Already underway, this year’s Cannes Film Festival runs through next Saturday in scenic southeast France, and celebrates bold, innovative messaging across the medium of film—and beyond. Connect4Climate’s focus at the festival will be the exciting virtual reality presentations taking place at the XR Hub on May 19 from 3:00 to 5:00 PM local time.

The Earth Day Network's Climate Leadership Gala, which took place this Wednesday at a hotel ballroom in Washington, D.C., saw an unlikely congregation of climate allies come together to recognize one another's work in accelerating climate action and to lay out new strategies for ensuring a greener future. Attendees included influencers from governmental organizations, popular media, social media, private industry, and the youth protest movement.
Earth Day Network president Kathleen Rogers kicked off the festivities with a reminder of the impact the original Earth Day made on so many people in the United States and abroad back in 1970, and maintained that the Network remains fully committed to promoting that same kind of enthusiasm around climate issues to this day. Rogers and her organization are looking forward to the many climate awareness activities planned for Earth Day 2020.
The first Earth Day remains "the largest civic event in human history," says @EarthDayNetwork president Kathleen Rogers, setting the tone for a series of talks on the positive steps we all can take across industries and communities to combat climate change pic.twitter.com/YgD329M2RA
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) May 14, 2019
Washington, D.C.'s Ward 3 councilmember Mary Cheh emceed the event, calling special attention to the recent achievements of youth in the realm of climate advocacy.
The youth of the world "are our future, and they're going to save us," says @EarthDayNetwork Gala MC (and DC councilwoman) @marycheh #ClimateAction #EarthDay2020 pic.twitter.com/7C0AlYQVZO
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) May 14, 2019
Early on, the night focused on the efforts of business leaders to cultivate greener images for their brands. Suzanne DiBianca, executive vice president of corporate relations at the San Francisco-based software firm Salesforce, accepted an award in recognition of her company's work eliminating its carbon footprint and enlisting community stakeholders in a sustainability and climate awareness campaign. Toyota's sustainability director Kevin Butt, for his part, discussed the automaker's latest strides in hydrogen- and electricity-powered vehicles, and laid out new goals for further reductions in the company's overall carbon emissions.
"We realized that the community was an important and critical stakeholder," says @SuzanneDiBianca of the green company Salesforce as she accepted her award at the @EarthDayNetwork gala. "Hundreds of thousands of volunteer hours have gone toward climate causes." #ClimateAction pic.twitter.com/HoVHDUh3My
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) May 14, 2019
After these talks the gala pivoted toward popular media when well-loved Today show veteran Al Roker accepted an award of his own for his commitment to communicating the severity of climate change. In his speech, Roker said he was grateful to be able to use his platform to distribute scientific fact to the American public and keep the dialogue on sustainability going in these contentious political times.
"You don't need a weatherman to tell you which way the wind is blowing," says Climate Visionary Award recipient @alroker. "We have to take an advocacy stance to let our politicians know that we believe in this" and hold them accountable. @EarthDayNetwork #climatechange pic.twitter.com/456qYEScvE
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) May 15, 2019
As fish and falafel dinners were served to the assembled guests, National Football League chef Charity Morgan took to the podium to discuss her work improving the diets of American footballers. She noted that, contrary to what you might expect, the food provided to these athletes has historically been nutrient-poor and unsustainable. She's been changing that one meal at a time, establishing a positive, sustainability-minded relationship with the NFL and arranging more nutritious plant-based dietary options for players.
"How do you get NFL players to go plant-based? You speak to them with food," says Chef Charity Morgan, whose work has spread healthy, sustainable meal practices throughout the NFL @ChefCharity #EarthDay2020 @EarthDayNetwork pic.twitter.com/yPU7t11fUk
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) May 15, 2019
The next award recipient was the evening's youngest speaker, 13-year-old climate striker Alexandria Villaseñor, who was recognized for her work galvanizing the first-ever worldwide school strike for climate on March 15. Inspired by school strike for climate pioneer Greta Thunberg, Villaseñor is mobilizing youth around the world for an even mroe ambitious international demonstration on May 24.
"Together, my activist friends and I rallied 1.6 million students in 125 countries to take place in the first-ever international climate strike on March 15," says 13-y.o. activist @AlexandriaV2005. The next is on 5/24. "I will never give up." #climateaction @EarthDayNetwork pic.twitter.com/xxuV48VKT6
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) May 15, 2019
Rounding out the evening were presentations from actress-turned-documentary filmmaker Ashley Bell and blockbuster director James Cameron. Bell, whose documentary debut Love and Bananas makes a compelling emotional case for the protection of elephants worldwide, accepted her climate leadership award with a call to preserve the beauty of nature for future generations. Cameron concluded the gala with remarks beamed in from New Zealand, focusing on the importance of civic engagement in bringing about systemic change and exhorting everyone to "Get involved, get informed, and vote Earth!"
Climate Leadership award winner Ashley Bell directed the landmark elephant documentary Love & Bananas. "We wanted audiences to feel empowered and uplifted when watching it," she says, not dejected and hopeless. @EarthDayNetwork #ClimateAction #EarthDay2020 pic.twitter.com/MPZ1PWt73n
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) May 15, 2019

