The Change Climate Project

@theclimatelabel

The climate certification for companies cutting emissions now—not someday. Look for the label.
Followers
15.3k
Following
543
Account Insight
Score
56.29%
Index
Health Rate
%
Users Ratio
28:1
Weeks posts
You’ve seen climate claims before—bold goals, big promises, but not much follow-through. The Climate Label is here to change that. It’s not about saying the right thing. It’s about doing the right thing—measuring emissions, investing in real solutions, and being transparent about it. When you see this label, you know the brand isn’t just talking the talk—they’re putting their money where the carbon is. Because climate action should come with receipts. 🧾
61 0
9 months ago
Happy 100th birthday to the voice of our planet. 🌍 For generations, David Attenborough has helped people see the natural world not as something distant, but as something deeply connected to all of us. These words helped inspire the foundation of our work at The Change Climate Project: the belief that the choices businesses make today matter, and that climate action has to move beyond promises into measurable, transparent progress. His work helped shape a generation of people asking the same question we still ask today: what does it actually look like to act like the future matters?
19 0
8 days ago
Over 90% of new electricity added to the U.S. grid in 2025 came from clean power. Behind that number: $79 billion invested, 1.4 million jobs supported, and years of projects moving from blueprints to reality. This kind of progress is the result of sustained effort — from financing to construction to delivery. Real climate progress shows up not in what you commit to, but in what you actually build.
6 0
9 days ago
Our 2025 impact report is live! The biggest headline? 🥁 Our community put $22.3M to work for climate action in 2025. Not commitments. Not pledges. Actual funding, by companies certified with The Climate Label. From cutting emissions across supply chains to supporting climate projects and broader system change. If you’ve ever wondered what “climate action” looks like—this is it. 🔗 See how it all adds up at the link in our bio.
16 0
17 days ago
🦪 More than 15 million oysters are being reintroduced to the North Sea. Oyster reefs were once a major part of coastal ecosystems. Over time, many disappeared due to overharvesting and habitat loss. Now they’re being rebuilt. Oysters attach to each other and form reef structures that grow over time. Those reefs create habitat, stabilize coastlines, and can trap carbon in shells and seafloor sediments. Early estimates suggest this project could store up to 76 tonnes of CO₂ a year to start, with potential to grow significantly as reefs expand. It’s not one intervention that changes the system. It’s what happens when something is built, allowed to grow, and given time to scale. That’s how decarbonization works, too. Not from a single action, but from real changes that are put in place and built on over time.
7 0
18 days ago
Happy Earth Day from all of us at Cairnspring. 🌎 From partnering with farmers to rebuilding soil health, and building a more resilient food system, sustainability guides every step of what we do. Hear from Paul, our Sustainability Manager, about the journey to earning The Climate Label and building for the future. We’re proud to share a look at the work happening behind the scenes to produce nutritious, flavorful, regeneratively grown grains and stone-milled flour. Watch the full video on YouTube linked in our profile.
184 9
24 days ago
Earth Day comes with a lot of messaging. Some of it holds up. Some of it doesn’t. The difference is in the work: what’s been measured, what’s changing, and where companies are putting real resources to reduce emissions. That’s what counts.
30 0
24 days ago
Natural gas is usually the largest source of electricity in the U.S. But in March, renewables surpassed it — for the first time ever. But there's more: renewables together with nuclear provided more than 50% of electricity. Despite the rise of data center energy hogs. This didn’t happen because of a single policy or announcement. It reflects how the energy sector is steadily changing. This kind of change doesn’t happen all at once. It builds through consistent, deliberate work. The same is true for businesses — lasting change comes from deep investment and gradual transformation, not quick claims and short-lived whims.
10 0
25 days ago
What does climate action actually look like? We’re about to find out 🌿 Join us this Earth Day at Planet Haus in San Francisco—an immersive experience designed to show what climate action looks like in the real world, not just on paper. We’re proud to be part of it. Our CEO, Austin Whitman, will be in conversation with Peak Design CEO, Peter Dering—we’d love to see some familiar faces there. ✨ Come curious. Leave inspired. 🔗 RSVP in our bio 📍 The Battery SF 🗓 April 22
9 0
1 month ago
Every brand loves Earth Month. Only some brands love Earth the way we need to. The Climate Label certifies brands with the goals, plans, and budgets to decarbonize. All certified brands have to measure their emissions, create climate transition plans, and demonstrate that they're funding real projects to cut carbon now. Find certified brands at the link in our bio, and follow along as we spotlight the work they're doing this Earth Month.
17 0
1 month ago
Beavers aren’t thinking about carbon when they chomp on trees. But like all of us, their work makes a difference. New research shows that beaver-created wetlands can act as powerful carbon sinks, storing as much as storing as much as 164 tonnes of carbon in one wetland that was studied. This shows us how tightly all of earth's complex systems are tied to the climate. It's not always obvious, but it's there once you look. This connection is present in nature and in business. Beavers are nature's systems engineers. If they can do it, we can do it. Source: Nature.com
12 0
1 month ago
Today we’re celebrating Jane Goodall. Her work changed how we understand the natural world and our place within it. She helped show that humans aren’t separate from nature, we’re part of it. And what we do has consequences. From ecosystems to the atmosphere, everything is connected, including the carbon emissions we generate, and the choices that lead to them. Jane's words remind us that the small decisions we make, every day, add up to something much bigger — and that we all have a choice about what kind of mark to leave. Photo: Michael Nichols, National Geographic
59 0
1 month ago