I’ve spent most of my career as a storyteller, using stunning visual imagery and compelling personal stories to move people. Moving people is exactly what’s needed to save our planet. We cannot afford to stand still any longer, let alone go backwards. Too often, the very real threat of climate change can feel either distant or overwhelming – robbing the allies we need of their sense of urgency and their drive to take action. But I’ve seen how storytelling can turn apathy into action. Building connection through storytelling is the key to unlocking critical climate action in this decade.
In 2017, I published a photograph of an emaciated polar bear on a barren arctic tundra using it as an entry point into a conversation about climate change. Millions of people saw this image and the resulting global dialogue provided unprecedented insight into the work still necessary to create a large enough movement to activate solutions.
World military expenditure grows to $1.8 trillion in 2018
Start-up devours pollution with new plastic recycling method
Call to Earth and the extraordinary people working for a more sustainable future
Anna Fletcher: Indian student creates a brick made from recycled plastic
Scientists Accidentally Create A Plastic-Eating Enzyme
Kiss the Ground Film Trailer (2020) / What’s the big deal about soil? / Living Soil Film
George Monbiot: Extinction’s Collaborators
JOHN BUELL: Living on a Newly Unrecognizable Planet
Could the Free World start cleaning up its act – from the bottom up?
Wiped out: America’s love of luxury toilet paper is destroying Canadian forests
NORMAN MILLER: The forgotten foods that could excite our tastebuds
Dan Collyns – Peru’s potato museum could stave off world food crisis
Jon Henley: Rise of far right puts Dreyfus affair into spotlight in French election race
Society of the Spectacle / ‘इमेज‘ – ‘Image’: A Poem on Deaths in the Age of Covid
