Climate Visuals
Promoting diverse and compelling climate change photography, focusing on people. A Climate Outreach project.

The impacts of illegal oil extraction near K-dere village, in Gokana Local Government Area of Ogoniland.
Rivers State is rich in crude oil resources, and for years both illegal and legal refineries have burned petroleum products, contributing to widespread black carbon pollution across the state. Government interventions have reduced soot levels by an estimated 85 percent, but soot pollution remains a persistent environmental and public health problem in the state. Rivers State, Nigeria. January 7 2026.
This is part of a set of new photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

New photographs coming soon from @taiwoaina_ documenting the impacts of black carbon on communities in Nigeria.
Taiwo recently spoke to @mongabay about the work - read more at the link in our bio.
The photographs are part of our black carbon collection, highlighting the causes and impacts of the super-pollutant, as well as potential solutions to the problem.
We’ll be launching these images, alongside others from Kenya and Nepal on Climate Visuals soon. They’re free for editorial, non-profit and educational use, and join photographs from Brazil that are live already.

A deer jumps over rows of straw whilst a combine harvester works in South West England.
Photo credit: Alastair Johnstone-Hack / Climate Visuals

Join Climate Visuals and @coveringclimate for this webinar next week!
Selecting the right visuals is crucial to accurately telling the climate story and engaging audiences. Visuals are journalists’ first chance to hook readers and viewers; they can entice someone to click on a story and engage or to scroll away.
Join Climate Visuals and Covering Climate Now for a special webinar about how to visualise climate change for print and TV. Learn more about visual databases where you can source imagery, with Climate Visuals manager Alastair Johnstone-Hack and @hilary_ogali of Wikimedia. Hear from photographer @justincookphoto about his process for reporting and creating climate visuals, with a focus on solutions. Come with questions!
Sign up at the link in our bio!

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Tipping Points | Crossing climate thresholds
Small increases in temperature can trigger large, irreversible shifts in the Earth system. Ice sheets melt, forests lose resilience, permafrost releases methane. These changes don’t happen in isolation. They interact through feedback loops, accelerating warming once they begin.
Some systems are already showing signs of instability. As we move beyond 1.5°C, the risk of triggering multiple tipping points increases, with impacts that extend far beyond ecosystems.
These shifts reshape human systems too, from food and water to displacement and conflict. Yet responsibility remains uneven, with those contributing least often most affected.
At the same time, fossil fuel expansion continues, delaying the transition needed to reduce risk.
Tipping points are not only about collapse. The same dynamics can drive rapid change in the other direction through policy, technology, and collective action.
—
‘Our Power, Our Planet’ – Earth Day 2026
Source: We Don’t Have Time (@wedonthavetime0) Podcast, Ep1: Climate Tipping Points.
Explore more about their upcoming conference: Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels. Link in bio 🔗
#earthday #climatechange #tippingpoints #systemicchange #climatejustice

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

Today is Earth Day, and this year’s theme is “Our Power, Our Planet” - chosen to highlight the daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families across the world protecting where they live and work.
At a moment of global uncertainty and challenge, efforts to protect our planet in the face of the climate crisis remain enduringly strong. Ensuring these efforts are visible, and inspiring action from others is a crucial role for communicators - and photography can play an important part in this.
Climate Visuals is packed full of images highlighting these stories around the world - here are just a few of them!
Photo credits:
@mravijitghosh, Raphael Pouget, @giacomo_dorlando, @karentoroa, Alastair Johnstone-Hack, @anthony_ochieng_onyango, @victormoriyama, @ajistyawan, @gulshanii, @lachlan_gardiner

With the clown fish population off the coasts of Jakarta shrinking the government has created a hatchery to revive the clown fish population in the wild in order to protect the marine ecology.
Photo credit: @giacomo_dorlando / Climate Visuals

A stream runs through scorched ground after a large moorland fire near Errwood Reservoir in the Goyt Valley, near Buxton in the Peak District. Derbyshire, England. 3rd May 2025.
Photo credit: Alastair Johnstone-Hack / Climate Visuals

A man cycles past burning in a rural area near Via Chico Mendes, one of the main expressways in Rio Branco, capital of Acre. During the months of August, September, and October, the Amazon region historically suffers from urban and forest fires, filling the skies with smoke. Acre State, Brazil. August 11 2025.
Photo credit: @victormoriyama / Climate Visuals
Keep an eye out for more images from our black carbon project, from Kenya, Nepal and Nigeria, coming to the Climate Visuals library soon!

