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Climate change news often focuses on the negative effects on our communities. These news stories often provoke feelings of sorrow and can increase our climate grief. This resource list is intended to provide outlets that focus on the positive effects that environmental advocates are having on our planet. It is also meant to inspire communities by providing examples of projects that are in place and working to combat climate change.

Positive Climate News Sources

Climate Generation’s Gist

  • Climate Generation’s Gist is a monthly newsletter with updates on the nonprofit’s work in training educators, mentoring youth, and engaging with communities through storytelling to accelerate climate action.

Climate Generation’s Teach Climate Tips

  • Climate Generation’s Teach Climate Tips is a network of educators and includes a monthly newsletter to help equip teachers with tools to teach about climate change.

Environment America’s Good News

  • Environment America is a national network of 30 state environmental groups that work together to achieve clean air, clean water, clean energy, wildlife and open spaces. 

Happy Eco News

  • Happy Eco News provides positive information about the environment and the people working to improve it. 

Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s “The Climate Optimist”

  • Havard’s “The Climate Optimist” provides a monthly dose of good news about climate change. 

The Daily Climate’s Good News Page

  • The Daily Climate is a publication of Environmental Health Sciences, which is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to driving science into public discussion and policy on environmental health issues including climate change. 

The Optimist Daily’s Environment Page

  • “The Optimist Daily is your go-to herald of positive environmental news, highlighting eco-friendly solutions and scientific progress around climate action, circularity, conservation, and more. Learn about everything eco in our Environment section.”

Climate Solutions

Green Space

Community gardens are a great way to bring communities together, combat food insecurity, reduce carbon emissions from food shipments (including packaging) and improve the quality of the food being consumed. Here are a few examples of community gardens in the United States:

  1. Growing Neighbors is located in Spokane, Washington and is a nonprofit organization that connects community members with the 26+ community gardens in the area. 
  2. Shiloh Field in Denton, Texas is home of the largest community garden in the United States. Their mission is to bring communities together and to feed the food insecure. 
  3. Soo Line Community Garden is located in Minneapolis, Minnesota and was founded in 1991. This community garden replaced an empty underutilized lot and became a green refuge to members of the neighborhood. 

Green roofs, green walls, and other forms of living architecture have economical, social, and environmental benefits. This type of infrastructure is a climate adaptation that can reduce flooding, promote biodiversity, and reduce energy use by functioning as an additional layer of insulation. Tree and vegetation planting can also reduce heat indexes and have a positive effect on heat islands in cities. Here are a few examples of green infrastructure in the United States:

  1. California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, California has a green roof that covers nearly 87% of the total 2.5 acre space. 
  2. The Jacob Javits Convention Center in Manhattan, New York, has one of the largest green roofs in the United States, covering 6.25 acres. 
  3. Will’s Garden at the Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana, Illinois was a recipient of the 2023 Green Roof Award of Excellence in Extensive Commercial Projects. 

Microgrids

Microgrids are distributed energy resources that act as a single, controllable entity. Microgrids can connect and disconnect from the grid to operate, making them an energy resiliency tool to combat power outages that disrupt communities. Advanced microgrids also have the capability to model energy use and use local assets to save costs and reduce energy losses. Here are a few examples of Microgrids in the United States:

  1. Fort Collins, Colorado Microgrid is part of a larger project called Fort Collins Zero Energy District. This microgrid was created to assist the City of Fort Collins in reducing peak loads by 20-30%, increase the input of renewable energy and deliver improved efficiency and reliability to the grid. 
  2. Montgomery County, Maryland has two microgrids that power essential facilities during power outages. These were put in place due to the increasing number of outages from major storm events. The microgrids are focused on bringing power to their public safety headquarters and a correctional facility in the area. 
  3. Santa Rita Union School District in Salinas, California has installed Solar and energy storage systems at six different locations. These systems will be able to keep the school running for up to 7 hours during a power outage. It is also meant to offset some of the energy use pulled from the grid, saving the schools money on electricity. 

