Sudhanshu Malhotra
2026 has been quite an eventful year… and it’s only been three months! By March, we have seen a huge range of climate disasters in almost every part of the Earth. People around the world feel the effects, especially in areas vulnerable to the climate crisis. From forest fires in Chile to snowstorms in Japan, from cyclone in Sri Lanka to flooding in Brazil, France, and Kenya. Scientists have warned us for years about the link between erratic weather, extreme heat, and heavy rainfall. These are clear signs of a climate emergency. Severe climate change shows in the polar vortex, flash flooding, and extreme weather. This isn’t a coincidence; it’s a choice made by politicians and a focus for the economy. Since February 2026, we have seen billions of dollars being poured into the war against Iran. If only we had this kind of commitment and budgets promised at UNFCCC meetings or in securing the future of the communities living under the threat of climate change. Fighting climate change means pushing for strong public policies. It also involves stopping fossil fuel expansion and investing in cities that can protect lives. Governments and companies should look beyond profits. They need to think about the millions of people impacted. We need to start rethinking our priorities and focus on what’s really urgent. NOW This is a short visual reminder of a few climate emergencies this year. Texte intégral (5447 mots)
Chile: In the 2025-2026 wildfire season alone, more than three thousand wildfires have already been recorded. Nationwide, the burned area is 193% higher than that of the previous season (2024-2025). The Ñuble, Biobío, and La Araucanía regions, among the hardest hit in southern Chile.
Indonesia – A portrait of Mariasi Aritonang in front of her home that was affected by the flash floods in Tukka Subdistrict, Central Tapanuli, North Sumatra.
Argentina: Greenpeace Andino documented forest fires in Chubut province (Patagonia, Argentina), which have already burned 30,000 hectares of forests. Greenpeace denounces the government’s negligence regarding the effects of the climate crisis.
Japan: Japan faced a deadly winter after weeks of unusually heavy snowfall across its northern regions. At least 35 people died, mostly in prefectures along the Sea of Japan coast such as Niigata, Aomori, Akita, Yamagata, and parts of Hokkaido. Many of the deaths happened during everyday activities like clearing snow from rooftops and entrances, especially among elderly residents. In Aomori, snow on the ground crossed 175 centimetres, more than double the seasonal average, breaking records set four decades ago.
Australia: Parts of Victoria, Australia, suffered some of its worst bushfires since the Black Summer fires of 2019–20. Over 400,000 hectares are estimated to have been burnt, an area more than five times larger than Singapore. This makes it more difficult for animals to find suitable habitat outside of burnt areas in a fragmented landscape as they recover.
France: Several French regions experienced exceptional flooding in February 2026. Following Storm Nils, the entire western half of France was under a severe rain and flood warning. Concrete streets, uprooted hedges, straightened rivers… Human activity has depleted the soil, leading to a loss of its absorption and storage capacity and further exacerbating the flooding in western France.
United States of America: A powerful winter storm in the northeastern United States forced school closures and pushed offices and transit systems to emergency schedules, with officials across the region warning of heavy snow, strong winds, and dangerous travel conditions.
Kenya: Nairobi woke up on Saturday to streets turned to rivers, homes submerged, and families torn apart. At least 42 people have lost their lives, fathers, mothers, children, swept away in a single night of rain. Greenpeace Africa grieves with every family carrying that loss today. 
Jaqueline Sordi
From 5 to 11 April 2026, thousands of Indigenous Peoples from across Brazil gathered in Brasilia, the capital of the country, for the 22nd Free Land Camp (ATL). This event is the largest Indigenous mobilisation in Brazil and one of the biggest in the world. It united diverse communities under a powerful message: “Our future is not for sale: the answer is us.” The discussions at this year’s Free Land Camp reflected the urgency of the moment. Key issues included the demarcation of Indigenous lands, the rise of illegal mining and other harmful activities, the climate crisis and the defense of democracy. These topics are interconnected, exposing an economic model that prioritises extraction of the planet’s natural resources over the protection of vital ecosystems and short-term profits over long-term stability of climate and biodiversity. In Brazil, illegal gold mining in Indigenous territories is a clear example of this destructive model. The activity has serious impacts to the environment, causing deforestation and poisoning rivers, a vital source of food and transportation for Indigenous People. The presence of non-Indigenous Peoples in the land also causes conflict and directly threatens the way of life of those living in the territory. The forces driving this expansion are not just local; they are linked to a global demand for resources. The 2026 edition of the Free Land Camp takes place at a pivotal moment for tropical forests. Across the Amazon, the Congo Basin and Southeast Asia, pressure is intensifying as extractive industries like illegal gold and nickel mining, agribusiness and large-scale infrastructure continue to expand, often enabled by government support or persistent inaction. This escalation is not only accelerating forest destruction. It is reshaping the climate and impacting millions of people. According to a 2025 study, tropical deforestation between 2001 and 2020 exposed some 345 million people around the world to local warming, significantly intensifying heat stress and, in some cases, leading to death. The study estimates that up to 28 thousand deaths each year across the tropics are already linked to these changes. This reality stands in sharp contrast to the commitments countries have made under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Through the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, agreed in 2022, governments have pledged to halt biodiversity loss, protect at least 30 percent of land and oceans by 2030, and restore degraded ecosystems. Yet these commitments remain largely disconnected from the decisions that continue to drive deforestation and ecosystem destruction on the ground. What is at stake is the survival of some of the world’s most biodiverse regions and the incredible fauna and flora that live there, the stability of the climate and the planet as a whole, and the lives of millions across the world. The pathways to address these crises are not abstract: they are already being practiced in territories managed and defended by Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs), through forms of governance that sustain forests and biodiversity. What the Free Land Camp and Indigenous resistance across the world show is that the question is no longer whether solutions to the climate and biodiversity crises exist, but whether global systems are willing to support and scale those who have been protecting forests for generations. Despite their vital role in protecting forests, Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs) are often treated as secondary stakeholders in decisions about their territories. Their participation is limited, and access to financial resources is often stretched across multilateral spaces and national decision-making processes. Changing this situation requires more than just inclusion. It means securing Indigenous and community land rights, recognising IPLCs as decision-makers and stewards of their territories, and ensuring they have direct access to funding that supports their livelihoods. Indigenous Peoples’ way of life has sustained forests for generations and continues to do so despite increasing pressures. In a year that will shape the future of global biodiversity action, the direction is clear: the systems that have kept forests standing must be the ones that guide what comes next. We demand the immediate legal recognition of Indigenous territories and an end to illegal gold mining in critical biomes like the Amazon rainforest. Ask political leaders to act on their promises to stop Amazon destruction. Jaqueline Sordi is a Comms & Media Specialist for the Tropical Forest Campaign with Greenpeace International. Texte intégral (1945 mots)

For over 20 years, the Free Land Camp has become an important space for political organisation among Indigenous Peoples. Thousands gather to build alliances, make their presence visible through marches, daily assemblies on territorial rights, and ceremonies that ground the mobilisation in ancestral knowledge. Across the camp, Indigenous media teams produce their own coverage, while spaces for dialogue bring forward discussions on gender, women’s leadership and LGBTQ+ Indigenous rights. Art, music and collective expression weave through it all, making the Free Land Camp a political force as much as a cultural one.
The centre of Free Land Camp

A decisive year for tropical forests


From the margins to decision-making
Greenpeace International
Texte intégral (1945 mots)
Greenpeace International
A stranded whale, incomplete infrastructure, and a call for peace. Here are a few of our favourite images from Greenpeace work around the world this week. Greenpeace has been a pioneer of photo activism for more than 50 years, and remains committed to bearing witness and exposing environmental injustice through the images we capture. To see more Greenpeace photos and videos, visit our Media Library. Texte intégral (1670 mots)

USA – As another perilous threat to Iran looms from behind White House gates, Greenpeace USA activists took a banner to the Capitol calling for the immediate removal of President Donald Trump for war crimes. NO WAR calls are coming from across the nation while Trump schemes up more ways to steal oil under the guise of a senseless war that would not only put American’s lives at risk, but is already threatening the livelihood of all.

Brazil – The 22nd edition of the Free Land Camp (ATL 2026) takes place from April 5 to 11 in Brasília. As Brazil’s largest Indigenous mobilisation, this year’s gathering is held under the theme “Our future is not for sale: we are the answer,” bringing together thousands of Indigenous leaders from across the country to discuss land demarcation, confront the climate crisis, and defend democracy, while also fostering cultural exchange among hundreds of Indigenous peoples.

Argentina – In the hours leading up to a debate in the Chamber of Deputies, Greenpeace Andino activists staged a peaceful protest outside the National Congress in Buenos Aires to demand that the bill seeking to amend the current Glacier Law not moved forward, as it puts the country’s main freshwater reserves at risk. The proposal seeks to open unique glacial areas to mining.

Germany – Aerial footage shows a humpback whale stranded close to the Island Poel in the Baltic Sea off Germany. Greenpeace is on the ground and supporting the ongoing efforts to help the whale to safety.

India – Through creative intervention themed around the Scream, where citizens scream their frustrations about wasteful infrastructure projects in Bangalore, the incomplete pillars at R. R. Nagar, Bangalore were highlighted by putting up stickers and banners criticising these unfinished projects.

Poland – Polish coal mines illegally leak enormous amounts of climate-killing methane. Their total climate impact is already larger than the EU’s single largest climate killer, Belchatow power plant. Greenpeace activists have scaled the 54 meter high shaft of the Knurów-Szczygłowice coal mine to protest against these illegal activities. The government of PM Donald Tusk should fully implement the EU methane regulation in order to stop the leakage.
The banner reads “Dangerous Methane is leaking from here.”

South Africa – Greenpeace Africa activists join the 2026 Human Rights Festival at Conhill, Johannesburg.
🌱 Bon Pote
Actu-Environnement
Amis de la Terre
Aspas
Biodiversité-sous-nos-pieds
🌱 Bloom
Canopée
Décroissance (la)
Deep Green Resistance
Déroute des routes
Faîte et Racines
🌱 Printemps des Luttes Locales
F.N.E (AURA)
Greenpeace Fr
JNE
La Relève et la Peste
La Terre
Le Lierre
Le Sauvage
Low-Tech Mag.
Motus & Langue pendue
Mountain Wilderness
Negawatt
🌱 Observatoire de l'Anthropocène