My grandma is my north star and my mentor in nature. She is a beacon of hope for those committed to protecting and appreciating nature and all that the outdoors has to offer. She thrives in nature and she works, with relentless determination, to get those she loves outside to explore the wondrous beauty of the natural world.

When I was young, many weekends were spent packing up the car and driving hours away from the busy day-to-day of our lives, filling our weekends with outdoor adventures. Adventures varied from hut-to-hut hikes meeting inspiring thru-hikers who chatted with us about their times on the trail, cross-country skiing in the early mornings in search of grazing moose, ice skating across broad lakes, learning to kayak properly whilst fishing, playing games identifying small critters plants and flowers, to trekking through snowy woods to secluded huts warmed only by small fires. While these adventures were intended as fun weekends away from our routine, they were also lessons in how to engage with and respect the natural world as we enjoyed the playgrounds it offered.

While my grandma served as our leader in engaging with the environment, she let nature be our teacher. She knew that she too would always find new things to wonder about. So, through her eyes, we got to see it and appreciate its beauty. Today, at 83, she still regularly goes camping, hiking, and xc skiing, but with a more adamant demeanor, because she knows that she has only a limited time to have these adventures. Although this is true, and she has slowed down. She has watched my siblings and I grow older and as we continue to engage with nature, to respect it, and to learn from it. Although she has watched her natural playground be threatened and shrink because of climate change caused by human powers, she has also seen a growth in those willing to fight for it; those like you and me who cherish this natural playground and who want to protect it for our future generations. In her day she was the anomaly, today those convictions to cherish and protect our planet are felt by so many of us so that we can take on that beacon of hope for our planet.

What I grasped from these naive childhood explorations of nature is that our world is colorful and magnificent, that everything is connected.
That it is enduring, and I am lucky to have been able to see nature and all its connections in the ways that I have. As I have grown older, have lived across continents, and have seen and learned more about the complexities of humans, ecosystems, and our changing climate, those childhood lessons have transformed into a deeper recognition that we must respect and embrace the natural harmonies of our world, just as my grandma has always done.

My climate story is fortunate; I’ve never faced the climate disasters that are displacing communities or forcing evacuations from homes due to extreme weather occurrences.
Still, I have seen the lake that I used to skate on as a child stop freezing over during the winter, and I’ve stopped swimming in certain lakes and rivers due to dangerous levels of toxins from algal blooms and bacteria. And I no longer see moose wandering through forests and grasslands in more southern parts of New England. These changes are not themselves the story but are little, tiny pieces to a much larger story of climate change.
While those childhood experiences may, very well, only ever again be a childhood memory, I know that I must help protect those natural ecosystems and climate so that they continue to endure and work in harmony with each other and so that future generations get to see and experience the colorful magnificent nature in the same way that I got to.

I want my climate story to be one of hope. So, I hope to inspire our current generations to do as my grandma did – to guide others into nature so they, too, can learn to embrace and respect those natural systems that are integral to the climate and our world. Those childhood lessons, combined with the knowledge we have today in our current climate crisis, can and must be used to empower and motivate communities, societies, and humanity to protect the harmonious systems of nature so that they endure for us and for the wonderous ecosystems that depend on it.

