Parley AIR: Plastics and the Pandemic
How the plastics industry used the pandemic to push single-use plastics, and what we’ve learned in three years
To highlight the link between glacial and ocean ecosystems, Parley Argentina coordinator Yago Lange set out to foil surf the Perito Moreno glacier in Patagonia.
The blue part of the planet is a massive carbon sink, so preserving ocean health is a key part of climate policy.
According to the latest IPCC report, we still have time to change the future of our planet. Here are 101 ways you can help.
How the plastics industry used the pandemic to push single-use plastics, and what we’ve learned in three years
A look at the plastics and pollutants infiltrating every part of the food system
Are beach cleanups actually helping? A closer look at a piece of the solutions puzzle
Poorly regulated international waters make up almost 95% of the global ocean
Plastics plants are concentrated in one part of the U.S. and disproportionately impact poor and BIPOC communities.
The oceans know no borders, and are an all-connecting link for the world’s plastic.
The global recycling industry pollutes low-income communities. Here’s how.
To highlight the link between glacial and ocean ecosystems, Parley Argentina coordinator Yago Lange set out to foil surf the Perito Moreno glacier in Patagonia.
The blue part of the planet is a massive carbon sink, so preserving ocean health is a key part of climate policy.
This month, we’re exploring what plastic bans can and can’t do – and the role policy can play in curbing plastic consumption.
How the next generation is thinking about the environmental crisis — and leading solutions.
According to the latest IPCC report, we still have time to change the future of our planet. Here are 101 ways you can help.
With the climate crisis reaching new levels of visibility and urgency this summer, preserving ‘blue carbon’ ecosystems like mangroves is vital.
A real-life guide to curbing plastic, in collaboration with Future Earth.
To end marine plastic pollution, we need to understand how waste travels to the seas.
Our Brazil team explores the mysterious ocean realm of Sargassum seaweed and its potential to help capture carbon, combat acidification and create biomaterials.