Around the past year, journalists and students from all around the world have contributed to our investigation of climate change and the strategies for halting and reversing it.


Because of how serious a problem climate change is, many people are overwhelmed by it. The forecasts were ominous, and the reality seems far worse. We are dealing with species extinction, drying lakebeds and rivers, increasing oceans and temperatures, and severe weather. People discuss the end of the world.

But rather than panicking, now is the moment to push for solutions like carbon capture, clean, renewable energy sources, and alterations to our way of life to lessen our influence.

There are events taking place all over the world. People are implementing new policies and strategies everywhere. Together, scientists are developing technical fixes. People are working together to improve how they produce and consume goods and to plant trees.

News Decoder released a series of articles titled "Climate Decoders" and a collection of profiles by student journalists as part of a project titled The Writing's on the Wall, funded by the Erasmus+ program of the European Union. These works help us comprehend the severity of the issue we are facing. - worldwide, collectively — in preserving the environment. However, we also observe how people from diverse spheres of endeavor, locations, and socioeconomic classes collaborate to find answers.

"Climate change stands in front of our noses like a brick wall," said Matthew Pye, a philosophy instructor, author, and the creator of the Climate Academy. "It is impossible to negotiate, debate, or modify the rules of physics and chemistry. They simply exist. However, we are free to consider them and choose to respond in a unique and knowledgeable manner.

News Decoder has assembled the stories here as a celebration of the completion of this project and the efforts of these reporters and student journalists.  Our company's motto is: "While problems transcend borders, solutions bind us together."