April 22 Earth Day to Put a Face on Climate Change
Interactive Digital Mosaic to Be Shown at Thousands of Events Worldwide
Washington, April 15, 2013 – Earth Day, April 22, is one week away. The theme of Earth Day 2013 is The Face of Climate
Change. This campaign seeks to harness the power of Earth Day to personalize the massive challenge that climate change
presents, while uniting people around the globe into a powerful call to action.
Earth Day Network is collecting images of people, animals and places affected by climate change, as well as images of
people doing their part in the fight against climate change. On Earth Day itself, an interactive digital display of all
the images will be shown at thousands of events around the world. The display is also available online to anyone who
wants to view it, show it or read the stories.
Although climate change still seems a remote problem to some people, the reality is quite different. This past year
marked many climate-change milestones. Arctic sea-ice cover reached a record low in September. The United States
experienced its hottest year ever; this after the World Meteorological Organization announced that the first decade of
this century was the hottest on record for the entire planet. Public perception of extreme weather events as “the new
normal” grew, as unusual super storms rocked the Caribbean, the Philippines and the northeast United States; droughts
plagued northern Brazil, Russia, China and two-thirds of United States; exceptional floods inundated Nigeria, Pakistan
and parts of China; and more. Meanwhile, international climate change talks stagnated.
But as these Faces of Climate Change begin to multiply, others are multiplying, too: people stepping up to do something
about it.
“The goal is to depict the very real impact that climate change is having on people’s lives and to unite thousands of
Earth Day events around the world into one call for climate action,” said Franklin Russell, director of Earth Day at
Earth Day Network. “The more people who participate, the more of an impact it will have.”
Earth Day Network is encouraged by the level of participation in this year’s activities.
Examples of stories collected so far include a mountaineer in New Zealand who reported on receding glaciers and an
organization in Thailand who installed solar panels at a refugee camp on the Myanmar border. With more than 1 billion
people across 192 countries participating in Earth Day-related activities each year, the potential is enormous.
People can also post photos to Twitter and Instagram using the hashtag #FaceOfClimate for inclusion in the mosaic. To
view The Face of Climate Change photo display, go to www.earthday.org/faces. To learn more about Earth Day 2013 and The Face of Climate Change, go to www.earthday.org/2013.
ENDS