Instructional Video1:06
Next Animation Studio

Amazon goes from ‘carbon sink’ to carbon creator

12th - Higher Ed
The Amazon used to be praised as our planet’s lungs, absorbing a lot of Earth’s carbon dioxide, but things are going very wrong in the world’s last great wilderness.
Instructional Video24:54
The Wall Street Journal

Sounding the Alarm: Climate and Health

Higher Ed
María Neira of the World Health Organization, Shasta Gaughen of the Pala Band of Mission Indians and Jeni Miller of The Global Climate and Health Alliance discuss the trajectory of climate-based harms to public health.
Instructional Video1:51
Next Animation Studio

World’s largest carbon-sucking machine turned on

12th - Higher Ed
The world’s largest carbon capture plant has opened in Iceland and its manufacturers say it will capture 4,000 tons of carbon dioxide from the air per year.
Instructional Video1:01:55
The Telegraph

Charles Moore discusses British Institutions Climate Change and the rise of China

Higher Ed
When Charles Moore first became a journalist in 1979, Britain was at a crossroads. There were fears the country was facing a perpetual crisis with soaring unemployment, inflation, and social unrest. Britain was bitterly divided....
Instructional Video6:03
Economics Explained

MIT Has Predicted that Society Will Collapse in 2040: The Outcomes & Criticisms

9th - Higher Ed
A report in the 1970's looks at how society will progress along certain factors. Which path is the most viable moving forward and which one is the most distrastrous? Either way, what does the year 2040 have to do with it? Helping you...
Instructional Video6:57
Economics Explained

MIT Has Predicted that Society Will Collapse in 2040: The Limits To Growth

9th - Higher Ed
A report in the 1970's looks at how society will progress along certain factors. Which path is the most viable moving forward and which one is the most distrastrous? Either way, what does the year 2040 have to do with it? Helping you...
Instructional Video8:35
The Guardian

Plants before pandas: the young botanist tackling extinction in his own backyard

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Almost as rare as the plants he protects, 24-year-old Josh Styles is not your average botanist. In 2017 he founded the North West Rare Plant Initiative, a conservation project in his local region. His aim is to resurrect 44 plant species...
Instructional Video9:16
The Guardian

The Living Forest

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The Kichwa tribe in the Sarayaku region of the Amazon in Ecuador believe in the ‘living forest’, where humans, animals and plants live in harmony. They are fighting oil companies who want to exploit their ancestral land. A delegation of...
Instructional Video11:04
The Guardian

The Age of Stupid revisited: what's changed on climate change?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Ten years after climate movie The Age of Stupid had its green-carpet, solar-powered premiere, we follow its director as she revisits people and places from the film and asks: are we still heading for the catastrophic future it depicted?
Instructional Video12:40
The Guardian

My journey back to Dominica after the hurricane

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This year the Caribbean experienced its most destructive hurricane season in decades. While large countries dominated the headlines, the small island nation of Dominica suffered the worst devastation it has ever seen. Josh...
Instructional Video5:17
The Guardian

Why the world is getting hotter and how you can help

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How to save the world, by counting to zero: the Guardian's Phoebe Weston breaks down all the climate jargon we have been hearing in the run-up to Cop26, the make-or-break climate summit starting on Sunday, and explains what we – and most...
Instructional Video9:35
The Guardian

I had no idea hot summers could kill': how 'climate apartheid' divides Delhi

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As the Earth continues to break new heat records, the UN is warning of a 'climate apartheid' between those who can afford to keep themselves cool and those who must live, work, suffer – and sometimes die – in the heat. In Delhi, where a...
Instructional Video13:09
The Guardian

The new green superpower? Oil giant Kazakhstan tries to wean itself off the black stuff

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Kazakhstan is rich with oil, gas and coal but Nursultan Nazarbayev, its president for life, has committed the country to a dramatic shift from fossil fuels to green energy. Is this huge nation, which is beset by rural poverty, major...
Instructional Video10:55
The Guardian

Middle Earth: the fight to save the Amazon's soul

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the heart of the Amazon rainforest, an alternative climate conference is taking place that brings together youth activists, indigenous leaders, scientists and forest dwellers. In a region known as Middle Earth, they are building a new...
Instructional Video15:07
The Guardian

Inside the mission to create an army of Greta Thunbergs

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Melanie Harwood is an education entrepreneur and self-styled 'disruptor', who has partnered with the United Nations to educate teachers about climate change. The Guardian's Richard Sprenger joined her on a trip to Dubai, to witness her...
Instructional Video12:35
The Guardian

Lord of the Rain: one man's fight against climate catastrophe

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Doyte lives in South Omo, Ethiopia, one of the most remote areas in the world and hard hit by the climate crisis. As Lord of the Rain, it’s Doyte’s job to summon the rains, but for five years they haven’t come. Ethiopia’s economy is...
Instructional Video4:17
Economics Explained

MIT Has Predicted that Society Will Collapse in 2040: Introduction

6th - 11th
A report in the 1970's looks at how society will progress along certain factors. Which path is the most viable moving forward and which one is the most distrastrous? Either way, what does the year 2040 have to do with it? Helping you...
Instructional Video3:32
Institute for New Economic Thinking

The Death of Neoliberalism [Suresh Naidu]

Higher Ed
Market fetishists may not know it yet, but it's over.Suresh Naidu breaks down neoliberalism, and why it can no longer support itself.Produced by Matthew Kulvicki, Nick Alpha & Ryan Scammell
Instructional Video15:56
Financial Times

Greta Thunberg: 'treat the climate crisis like a real crisis'

Higher Ed
The environmental activist talks to the FT's Leslie Hook about her future beyond climate strikes; her neutrality towards business and politics; and her frustration with climate conferences
Instructional Video1:03
Next Animation Studio

Greenland ice sheet caught in feedback loop, melting fast

12th - Higher Ed
A new study claims that the massive Greenland ice sheet is on the brink of a disastrous tipping point.
News Clip7:17
Curated Video

Logging on public lands increases despite President Biden's forest protection efforts

Higher Ed
As logging increases in old-growth forests, there is concern among scientists and conservation groups that the Biden Administration isn't doing enough to preserve public land. (Scripps News)
News Clip4:55
Press Association

"We have a moral imparative to turn things around" says Anneliese Dodds

Higher Ed
Rt Hon Anneliese Dodds, Minister of State for Development in the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, lays out her priorities for meeting international development goals over the coming parliament at Chatham House.
News Clip2:49
Press Association

Interview with the CEO of The Wildlife Trusts at London Nature March

Higher Ed
Interview with the CEO of The Wildlife Trusts, Craig Bennett, at the London Nature March. More than 350 charities, businesses and direct action groups were taking part in the Restore Nature Now march on Saturday, along with Dame Emma,...
News Clip4:56
Press Association

Blackadder actress and Game of Thrones actor speak at London nature march

Higher Ed
Blackadder actress Miranda Richardson and Game of Thrones actor Iwan Rheon speak at London nature march. They were among an estimated 60,000 people who marched in London to demand political action.