The role of schools in climate solutions
How are schools and educators reshaping the classroom for the climate's sake?
How are schools and educators reshaping the classroom for the climate's sake?
Humanity CAN halt climate change before it’s too late – but to do so, we must be strategic about what, where, and how to focus our efforts for the biggest impact.
That’s the take-home message keynote speaker Jonathan Foley, executive director of Project Drawdown, shared at the Nest Climate Campus during Climate Week NYC 2023 in September.
What happens when communities get serious about climate change?
Each and every one of us contributes to climate change – but some of us are going to need to do more to fix it.
To avoid climate catastrophe, we must invest in the most effective “emergency brake” climate solutions as quickly as possible – through philanthropy, private investment, corporate spending, and government funding.
This will take a strategic, ecosystem-style approach in order to mobilize more climate funding and align existing funding with proven climate science and solutions, such as Project Drawdown’s scientific analysis showing that there are nearly 100 technologically and financially viable solutions for reducing, avoiding, or sequestering emissions.
When it comes to climate change, does individual action matter? Emphatically, yes.
While it’s true that eating less meat, biking instead of driving, or planting a tree only does so much to reduce emissions, actions like these are just the beginning when it comes to the impact that you as an individual can have.
Personal climate action looks a lot like ripples expanding out from a pebble dropped in a pond. It starts with what you can do in your own home. But as you expand beyond your own personal space, your sphere of influence and impact grows, too.