Alyssa is a graduate Public Health Student at Lund University in Sweden. Originally from New England, USA, she grew up in the mountains and is passionate about making sustainable systems in public health.
The post My North Star to Nature appeared first on Climate Generation.
Climate Change
Nature cannot be ignored by Europe’s next big budget
Adeline Rochet is a programme manager for the Corporate Leaders Group Europe, a business coalition driving the transition to a sustainable, competitive, and resilient economy convened by the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL).
Europe’s economy depends on the natural world functioning as it should, but the effects of climate change risk undermining increasingly delicate ecosystems. Talks about the European Union’s next long-term budget miss this fact.
Climate-related losses in the EU have already reached €822 billion since 1980, with a quarter of that damage concentrated in just the past four years. Ecosystems are under increasing pressure: more than 80% of protected habitats are in poor condition, soils are degrading and water stress is rising across the continent.
The latest state of the climate report by the EU’s Earth monitoring service Copernicus confirms this worrying state of affairs: 95% of Europe experienced above-average temperatures in 2025.
Economic exposure to nature-related risk is also growing. Businesses, banks and insurers are beginning to reflect this in their risk assessments.
So, will the policymakers in charge of developing the European Union’s next big budget integrate this vision? We are in the midst of finding out.
Every seven years, the EU must negotiate a new budget that will help fund priorities over a seven-year-long period. The current one, which runs out next year, is worth more than a trillion euros.
Talks about the next multiannual financial framework (MFF) for 2028-2034 are now getting serious and the initial outline of this new budget shows it will focus on competitiveness, resilience and prosperity.
But, as the European Parliament adopted its negotiating position for the crunch budget talks and EU member states shape their approach ahead of a Council meeting on May 26, it is clear that the positioning of nature within this framework is strategically underestimated.
Why nature impacts economic growth
Back in 2022, France’s nuclear power output was severely affected when heatwaves drove up the temperature of the rivers used to cool atomic reactors, impacting other European countries too. This was particularly poor timing given the energy price crisis triggered earlier that year by Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.
Low river levels caused by drought have also heavily impacted economic activity and growth in countries like Germany, due to the negative effect on inland trade, while degraded fields in the Netherlands combined with heavy rainfall have ruined potato harvests.
These examples show that we cannot detach the health of the European economy from the good functioning of nature.
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Nearly three-quarters of businesses in the eurozone rely directly on ecosystem services such as clean water, fertile soils and pollination. That dependency extends into the financial system, where around 75% of bank lending is exposed to companies dependent on these natural assets.
They entirely underpin supply chains and financial stability across the European economy. If load-bearing ecosystems collapse, businesses not only face disruption in their own operations, but they will also be exposed to failures from suppliers and customers.
This is not just a risk for individual companies, it is a threat for the whole system.
A budget that looks greener than it is
According to the latest proposals for the next MFF, a single 35% climate and environmental target will replace priorities that used to have distinct funding. As it stands, biodiversity has a 10% target, yet spending has struggled to reach even 8%, already showing how easily it is put to one side in practice.
In the new framework, biodiversity is absorbed into a broader category with no separate tracking or visibility. Dedicated instruments are folded into larger funding envelopes, and nature-based investments are placed in direct and distorted competition with industrial projects.
These are often faster to deploy and easier to measure, making them more attractive.
Headline figures reinforce some appearance of ambition, with €587–635 billion allocated to climate and environmental objectives. But since these are aggregated numbers, they do not show how much will reach ecosystem conservation or restoration.
Less visibility, weaker accountability
Biodiversity funding also remains structurally fragile, with around 80% concentrated in agriculture policy rather than supported by a diversified investment strategy.
This shift is structural: nature has been relegated from a defined priority to a mere discretionary allocation, and the governance model reinforces this dynamic.
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Greater reliance on National and Regional Partnership Plans (NRPPs) moves decision-making into national spending choices, where fiscal and domestic political pressure will likely mean long-term ecosystem investments struggle to compete with short-term economic demands.
The current MFF paints a worrying picture of structural triple risk for nature: reduced visibility, increased competition for funding and weaker accountability.
Nature is critical infrastructure
It is a point worth reiterating: investment in nature offers clear economic returns. Healthy ecosystems drive resilience by reducing exposure to climate damage and supporting local economic activity.
Public finance plays a decisive role in enabling these investments at scale, making budget design a question of risk management and capital allocation.
Nature-based solutions already perform essential economic functions. They regulate water systems, restore carbon sinks, provide a buffer against extreme weather events and support agricultural productivity.
These are characteristics of infrastructure. Energy systems, transport networks and digital capacity are treated as strategic investments because they underpin competitiveness.
Natural systems play the exact same role, so why does the current budget plan not reflect this?
The next EU budget will shape investment for the decade ahead. Its structure will determine how risks are managed and where capital flows. Nature cannot be erased in favour of competing short-term priorities.
In the upcoming negotiations, European leaders still have the option to treat nature as a structural objective and a core asset, supporting Europe’s resilience and long-term competitiveness. But they must act now, before it’s too late.
The post Nature cannot be ignored by Europe’s next big budget appeared first on Climate Home News.
https://www.climatechangenews.com/2026/05/25/nature-cannot-be-ignored-by-europes-next-big-budget/
Climate Change
In Florida, an Agricultural Town in Need of an Economic Boost Eyes Hyperscale Data Centers
Across the state’s heartland, communities such as Indiantown are weighing proposals for hyperscale data centers. The massive facilities would reshape Florida’s rural lands.
INDIANTOWN, Fla.—Carroll McAllister frets over the prospect of a hyperscale data center opening next to the grassy expanse where she grew up, in a shack her father built.
In Florida, an Agricultural Town in Need of an Economic Boost Eyes Hyperscale Data Centers
Climate Change
USDA Extends Pause on Loans for Controversial Digesters That Turn Manure Into Biogas
Anaerobic digester loans showed “significant delinquency rates,” the U.S. Department of Agriculture said, while environmental groups see the technology driving an expansion of large-scale animal farming operations.
The federal government’s pause on new loans for anaerobic digesters, the controversial method of converting animal manure from large-scale feeding operations into biogas, will now extend through the end of the year.
USDA Extends Pause on Loans for Controversial Digesters That Turn Manure Into Biogas
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