Regenerative Agriculture

Regenerative Agriculture is a systematic farming method that focuses on closed-loop practices to limit the amount of input of fertilizers and pesticides, improve soil ecology and health, and promote existing ecosystems and wildlife. Here are a few examples of regenerative agriculture in the United States:

  1. Acres of Eden is a regenerative farm located in Fergus Falls, Minnesota. This farm focuses on improving the quality of their products without the use of pesticides, preservatives or chemicals. This farm focuses on sustainable circular farming methods to improve soil health, increase biodiversity, improve water management techniques, and increase climate resilience.
  2. Honey’s Harvest Farm is a regenerative farm located in Lothian, Maryland. They focus on permaculture practices and growing a healthy living soil to provide nutrient rich products for foods and medicines.  
  3. Rivers Edge Ranch is located in Chewelah, Washington. This farm values sustainability and keeping the land viable for generations to come. This farm focuses on rotational grazing, reduction of artificial fertilizers, improvement of water quality, decreasing tillage, and enhancing biodiversity. 

Resilience Hubs

A resilience hub is typically a community gathering place such as libraries, schools, churches or community centers that focuses on addressing the root causes of vulnerability with every services’, programs and infrastructure. These hubs usually include a disaster response plan for the community to address vulnerabilities during an extreme storm event. You can find more information about resilience hubs here. Here are a few resilience hubs that currently exist in the US:

  1. New Ulm Public Library in New Ulm, Minnesota, offers services that strive to foster an environment that promotes community connections and engagement, ignites curiosity and growth while providing services that enrich the community members lives. Their current strategic plan can be found here.
  2. Police Athletic League of Wilmington, Delaware, is a nonprofit organization that has been serving its community for over 22 years by increasing resources for families and youth in Wilmington and New Castle that includes programming for early learning, before and aftercare, education, prevention, recreation, and other activities for community members.  
  3. Rock Island Public Library in Rock Island, Illinois, provides a multitude of services for community members including education resources on a variety of topics, a game library, a seed library, a home and hobby supply library, and a technology library. This allows families to check out items that can be used without the need to buy an item. This is not only a great resource for citizens, but it is also reducing the amount of items that will end up in the landfill someday.
Chloe Olson

Chloe is a Civil and Environmental Engineer, and graduate student at Humphrey College of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota. Chloe served as a Minnesota Climate Impact Corps Member at Climate Generation throughout the summer of 2024. She is pursuing a master’s degree in Science,Technology, and Environmental Policy to develop cross-cultural competency to communicate scientific information among different communities in Minnesota. Her empathetic nature and dedication to justice will aid in ensuring that solutions have legitimacy and involve cross-boundary organizing to establish equity. In her free time she enjoys going on walks with her dogs, reading thrillers, downhill skiing and riding her bike.

The post Resources to Spark Hope appeared first on Climate Generation.

Resources to Spark Hope

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Wondering How to Talk About Climate Change? Take a Lesson from Bad Bunny

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Discussing climate change can make a difference. Focusing on the impacts in everyday life is a good place to start, experts say.

When Bad Bunny climbed onto broken power lines during his Super Bowl halftime show, millions of viewers saw a spectacle. Climate communicators saw a lesson in how to talk about climate change.

Wondering How to Talk About Climate Change? Take a Lesson from Bad Bunny

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Greenpeace response to escalating attacks on gas fields in Middle East

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Sydney, Thursday 19 March 2026 — In response to escalating attacks on gas fields in the Middle East, including Israeli strikes on Iran’s giant South Pars gas field and Iranian retaliations on gas fields in Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the following lines can be attributed to Solaye Snider, Campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific:

The targeting of gas fields across the Middle East is a perilous escalation that reinforces just how vulnerable our fossil-fuelled world really is.

Oil and gas have long been used as tools of power and coercion by authoritarian regimes. They cause climate chaos and environmental pollution and they drive conflict and war. The energy security of every nation still hooked on gas, including Australia, is under direct threat.

For countries that are reliant on gas imports, like Sri Lanka, Pakistan and South Korea, this crisis is just getting started. It can take months to restart a gas export facility once it is shut down, meaning the shockwaves of these strikes will be felt for a long time to come.

It is a gross and tragic injustice that while civilians are killed and lose their homes to this escalating violence, and families struggle with a tightening cost-of-living, gas giants like Woodside and Santos have seen their share prices surge on the prospect of windfall war profits. 

We must break this cycle. Transitioning to local renewable energy is the way to protect Australian households from the inherent volatility of fossil fuels like gas.

-ENDS-

Images available for download via the Greenpeace Media Library

Media contact: Lucy Keller on 0491 135 308 or lkeller@greenpeace.org

Greenpeace response to escalating attacks on gas fields in Middle East

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DeBriefed 20 March 2026: Energy crisis deepens | Brazil’s new climate plan | New Zealand climate case

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Welcome to Carbon Brief’s DeBriefed.
An essential guide to the week’s key developments relating to climate change.

