Over 250 media firms in tie-up to run a week of climate articles

Starting today, more than 250 media outlets around the world, including The Straits Times, will be participating in a collaborative effort to boost reporting on climate change and raise awareness of one of the key stories of our time.

The week-long Covering Climate Now initiative, co-founded by the Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) and The Nation in the United States, brings together newspapers, wire agencies, online publications, as well as TV and radio stations, with The Guardian as the lead media partner.

All outlets have committed to run a week's worth of climate coverage in the lead-up to the United Nations Climate Action Summit in New York next Monday. World leaders will be attending the summit, one of the most important climate gatherings since the UN Paris Climate Agreement was clinched in December 2015.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has told nations attending the summit to bring details of how they will significantly enhance national actions to cut greenhouse gas emissions - blamed for heating up the planet - by next year.

The plans, the UN says, should be in line with reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 45 per cent over the next decade, and to net zero emissions by 2050. Failure to do so will condemn the world to more extreme droughts, wildfires and storms, as well as falling crop yields, and also destroy many coral reefs and accelerate sea-level rise.

The UN says that now, more than ever, nations need to shift away from dirty energy such as coal and switch to renewables, green transport and more energy-efficient buildings. They also need to cut food waste and halt the destruction of rainforests in the Amazon, South-east Asia and Africa.

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who recently outlined the life-and-death threat from climate change to Singapore, is among the leaders attending the summit.

Covering Climate Now is one of the most ambitious efforts ever to organise the world's media around climate change, the organisers say. And a key feature is that all members can share content for free during the week from Sept 16 to 23. Participants already have a large - and growing - list of multimedia stories for sharing.

Globally, participants include Bloomberg, Agence France-Presse, CBS News, The Asahi Shimbun, Hindustan Times, El Pais, La Repubblica, Getty Images, and scholarly journals such as Nature and Science.

All of the news outlets participating will decide for themselves how many climate stories to run during the week of coverage, and what those stories say. The only requirement is that the participating outlets make a good faith effort to run as much high-quality climate coverage as they can.

"The need for solid climate coverage has never been greater," said CJR's editor and publisher Kyle Pope. "We're proud that so many organisations from around the world have joined with Covering Climate Now to do our duty as journalists - to report this hugely important story."

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on September 16, 2019, with the headline Over 250 media firms in tie-up to run a week of climate articles. Subscribe