The countdown to Earth Day 2020 is underway with its organizers—the Earth Day Network—announcing climate action as the overarching theme throughout this landmark 50th anniversary year.
“Climate change represents the biggest challenge to humanity’s future and the systems that make our world habitable,” said Kathleen Rogers, Earth Day Network President.
“2020 has to be the year of transformative change that seizes the positive action underway and makes it bigger and bolder worldwide,” she said.
“Together, we can unite to build a movement that is inclusive, ambitious, and impossible to ignore,” Rogers said.
A raft of individual action campaigns launch today, including:
Vote Earth
2019 and 2020 will see 60+ national elections and thousands of
regional, provincial, and city elections worldwide.
Vote Earth calls on citizens, particularly young and first-time voters, to examine the environmental platforms of their candidates and vote at the ballot box for candidates with clear, ambitious, and convincing plans to protect our planet.
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Earth Challenge 2020
Earth Challenge 2020 will empower everyday individuals to join the
largest-ever global citizen science initiative to report on environmental
health.
With partners including the Wilson Center, US State Department, and Esri, and support from tech giants like Amazon, the Earth Challenge 2020 app will be launched in early 2020.
The findings of this initiative will be uploaded to scientific networks to improve our understanding of the health of our world, with dual goals of triggering government policy shifts while arming citizens with better and more convincing facts.
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Billion Acts of Green
Earth Day Network will relaunch its flagship platform – Billion Acts of
Green – with a 2020 goal of 3.5 billion actions taken, logged, and aggregated
around the world.
Great Global Cleanup
Through a unified campaign including mobile registration, digital
mapping and social media, the Great Global Cleanup will connect partners and
participants around the globe to remove billions of pieces of trash from our
green spaces, urban communities, and waterways. Data collected will help build
a better understanding of the sources, scope, and solutions to our waste
problem.