This week

Iran war fallout continues

WORK FROM HOME: The International Energy Agency has advised its member countries to take 10 steps in response to the ongoing energy crisis fuelled by the Iran war, including reducing highway speeds and encouraging people to work from home, said the Guardian. It came after retaliatory attacks between Israel and Iran continued to destroy energy infrastructure in the Middle East, causing energy prices to soar further, said Reuters.

SUPPLY DISRUPTED: The IEA also said it is prepared to make more of its member nations’ 1.4bn-barrel oil reserves available to help ease the impacts of what it called the “biggest supply disruption in the history of the oil market”, reported Bloomberg. The outlet noted that Asian countries have been hit hardest by the shortages, caused by a “near-halt” of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

EU SUMMIT: The energy crisis dominated talks at an EU leaders summit on Thursday, said Politico. Arriving at the summit, Spain’s prime minister Pedro Sánchez attacked other European leaders for using the energy crisis as an excuse to “gut climate policies”, according to the EU Observer. The Financial Times said that some European leaders have asked the European Commission to overhaul its flagship emissions trading system (ETS) by summer in response to the energy crisis.

COAL BOOST: In response to the conflict, utility companies in Asia are “boosting coal-fired power generation to cut costs and safeguard energy supply”, said Reuters. UN climate change executive secretary Simon Stiell told Reuters: “If there was ever a moment to accelerate that energy transition, ​breaking dependencies which have shackled economies, this is the time.”

Around the world

  • WINDFARM WINDFALL: The Trump administration in the US is considering a nearly $1bn settlement with TotalEnergies to cancel the French energy company’s two planned windfarms off the US east coast and have it instead invest in fossil-gas infrastructure in Texas, according to documents seen by the New York Times.
  • BUSINESS CLASH: Following “clashes” with the agribusiness sector, Brazil launched its new climate plan, which calls for a 49-58% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from 2022 levels by 2025 and includes “specific guidelines for different sectors”, reported Folha de Sao Paolo.
  • SALES SLUMP: Sales of liquified petroleum gas from India’s state-run oil companies have fallen by 17% this month due to cuts in deliveries to commercial and industrial consumers “amid the widespread logistical bottlenecks triggered by the Iran war”, said the Economic Times.
  • CUBAN ENERGY CRISIS: The US imposed an “effective oil blockade” on Cuba, leaving the country facing its “worst energy crisis in decades”, reported the Washington Post. Meanwhile, Chinese exports of solar panels to the island have “skyrocketed” since 2023, it added.
  • RECORD HIGHS: An “unprecedented” heatwave in the western and south-western US is “shattering dozens of temperature records” and could lead to drought in California in the coming months, reported the Los Angeles Times.
  • VULNERABILITY CONCERNS: Landslides that killed more than 100 people in southern Ethiopia have “renewed concerns about Ethiopia’s vulnerability to climate-related disasters”, said the Addis Standard.

1%

The percentage of England’s land surface that could be devoted to renewables by 2050, according to the long-awaited “land-use framework” released by the UK government this week and covered by Carbon Brief.


Latest climate research

  • Approaching international climate action by shifting the burden of mitigation onto higher-income countries could avoid 13.5 million premature deaths from air pollution in middle- and lower-income countries by 2050 | The Lancet Global Health
  • Beavers can turn the ecosystems surrounding streams into “persistent” sinks of carbon that can sequester an order of magnitude more than non-beaver-modified ecosystems can store | Communications Earth & Environment
  • Mobile-phone data from seven diverse countries during the summer heatwaves of 2022-23 showed a “widespread tendency to withdraw into homes” and an increase in out-of-home activities that can offer cooling, such as indoor retail | Environmental Research: Climate

(For more, see Carbon Brief’s in-depth daily summaries of the top climate news stories on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.)

Captured

Nearly_750_studies_have_found_that_climate_change_has_made_extreme_events_more_severe_or_likely

Carbon Brief this week published a significant update to its map of how climate change is affecting extreme weather events around the world. The map now includes 232 new extreme weather events from studies published in 2024 and 2025. Of these events, 196 were made more severe or more likely to occur by human-driven climate change, 12 were made less severe or less likely to occur and 10 had no discernible human influence. (The remaining 14 studies were inconclusive.)

Spotlight

New Zealand breaks new ground on climate litigation

This week, Carbon Brief speaks to experts about a first-of-its-kind climate lawsuit in New Zealand.