An auxiliary research vessel pilots a team of Arctic research scientists through the marginal ice zone north of Svalbard, Norway. The team was on an expedition to understand how trace amounts of light may be radically altering the mysterious world of the polar night.
Photo credit: @michaelosnyder / Climate Visuals

Climate Visuals now has over 15,000 registered users!
Since we launched in 2016, we’ve been building our image library, widening our evidence and growing our user base and we’re very excited to have passed this significant milestone.
Users come to Climate Visuals from over 170 countries around the world, and from all kinds of sectors and scales; from hyperlocal community groups, through editorial publications and educational institutions to international NGOs and communicators - and we’re glad to be a trusted resource for them all.
Our image library now has nearly 4,000 photographs of climate change and the environment, including over 1,500 that are freely available for non-profit, educational and editorial use - all backed by our evidence base and understanding as to what makes for engaging climate imagery.
We’ve got exciting news coming soon, including many new images and website developments. In the meantime, check out the link in our bio for some recent highlights!
Photo credits: @victormoriyama, @ingmarbnolting, @lizseabrook, and Jasmin Souesi.

Climate Visuals now has over 15,000 registered users!
Since we launched in 2016, we’ve been building our image library, widening our evidence and growing our user base and we’re very excited to have passed this significant milestone.
Users come to Climate Visuals from over 170 countries around the world, and from all kinds of sectors and scales; from hyperlocal community groups, through editorial publications and educational institutions to international NGOs and communicators - and we’re glad to be a trusted resource for them all.
Our image library now has nearly 4,000 photographs of climate change and the environment, including over 1,500 that are freely available for non-profit, educational and editorial use - all backed by our evidence base and understanding as to what makes for engaging climate imagery.
We’ve got exciting news coming soon, including many new images and website developments. In the meantime, check out the link in our bio for some recent highlights!
Photo credits: @victormoriyama, @ingmarbnolting, @lizseabrook, and Jasmin Souesi.

Climate Visuals now has over 15,000 registered users!
Since we launched in 2016, we’ve been building our image library, widening our evidence and growing our user base and we’re very excited to have passed this significant milestone.
Users come to Climate Visuals from over 170 countries around the world, and from all kinds of sectors and scales; from hyperlocal community groups, through editorial publications and educational institutions to international NGOs and communicators - and we’re glad to be a trusted resource for them all.
Our image library now has nearly 4,000 photographs of climate change and the environment, including over 1,500 that are freely available for non-profit, educational and editorial use - all backed by our evidence base and understanding as to what makes for engaging climate imagery.
We’ve got exciting news coming soon, including many new images and website developments. In the meantime, check out the link in our bio for some recent highlights!
Photo credits: @victormoriyama, @ingmarbnolting, @lizseabrook, and Jasmin Souesi.

Climate Visuals now has over 15,000 registered users!
Since we launched in 2016, we’ve been building our image library, widening our evidence and growing our user base and we’re very excited to have passed this significant milestone.
Users come to Climate Visuals from over 170 countries around the world, and from all kinds of sectors and scales; from hyperlocal community groups, through editorial publications and educational institutions to international NGOs and communicators - and we’re glad to be a trusted resource for them all.
Our image library now has nearly 4,000 photographs of climate change and the environment, including over 1,500 that are freely available for non-profit, educational and editorial use - all backed by our evidence base and understanding as to what makes for engaging climate imagery.
We’ve got exciting news coming soon, including many new images and website developments. In the meantime, check out the link in our bio for some recent highlights!
Photo credits: @victormoriyama, @ingmarbnolting, @lizseabrook, and Jasmin Souesi.

Climate Visuals now has over 15,000 registered users!
Since we launched in 2016, we’ve been building our image library, widening our evidence and growing our user base and we’re very excited to have passed this significant milestone.
Users come to Climate Visuals from over 170 countries around the world, and from all kinds of sectors and scales; from hyperlocal community groups, through editorial publications and educational institutions to international NGOs and communicators - and we’re glad to be a trusted resource for them all.
Our image library now has nearly 4,000 photographs of climate change and the environment, including over 1,500 that are freely available for non-profit, educational and editorial use - all backed by our evidence base and understanding as to what makes for engaging climate imagery.
We’ve got exciting news coming soon, including many new images and website developments. In the meantime, check out the link in our bio for some recent highlights!
Photo credits: @victormoriyama, @ingmarbnolting, @lizseabrook, and Jasmin Souesi.

