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With Climate Week NYC 2025 just around the corner, Climate Generation is thrilled to spotlight events centering frontline and BIPOC leadership, all open to the public! Whether you are tuning in from across the nation or are in New York City, we’ve found virtual, hybrid, and in-person events that we hope will educate, motivate, and inspire you during Climate Week NYC.

Indigenous Solutions Short Films Screening | 9/15 | Virtual

Kick off Climate Week NYC with this Indigenous Solutions Short Films Screening, consisting of a virtual screening and a live virtual filmmaker discussion. 

Healing Ourselves & Healing Systems — Climate, Consciousness & Mental Health Summit | 9/17 | 5-10 pm | 538 E 11th St New York, NY 10009 

How can we look within to transform our outer worlds — and is collective healing, rooted in embodied action, the answer? Preparing for Climate Week NYC, explore powerful healing modalities and living systems as guides for systemic transformation. Reimagine a path forward that meets today’s urgency with resilience and renewal — without repeating the extractive patterns that created our crises.

5th Annual BIPOC Climate Justice Summit | 9/21 | Hybrid (see event for more details)

This year’s summit convenes frontline communities, organizers, researchers, funders, and public servants to build collective power and advance transformative climate justice. Through dynamic panels, interactive booths, and creative activations, this gathering aims to ignite alignment across sectors and build momentum for the shifts needed to deliver climate justice. The summit is led by the HBCU Green Fund, Donors of Color Network, and ACE Observatory, with Columbia University as host partner.

CLISSD Regenerative Agriculture and Climate Justice Dialogue | 9/21 | Hybrid (see event for more details)

This is a dialogue to raise awareness and engage individuals, non-profit organizations, farmers, and businesses to use regenerative agriculture to reduce climate change.

Danger Season & Decades of Deceit: Why We Must Hold the Fossil Fuel Industry Accountable Webinar | 9/25 | Virtual 

Join UCS and speakers from the Center for Climate Integrity, the Gulf South Fossil Finance Hub, and Lekeh Development Foundation (Nigeria) for a virtual discussion on a critical strategy in the fight for climate justice and a livable planet: holding the fossil fuel industry accountable.

Can’t get enough? Find even more climate justice events happening during Climate Week NYC.

The post Climate Generation’s Guide to Climate Week NYC 2025 appeared first on Climate Generation.

Climate Generation’s Guide to Climate Week NYC 2025

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Greenpeace Australia Pacific response to the Middle-East crisis

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Greenpeace Hungary projects “BLOODY PROFIT: SHAME” on Hungarian oil giant MOL’s refinery at Százhalombatta. The protest is to send a message that it’s unacceptable that the Hungarian government refuses to support an EU-wide embargo of Russian crude oil and refined products. With a veto, the government defends the profit of MOL that the oil company generated during the war in Ukraine, benefiting from the low prices of Russian oil. © Zsuzsi Dorgo / Greenpeace

Like so many people around the world, I am experiencing a sense of horror at the escalating violence in Iran and the Middle East. Greenpeace has called for all parties to immediately halt further military action, for international law to be fully upheld, and for a return to diplomacy to stop the suffering of civilians. The people of Iran, and all people, everywhere, have the inalienable right to live free of violence, fear and coercion. As humans we grieve for lives lost, and for all those who suffer.

But while countless people experience the consequences of this latest mass violence, some interests will no doubt attempt to benefit from the crisis. We can expect that fossil fuel corporations and lobbyists will cynically use the closure of the Strait of Hormuz-a major shipping route for oil and gas-to propagandise for increased fossil fuel production.

The practical reality is that a country as rich in renewable sources of energy as Australia should not be hostage to the global fossil fuel trade. The pursuit of fossil fuels–coal, oil and gas–have been the source of vast scale conflict, violence and geopolitical volatility for far too long. This will only accelerate as the climate crisis–itself driven primarily by fossil fuel extraction and burning–continues to put greater pressure on natural and social systems.

The truth is that the only absolute way to provide true energy security for the world is to phase out fossil fuels rapidly and deliberately, at emergency speed and scale, and to accelerate the shift to modern, renewable energy.

It’s in the strategic interest of all countries, including Australia, to unhook from volatile sources of energy. As long as our world runs on oil and gas, our peace, security and our pockets will always be at the mercy of geopolitics. As Professor Hussein Dia argued in The Conversation yesterday, this latest war in the Middle East shows why quitting oil is more important than ever.

These events are another jarring reminder that Australia doesn’t need more fossil fuel investment–we need less.

Locally controlled renewables are the best way to address the structural vulnerability at the heart of this recurring crisis. Ultimately, our freedom and security, prosperity and sustainability, are all best served by shifting from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

Dependence on fossil fuels makes all of us hostage to geopolitics and the whims of tyrants.

Greenpeace Australia Pacific response to the Middle-East crisis

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Environmental Groups Challenge Air Permit for Natural Gas Expansion at Atlanta Plant

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The Sierra Club and Southern Environmental Law Center are suing over state regulators’ approval of new gas turbines at Plant Bowen, citing concerns about worsening air quality.

Atlanta has spent decades battling smog and air pollution. Now, state regulators have cleared the way for a major natural gas expansion at Georgia Power’s Plant Bowen, a massive coal-fired power plant roughly 40 miles northwest of downtown that could add hundreds of tons of new air pollution each year to a region already struggling with unhealthy air.

Environmental Groups Challenge Air Permit for Natural Gas Expansion at Atlanta Plant

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War in Iran Could Have ‘Historic’ Disruptions on Energy Markets

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Oil prices jumped after the United States and Israel attacked Iran. Experts say the effects on oil and gas prices will depend on how long the war lasts and whether Iran damages energy infrastructure.

The U.S. and Israeli war against Iran is disrupting energy markets and driving oil and gas prices higher in the United States and globally. While those increases are modest so far, experts say the war has the potential to cause more severe and lasting impacts if Iran damages the region’s energy infrastructure or restricts shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

War in Iran Could Have ‘Historic’ Disruptions on Energy Markets

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