Climate change

Sebastian Liste | Featured in TIME with the coverage of deforestation in the Amazon rainforest

The Amazon is 10 million years old. Home to 390 billion trees, the vast river basin reigns over South America and is an unrivaled nest of biodiversity. At current rates of deforestation, 27% of the Amazon will be without trees by 2030. Sebastián Liste went to the Amazon for TIME to see the consequences climate change has on the Amazon.

© Sebastian Liste / NOOR for TIME

© Sebastian Liste / NOOR for TIME

Nina Berman | Coverage of the Global Climate Strike in NYC for Liberation

Tens of thousands of people, mostly young people, gathered in Lower Manhattan for the global climate strike on September 27. For Liberation, Nina Berman covered the strike in New York City as part of a global movement that brought over 7.6 million people.

© Nina Berman / NOOR

© Nina Berman / NOOR

NOOR Urges Action on Climate Emergency

Manifesto_NOOR.jpg
 

NOOR supports the Global Climate Strike that will take place on September the 20th and encourages everyone to join the movement.

 

kadir van lohuizen's rising sealevels in sunday times magazine

The Sunday Times Magazine published Kadir van Lohuizen's extensive project about sea levels rising around the world.  Kadir asks, "How fast is it going? It is alarming that past figures appear to have been too conservative and that humanity should start preparing for the biggest displacement of mankind in known history. As people in all of the world’s regions become displaced at ever growing scales, the biggest question is: Where will they go?"

See more of the Rising Sea Levels project, which spans eight countries on our website here.

kadir van lohuizen | s.o.s. miami, rising sealevels published in stern

 

Published in Stern Magazine, Kadir van Lohuizen returned to Miami as part of his extensive work on rising sea levels. "Glimmering new buildings, dark future - the rising sea-level is causing serious problems for Miami."

 

Have a look at Kadir's Rising Sea Levels project here, and see more images from Miami here.

 

 

 

 

 

rising sea levels in geo france

Today, no one any longer doubts that glaciers the world over are retreating, and even more worryingly that Greenland and Antartica are melting at an increasing pace. The question: how fast is it going? It is alarming that past figures appear to have been too conservative and humanity should start preparing for the biggest displacement of mankind in known history. As people in all of the world’s regions become displaced at ever growing scales, the biggest question is: where will they go?

 

For one and half year Kadir van Lohuizen has been looking at the global consequences of rising sea levels caused by climate change. He traveled to Kiribati, Fiji, the Carteret Atoll in Papua New Guinea, Bangladesh, the Guna Yala coastline in Panama, the United Kingdom and the United States. In these different regions Kadir not only looked at the areas that are affected or will be affected, but also where people will likely have to relocate to. Coastal erosion, inundation, worse and more frequent coastal surges and contamination of drinking water mean increasingly that people have to flee their homes and lands in a growing number of locales across the world. The human costs of these movements are dramatic in the extreme. The Rising Sea Levels project is designed to highlight both the immense complexities associated with in-island and inter-island/country movement, as well as the specific human rights implications involved with such involuntary movements.

 

This month Geo France published this important work in an extensive feature. Have a look at some of the pages here below: