Teaching Outdoor Science – Woodlands & Freshwater
This hands-on course explores how woodland and freshwater environments can be used as rich, accessible settings for outdoor science.
This hands-on course explores how woodland and freshwater environments can be used as rich, accessible settings for outdoor science.
This practical outdoor course focuses on using river and coastal environments as dynamic settings for teaching science through direct invest
front line of the impacts on our planet from climate change. The evening’s focus will be on how we can we build a urban growing infrastructure to best ensure we have food resilience. A panel discussion will be followed with questions and answers from our audience.
Nature is in decline across the world and DAERA has a duty to publish a Biodiversity Strategy to help the conservation of biodiversity in Northern Ireland. This draft Nature Recovery Strategy (which is the Biodiversity Strategy required by legislation) sets out how we intend to meet international and national ambitions in Northern Ireland. The lifespan […]
Glaciers are nature’s frozen sentinels, vast rivers of ice and snow that carve the Earth, silently bearing witness to the passage of time and the shifting rhythms of our planet.
Forests and economies is the theme of the 2026 International Day of Forests, celebrating the essential roles of forests in driving economic prosperity.
Where water flows, equality grows The global water crisis affects everyone – but not equally.
Every 23 March, the World Meteorological Organization commemorates the coming into force of the Convention establishing the World Meteorological Organization on 23 March 1950. It showcases the essential contribution of National Meteorological and Hydrological Services to the safety and wellbeing of society and is celebrated with activities around the world. The themes chosen for World […]
Join leading food policy expert Professor Tim Lang (author of Just in Case: 7 steps to narrow the UK civil food resilience gap) to explore civil food resilience — how citizens, communities, and governments can work together to build fair and sustainable systems that can withstand crisis.
This event will explore why we need urgent action to tackle climate justice obligations and responsibilities to vulnerable communities, and the role governments must play in a fair and funded fossil fuel phase out, from the perspective of both climate and human rights obligations.
The event is open to the general public and the gathering will be livestreamed on the YouTube channel and posted on the site afterwards. Speakers Mary Evelyn Tucker Yale Forum on on Religion and Ecology John Connell Farmer and writer George Marshall Climate communications expert Sadhbh O’Neill Journalist and Climate Campaigner Lorna Gold CEO Laudato Si Global […]