Measurable impacts
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The Horseshoe Falls at the Mt Field National Park, Tasmania, Australia. One of the natural treasures climate actions today can protect.
On May 21, 2022, the Australian federal election demonstrated something important: people are willing to talk about climate change and motivated to act. Overwhelmingly the Australian public changed their focus from the economy to climate in ways that both surprised and shocked the two established pollical parties and the media.
Ahead of the curve
When historians look back at the campaign by the major parties in the 2022 Australian federal election will be surprised by the lack of conversation about climate action by the major parties and the media. Yet, voters identified climate action as one of the most critical issues that drove a drop in primary votes for the incumbent and incoming Labor party. The media itself also missed this wave of sentiment amongst voters, showing that leaders in politics and the media need to catch up.
Permission to talk about climate change
The washup from this election could permanently change Australia's government's nature, creating a more genuinely representative democracy. Equally important, it permits organisations to have honest conversations about climate change and real climate action.
Changing the conversation
The pro-climate organisation Climate 200 were one of the primary driving forces in an election that saw the rise of climate action driven independent candidates to take rusted on seats from the incumbent government. They represent a seismic shift from talking about climate change in the future to taking action now. Their focus is on driving real grassroots change that reimagines Australia's political agenda.
Our children's children
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Generational change has created an expectation of climate action today. The voices for change will only grow louder as climate change impacts more lives and the planet's future.
Our children's children
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Generational change has created an expectation of climate action today. The voices for change will only grow louder as climate change impacts more lives and the planet's future.
Regenerating Australia
Those behind Climate 200 were in a forum at a recent screening of a new documentary by Director Damon Gameau and Producer Anna Kaplan, titled 'Regenerating Australia'. 'Regenerating Australia' is a film and accompanying impact campaign seeking to accelerate the transition to a regenerative future. It is set on New Year's Eve 2029 and takes the form of a news bulletin looking back at the decade that could be. A decade saw Australia transition to a fairer, cleaner, more regenerative economy that values Australia's greatest assets; First Nations' wisdom, our unique natural environment, and our sense of community. This film demonstrates the positive (and sometimes stunning) outcomes achieved by taking local action on climate and the environment. It also signals a shift from climate despair to hope.
See the future today
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'Regenerating Australia' features individual climate action stories that have restored land and environments to pre-western civilisation levels. It shows that real climate action can work in a relatively short timeframe.
See the future today
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'Regenerating Australia' features individual climate action stories that have restored land and environments to pre-western civilisation levels. It shows that real climate action can work in a relatively short timeframe.
Your climate action story
As they say, all politics is local. The 2022 Australian Federal Election demonstrated this. The same is true of climate action. The stories shown in the film 'Regenerating Australia demonstrate this in ways the public can see themselves. The same can be true for any organisation enacting its climate action plan. These are stories the public is hungry to hear and, based on the 2022 Australian Federal Election, are something the media will now be seeking to hear more. Your Lookatmedia™ newsroom is where you bring these stories to the media's attention.
Do you have a story to tell?
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The media, the public, investors, and policymakers are hungry for businesses' positive and authentic stories on climate action. Climate response is now an essential element in reputation management.
Do you have a story to tell?
Getty Images/iStockphoto
The media, the public, investors, and policymakers are hungry for businesses' positive and authentic stories on climate action. Climate response is now an essential element in reputation management.