Earlier this week, representatives from two environmentally focused legal advocacy groups challenged the New Zealand government’s climate-action plan in court.

The plaintiffs argued that the measures laid out in the plan are insufficient to achieve the country’s legal obligation to hold global warming to 1.5C above pre-industrial temperatures.

The case could be “influential” in shaping lawsuits and rulings around the world, one legal expert not involved in the case told Carbon Brief.

Reductions vs removals

The new case contends that there are several issues regarding the New Zealand government’s response to climate change.

One of the key arguments the plaintiffs make is that New Zealand’s second emissions reduction plan, which covers the period from 2026-30, is overreliant on the use of tree-planting to achieve its targets.

When the plan was released in December 2024, it was “immediately clear that it was a pretty lacklustre plan”, Eliza Prestidge Oldfield, senior legal researcher at the Environmental Law Initiative, one of the groups behind the legal case, told Carbon Brief.

The plan called for large-scale planting of pine tree plantations, which are not native to New Zealand and have a high risk of burning. Because of this, there are concerns about how permanent any carbon removal provided by these plantations actually can be, experts told Carbon Brief.

Catherine Higham, senior policy fellow at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment who was not involved in the case, said:

“The lawyers are arguing that there are real challenges with equating the emissions that you may be able to remove from the atmosphere through afforestation with actual emissions reductions, which are much more certain.”

‘Global dialogue’

While other climate lawsuits elsewhere in the world have also focused on the inadequacy of a government’s plan to meet its stated emissions-reduction targets, this is the first such case that addresses the role of removals head-on.

Lucy Maxwell, co-director of the Climate Litigation Network, told Carbon Brief that the lawsuit “builds on a decade of climate litigation” in national, regional and international courts.

Maxwell, who was not involved in the New Zealand case, added that there is a “real global dialogue” between, not just plaintiffs, but national courts as well. She said:

“[National courts] look to common issues that have been decided in other countries. They’re not binding on that court if it’s at the national level, but they are influential.”

Given that many other countries have legal frameworks requiring their governments to create plans outlining the pathway to their long-term climate targets, Prestidge Oldfield told Carbon Brief that other jurisdictions “should be interested in these questions around the level of certainty”.

Higham noted that, even if the case is successful, addressing the plan’s shortfalls will face its own set of challenges. She told Carbon Brief:

“A lot of these decisions are political and they can be politically contentious…Those [measures] have to be put into action through legislation and that is then subject to the usual political process. So that’s where the challenge comes in.”

While she could not speculate on the outcome of the case, Prestidge Oldfield said it was “very heartening” to see that both the judge and the opposing counsel “appreciated how much of a concern climate change is globally”.

She added:

“It’s not a given that the judge would even be interested in climate change.”

Watch, read, listen

COMMON APPROACH: The Heated podcast analysed fossil-fuel advertisements and highlighted the most common deception tactics they employed.

THREAT ASSESSMENT: Mongabay mapped the potential threat that oil extraction poses to Venezuela’s ecosystems, including the Amazon rainforest and its coral reefs.

SALT LAKES? GREAT!: High Country News interviewed journalist Dr Caroline Tracey about her new book on saline lakes – such as Utah’s Great Salt Lake – the threats that face them and what they can teach us.

Coming up

  • 23 March-2 April: Third meeting of the preparatory commission for the High Seas Treaty, New York
  • 24-27 March: 64th session of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Bangkok
  • 26-29 March: 14th ministerial conference of the World Trade Organization, Yaoundé, Cameroon

Pick of the jobs

  • International Centre of Research for the Environment and Development (CIRAD), IPCC chapter scientist | Salary: €3,200-3,750 per month. Location: Nogent-sur-Marne, France
  • Avaaz, chief of staff | Salary: Dependent on location. Location: Remote, with preferred time zones
  • Green Party, social media officer | Salary: £31,592-£32,192. Location: Remote or Westminster, UK

DeBriefed is edited by Daisy Dunne. Please send any tips or feedback to debriefed@carbonbrief.org.

This is an online version of Carbon Brief’s weekly DeBriefed email newsletter. Subscribe for free here.

The post DeBriefed 20 March 2026: Energy crisis deepens | Brazil’s new climate plan | New Zealand climate case appeared first on Carbon Brief.

DeBriefed 20 March 2026: Energy crisis deepens | Brazil’s new climate plan | New Zealand climate case

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