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Guardian climate pledge 2019

The Guardian’s statement on our climate commitments for 2019. Read about our 2020 climate pledge here

  • Julie Richards, Delivery Portfolio Director at Guardian News & Media. Photographed 27 November 2019

    Why the Guardian became a B Corp: 'We want to do more than talk'

    Julie Richards of the strategy and delivery team explains why we have become the first major media organisation to achieve B Corp status, and what it means for our commitments to the climate
  • A mangrove surrounded by plastic trash in Jakarta, Indonesia, May 2018.

    Guardian environment writers: 'With your help, we are tackling humankind's greatest challenge'

  • Nathalie Lees image for Rebecca Solnit

    Guardian climate pledge: thanks to our readers, we can dare to hope for change

  • Climate change teen activist Greta Thunberg joins a climate strike march in Edmonton<br>A sign made for Swedish climate change teen activist Greta Thunberg during a climate strike march at the Alberta Legislature in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada October 18, 2019. REUTERS/Amber Bracken

    Global climate emergency: Which issues should we focus on next?

    We’d like you to tell us what you’ve liked about the Guardian’s reporting on the climate crisis and what you’d like us to explore in more depth
  • Ka’apor Indians

    'Everybody has something to lose': the exciting, depressing life of a climate writer

    The Guardian’s global environment editor, Jonathan Watts, explains how he aims to make the climate emergency resonate with readers on an emotional level
  • Damian Carrington. Environment editor.

    Damian Carrington on 10 years as the Guardian's environment editor

    One of our leading environment journalists reflects on how awareness of the climate crisis has shifted in the last decade and offers advice for those who want to do more
  • marks in blue sky left by aeroplanes

    How to explore the world without harming it: Guardian climate pledge 2019

    Guardian travel editor Andy Pietrasik explains how a flexitarian approach can enable us to enjoy exploring the planet without increasing our carbon footprint
  • A villager shouts for help as a wildfire approaches a house at Casas da Ribeira village in Mação, central Portugal on July 2019.

    Why we're rethinking the images we use for our climate journalism

    Guardian picture editor Fiona Shields explains why we are going to be using fewer polar bears and more people to illustrate our coverage of the climate emergency
  • A crack generated by the pressure of water at a glacier in Patagonia

    'There are no excuses left': why climate science deniers are running out of rope

  • Women with empty plastic pots protest as they demand drinking water in Chennai, India.

    From foreign news to fashion, how our editors see the climate crisis

  • FILES-US-CALIFORNIA-WILDFIRES-WEATHER<br>(FILES) In this file photo taken on November 11, 2018 a helicopter passes by the sun as it makes a water drop in the Feather River Canyon, east of Paradise, California. - Rolling blackouts affecting up to 800,000 customers began October 9, 2019 in parts of California as a utility company switched off power because of hot, windy weather that raises the risk of wildfires. Pacific Gas &amp; Electric, which announced the three-phase deliberate power outage, is working to prevent a repeat of a catastrophe last November in which power lines it owned were determined to have sparked California’s deadliest wildfire ever. (Photo by Josh Edelson / AFP) (Photo by JOSH EDELSON/AFP via Getty Images)

    'It's a crisis, not a change': the six Guardian language changes on climate matters

  • John Mulholland

    Why the climate crisis is the most crucial story we cover in America

    John Mulholland
  • Katharine Viner

    Today we pledge to give the climate crisis the attention it demands

    Katharine Viner
  • The Guardian's environmental pledge 2019

    The Guardian's climate pledge 2019

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