just The Start" is Mikaela Loach's second book, announced to her audience with visible excitement. The title continues the central argument of her first book — that engaging with the climate crisis is a gateway into confronting the full range of global injustices rooted in colonialism and extractive capitalism. She has presented it as a direct continuation from where "It's Not That Radical" left off.
Awethu is an initiative co-founded by Mikaela Loach that she links directly from her Instagram bio alongside her books and climate work. While she hasn't given detailed public breakdowns of its full scope through her social content, it sits within her broader ecosystem of climate justice and collective action. Its placement as a headline item in her bio suggests it is a significant long-term project rather than a one-off campaign.
Mikaela Loach has used her platform to highlight how large stretches of Jamaica's coastline have effectively been privatised — often by foreign-owned resorts — making them inaccessible to ordinary Jamaican people. She tags this content with #beachaccess and #jamaicanbeaches, framing the issue as a direct legacy of colonial land ownership. For Loach, whose heritage is Jamaican, it is a concrete local example of the global injustices she writes and campaigns about.
Mikaela Loach is Jamaican-Scottish — she carries the Jamaican flag emoji in her bio and her Jamaican heritage is central to her public identity, while she is based and active in the United Kingdom. She studied at the University of Edinburgh, where much of her early activism also took shape. Her dual background directly informs her climate justice framing, particularly around the outsized harm the climate crisis inflicts on Caribbean and Global South communities.
Yes — Mikaela Loach is openly vocal about Palestinian solidarity and regularly uses #palestinesolidarity and #palestine across her content. She connects Palestinian rights to the climate and environmental justice movements, pointing to the scale of environmental destruction caused by conflict. Her posts on the subject consistently draw high engagement from her audience.
Mikaela Loach uses the #FreeCongo hashtag to draw attention to the crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where conflict closely tied to the extraction of minerals used in electric vehicle batteries and consumer electronics has displaced and harmed millions of people. She makes the DRC a central example in her argument that a green energy transition built on exploitative mining in the Global South reproduces the same colonial harms it claims to solve. It is one of the sharpest illustrations of her broader thesis that climate is just the start.
Yes — Mikaela Loach trained as a medical doctor at the University of Edinburgh before moving into full-time climate justice activism and writing. Her clinical background gives her a public health lens that runs through her work, particularly when she frames the climate crisis as a health emergency whose worst consequences fall on the world's least-resourced communities. She is one of the very few prominent climate activists with formal medical training.
Mikaela Loach has used the #timeearthawards hashtag across her content, indicating she was recognised by TIME magazine as part of their annual Earth Awards programme celebrating individuals making a meaningful impact on the planet. Recognition at that level helped extend her reach well beyond the UK climate movement to an international audience. TIME's Earth Awards spotlight a mix of activists, scientists, and communicators, placing Loach in prominent global company.
Stats (followers, engagement, audience demographics, growth) are pulled live from the CreatorDB API covering YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. Bio and FAQ content is AI-assisted; news items are sourced from cited public press at generation time. Read the full methodology →
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@mikaelaloach · Instagram
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