In recent years, global youth have demonstrated in spades their enthusiasm for climate action and their skill at rallying others to join them in their pursuit of a greener planet. Recognizing that we all have much to learn from the brave example of these enterprising youth leaders, Connect4Climate is handing its social media channels over to student groups in Rome, Italy tomorrow to kick off an exciting new series of #StudentTakeover sessions.

This Earth Day, Monday, April 22, is sure to inspire exciting climate action all over the world from a wide variety of eco-minded organizations and individuals. Part of what makes the day so special is the diversity of those who participate—and this diversity will itself be the focus of a wide-ranging 2:00 PM-6:30 PM Earth Day event in Stockholm (8:00 AM-12:30 PM Eastern Time), the second annual We Don’t Have Time Earth Day Conference.

On Friday, April 5, some 700 high school and college students gathered at the the Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II in Naples, Italy for an honest climate discussion with Italy's Minister of the Environment, Sergio Costa. At the heart of the event was the question of how best to safeguard the world's natural capital, i.e. protect the scope and diversity of natural ecosystems everywhere. Biodiversity and robust forests are essential to the health of our species and our planet; over the course of the three-hour session, Costa and the assembled young people strove to arrive at a common understanding of how to keep the Earth from further damage, and, where possible, how to undo the damage already done.

Opening remarks were delivered by professor and university dean Gaetano Manfredi and Connect4Climate's own program manager Giulia Braga. These introductions set the stage for an event emphasizing the power of youth innovation and activism to make an impact on climate worldwide. With a touching tribute, the event was formally dedicated to Connect4Climate's late climate expert and content lead Max Thabiso Edkins, who always went the extra mile to include young, bold thinkers in the climate dialogue. The tribute recalled a spirited exhortation from Edkins to "take this momentum and help solve this challenge of our generation."
Grazie #Napoli for hosting an energising event that brought young voices into the conversation about how to accelerate #ClimateAction & shape our future. We dedicated today’s event to our dear Max Thabiso Edkins whose words continue to inspire the next generation. #NaturalCapital pic.twitter.com/pLovSgwYmy
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) April 5, 2019
The event kicked off in earnest with a lively performance from sustainable music collective BungtBangt, who played on intruments made from recycled everyday materials. "Together," the group's frontman said, "we can be protectors, not destroyers, of the Earth." He maintained that natural capital was absolutely essential to the daily existence of everyone on the planet, and noted that music was an especially fitting means of distributing this message, for "Music is the purest form of natural energy."

After the performance came a discussion between Sergio Costa and journalist Paolo Chiariello and a question-and-answer exchange with the students in the audience. Costa pointed to recent ocean conservation legislation and other good work the Italian government was doing as examples of steps in the right direction, but made it clear that there was a tremendous amount of work left to be done, and that it was up to young people to stand up for their beliefs and be as vocal as possible about the changes they wish to see implemented.
We are LIVE w @SergioCosta_min: https://t.co/H4RiQGJS75
— Connect4Climate (@Connect4Climate) April 5, 2019
“Our families understood before our institutions that a different future, one that is plastic free, is possible. Get on the streets, make yourselves heard. That’s the only way any change will ever happen.” #naturalcapital pic.twitter.com/B0f7A4w1JD
"Our families understood before our institutions that a different future—one that is plastic-free—is possible," Costa said. "Get on the streets, make yourselves heard. That's the only way change will ever happen." He made it clear that the environmentalism of today "has to touch everyday life" if it's to be successful. "If it does not upset our habits," he noted, climate discussion will not solve anything. Action must always undergird the movement if we're to have a chance at saving our planet. And the youth of the world have demonstrated their willingness to make that action happen.

Connect4Climate live-streamed the event from beginning to end on our Facebook channel, and you can still watch the footage in its entirety at this link.