Arnatassiaq and Niels Molgard push an iceberg with their boat so that it doesn't drag down their fishing nets. More and more icebergs are being calved by glaciers due to the effects of climate change. Those Icebergs drift away and take the fishermen's nets with them, causing financial and environmental losses on the seabed. The melting ice, accelerated by global warming, now frees up the ocean for nearly 8 months of the year.
Photo credit: Samuel Turpin / Climate Visuals
View this image and more in the Climate Visuals library. Link in our bio!
Instagram Story Viewer to proste narzędzie, które pozwala na ciche oglądanie i zapisywanie historii Instagram, filmów, zdjęć lub IGTV. Dzięki tej usłudze możesz pobrać zawartość i cieszyć się nią offline, kiedy chcesz. Jeśli znajdziesz coś interesującego na Instagramie, co chcesz sprawdzić później, lub chcesz oglądać historie pozostając anonimowym, nasz Viewer jest idealny dla Ciebie. Anonstories oferuje doskonałe rozwiązanie do ukrywania swojej tożsamości. Instagram po raz pierwszy uruchomił funkcję historii w sierpniu 2023 roku, która szybko została zaadoptowana przez inne platformy ze względu na jej angażujący, czasowo ograniczony format. Historie pozwalają użytkownikom dzielić się szybkimi aktualizacjami, czy to zdjęciami, filmami, czy selfie, wzbogaconymi o tekst, emotikony lub filtry, i są widoczne tylko przez 24 godziny. Ten ograniczony czas sprawia, że historie cieszą się dużym zaangażowaniem w porównaniu do zwykłych postów. W dzisiejszym świecie historie to jeden z najpopularniejszych sposobów komunikacji na mediach społecznościowych. Jednak gdy oglądasz historię, twórca może zobaczyć Twoje imię na liście oglądających, co może stanowić problem związany z prywatnością. Co jeśli chcesz przeglądać historie, nie będąc zauważonym? Tutaj Anonstories staje się przydatne. Umożliwia oglądanie publicznej zawartości Instagram bez ujawniania tożsamości. Wystarczy wpisać nazwę użytkownika profilu, który Cię interesuje, a narzędzie wyświetli ich najnowsze historie. Cechy Anonstories Viewer: - Anonimowe przeglądanie: Oglądaj historie bez pojawiania się na liście oglądających. - Brak konta: Oglądaj publiczną zawartość bez logowania się na konto Instagram. - Pobieranie zawartości: Zapisuj dowolną zawartość historii bezpośrednio na swoje urządzenie do użytku offline. - Przeglądaj najważniejsze: Dostęp do Instagram Highlights, nawet po 24 godzinach. - Monitorowanie repostów: Śledź reposty lub poziom zaangażowania w historię na prywatnych profilach. Ograniczenia: - Narzędzie działa tylko z publicznymi kontami; konta prywatne pozostają niedostępne. Korzyści: - Przyjazne dla prywatności: Oglądaj zawartość Instagram bez bycia zauważonym. - Proste i łatwe: Brak potrzeby instalacji aplikacji lub rejestracji. - Ekskluzywne narzędzia: Pobieraj i zarządzaj zawartością w sposób, którego Instagram nie oferuje.
Śledź aktualizacje na Instagramie dyskretnie, chroniąc swoją prywatność i pozostając anonimowym.
Oglądaj profile i zdjęcia anonimowo za pomocą Prywatnego Viewera.
To darmowe narzędzie pozwala oglądać historie Instagram anonimowo, zapewniając, że Twoja aktywność pozostaje ukryta przed twórcą historii.
Anonstories pozwala użytkownikom oglądać historie na Instagramie bez informowania twórcy.
Funkcjonuje płynnie na iOS, Android, Windows, macOS i nowoczesnych przeglądarkach takich jak Chrome i Safari.
Priorytetem jest bezpieczne, anonimowe przeglądanie bez konieczności logowania się.
Użytkownicy mogą oglądać publiczne historie, wpisując nazwę użytkownika – bez konieczności zakładania konta.
Pobiera zdjęcia (JPEG) i filmy (MP4) z łatwością.
Usługa jest bezpłatna.
Treści z prywatnych kont mogą być dostępne tylko dla obserwujących.
Pliki są przeznaczone do użytku osobistego lub edukacyjnego i muszą być zgodne z przepisami dotyczącymi praw autorskich.
Wpisz publiczną nazwę użytkownika, aby oglądać lub pobrać historie. Usługa generuje bezpośrednie linki do zapis