Children in the Climate Crisis
Co-funded project by the European Union

Our project sees itself as an international contribution to the fight against climate change. Here, the eight project partners from six different European countries start early. The focus is on professionalizing ecological and scientific education for educators at daycare centers, schools, and youth centers. Through sensitizing children and adolescents to the need for climate protection, the necessary, sustainable societal consensus is to be promoted. For more information about the project, you can click here.

The colors in the figure above represent the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere from 2004 to 2023 on a monthly basis. Dark colors on the left indicate lower values of atmospheric CO2 in the earlier years, while lighter, yellow colors represent higher values of atmospheric CO2 towards the end of the period. Due to high anthropogenic emissions of CO2, the overall content increases over the years. Additionally, we observe monthly variations in CO2 levels, visualized by changes in darker and lighter colors within individual years. This is due to the annual cycle of plant growth in the Northern Hemisphere. During boreal summers, plants and trees have more leaves and are greener, performing more photosynthesis. In this process, plants convert atmospheric CO2 and water into glucose and oxygen using solar energy. This glucose is used for growth and energy. As a consequence, atmospheric levels of CO2 decline. Plants act as a natural sink of CO2 in our climate system. In winter, photosynthesis is strongly reduced, and CO2 accumulates in the atmosphere

Contact

Avatar Esters

Leonie Esters

Avatar Schielicke

Lisa Schielicke

Avatar Ginting

Yohanes Ginting


Avatar Hauser

Simon Hauser

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