X-Ray Fashion, a Connect4Climate and Vulcan Productions virtual reality experience created by Danish media collective MANND and directed by fashion photographer Francesco Carrozzini, harnesses the immersion of VR to raise vital questions about the environmental and human costs of “fast fashion,” providing participants with a firsthand look at the wastefulness and labor exploitation underpinning a massive global industry.
The mission of X-Ray Fashion to raise awareness and spark concrete change among both consumers and companies aligns perfectly with Connect4Climate’s mandate to disseminate climate knowledge and foster climate action worldwide.
X-Ray Fashion has been touring the globe in an effort to impact as many people as possible, and we are proud to announce that the VR installation has just been nominated for Webby awards in two distinct categories: Best Interaction Design and VR: Interactive, Game or Real-Time.
Follow the links above and vote for X-Ray Fashion if you’d like to see this project recognized with People’s Voice awards—and feel free to circulate these links among any acquaintances you think may also be interested in voting. You can also spread the word by sharing this Facebook video, tailor-made for the occasion. We need all the help we can get if we’re going to pull off a win!
These Webby nominations are exciting and heartening for all of us here at Connect4Climate, and we thank you for your support in this competition and otherwise.
This Friday in Naples, Italy, the Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II will play host to a vital climate gathering focused on the celebration and preservation of the world's "natural capital." Themes of climate change mitigation, environmental protection and the primacy of safeguarding the world's natural resources will animate a moderated discussion between Italian Minister of the Environment Sergio Costa and some 700 assembled high school and college students.
Know any young people campaigning for climate action? The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) is holding a competition centered on change-making youth passionate about sustainability and the environment.
If the world is to keep climate change at manageable levels before the middle of the century, changes in lifestyles are not only inevitable, but would need to be radical, and start immediately. Considering current consumption levels, citizens in many developed countries would have to cut their lifestyle carbon footprints by about 80-90% or more, and some in developing countries by about 30-80% within the next 30 years.

Bonn, Germany, 11 February 2019 – Starting today, organizations, cities, industries, universities, governments, and others taking bold leadership on climate change can nominate their work for a UN Global Climate Action Award.
The award, the focus of United Nations Climate Change’s Momentum for Change initiative, recognizes the most innovative projects in the field of climate action.
Winning activities encompass scalable and replicable examples of what people are doing to address climate change, in the hope of inspiring others to act. The selected activities will be recognized and celebrated at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP 25) in Chile.
Past recipients of the award have maximized their impact and scaled up globally.
For example, Bhungroo, a rainwater management system used in dry spells to provide food security and sustainable livelihoods to marginal farmers across India, won the award in 2015. Today, Bhungroo is also being implemented in Ghana, Zimbabwe, Togo, and Madagascar.
Liter of Light, a solar lighting project that can be implemented with everyday objects and carpentry skills, won the award in 2011. It began in the Philippines and has since spread to 30 countries. In 2015, Liter of Light went on to win the coveted Zayed Future Energy prize.
Past winners have also included Google, Microsoft, and the Government of British Columbia, Canada.
“With the adoption of the Katowice Climate Package, we have entered a new era in our collective efforts to address climate change; one demanding increased climate action at all levels,” said Patricia Espinosa, Executive Secretary of UN Climate Change.
“The UN Global Climate Action Award is an opportunity to recognize leaders who are not only taking such action, but providing an inspiring example for other governments, businesses, cities and communities to follow. I therefore encourage those currently leading projects—from large corporations to small cooperatives—to apply.”
The 2019 award will recognize climate action that is already achieving real results in four categories:
- Planetary Health: recognizing novel solutions that balance the need for both human health and a healthy planet.
- Climate Neutral Now: recognizing efforts by individuals, companies and governments that are achieving real results in transitioning to climate neutrality.
- Women for Results: recognizing the critical leadership and participation of women in addressing climate change.
- Financing for Climate Friendly Investment: recognizing successful financial innovations for adaptation and climate mitigation.
The award’s Advisory Panel, made up of senior experts from various fields and countries, will select the winners. The panel is part of the secretariat’s Momentum for Change initiative, which is implemented with the support of The Rockefeller Foundation and operates in partnership with Climate Neutral Now, donors supporting the implementation of the UNFCCC Gender Action Plan, and the World Economic Forum.
Applications for the 2019 UN Global Climate Action Award will be accepted from 11 February through 30 April 2019 at: https://momentum.unfccc.int/
For more information, please contact:
Sarah Marchildon, Momentum for Change Team Lead, UN Climate Change
SMarchildon@unfccc.int | +49 228 815 1065
Melissa Angel, Momentum for Change Communications Specialist, UN Climate Change
MAngel@unfccc.int | +49 228 815 1602
Digital assets available for download here.