Resources
Book (download as a free PDF), The Drawdown Review, is Project Drawdown's latest publication (from 2020) and the first major update to their research and analysis of climate solutions and includes 10 key insights for possibility and action across sectors.
Climate resources from NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
NOAA NCEI State of the Climate - The State of the Climate is a collection of monthly summaries recapping climate-related occurrences on both a global and national scale.
NOAA Climate.gov has featured articles and a special news story collection Climate and... You may also be interested in NOAA's Data Snapshots.
Two excellent background articles to share that focus on definitions: What's the difference between climate and weather? and What's the difference between global warming and climate change?
Go-to documents
IPCC - The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Explore climate stories presented through ArcGIS StoryMaps and other atlases
Stories in ArcGIS StoryMaps and other atlases
The 2100 Project: An Atlas for the Green New Deal (from UPenn's McHarg Center, see press release for this new collection of maps and datascapes capturing the spatial consequences of climate change in support of a coordinated national response)
Yale Program on Climate Change Communication - Yale Climate Opinion Maps
For educators
Articles, videos, and podcasts
Explore the online articles in these collections: Yale Environment 360 climate, Issues in Science and Technology climate (from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, and ASU), Stanford Univ. Earth Matters climate change, Science News climate, UN News climate and the environment, Carbon Brief climate modeling, The Atlantic - Planet (covers climate), Grist
From Dr. Jonathan Foley (Executive Director, Project Drawdown) - Your Personal Action Guide for the Environment
TED Countdown (a global initiative to accelerate solutions to the climate crisis) - recorded videos of talks, interviews, performances
Additional TED Talks
Luisa Neubauer, You don't have to be a climate expert to be a climate activist. Here are 4 steps you can take to start taking action today
Podcasts
Drawing Down in Pennsylvania (website, SoundCloud page with only the audio files)
How to Save a Planet (also available on Google Podcast) (episode, Is Your Carbon Footprint BS?)
A Matter of Degrees, by stories about the powerful forces behind climate change — and the tools we have to fix it. This show is for the climate curious people who know climate change is a problem, but are trying to figure out how to tackle it.
Additional climate-related programs