
Read our annual report for 2024-25

Climate mapping for Western Australia's bioregions is now availale for Autumn 2025

Our Earth System Weather Model has been launched

Read our strategic plan for 2025-26

EarthEye returns as a web application

Welcome Eco to our team!

Read our submission to the NSW Net Zero Commission
Connecting community to climate research through understanding, action and resilience
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Understanding
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Action
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Resilience
The Climate Centre's mission is to connect communities in need with actionable climate research through outreach, collaboration, and expert volunteer support. We focus on empowering underserved populations by conducting locally relevant studies on heat stress, fire risk, flooding, and ecosystem health. Our dedicated volunteers provide technical assistance to those who lack access to consultancy services, helping translate complex climate science into practical, understandable insights. We foster meaningful stakeholder engagement through interviews, public communication, and simple languageāensuring climate issues are not only studied but understood at a community level. Through initiatives like remote monitoring, environmental assessments, and scenario modeling, we offer non-profit support that informs and strengthens community-led responses to climate impacts.
Climate change and community challenges are ultimately addressed by taking action. By undertaking work relevant to local communities and providing stakeholders with actionable recommendations, we shift the mindset from impossible to actionable by leading stakeholders through the problem towards something they can do regardless of their financial or logistical capabilities. Assessing the environmental conditions and then recommending changes in line with science and government regulation comprise The Climate Centre's goal of taking action to address climate change. But we also take action through our social justice efforts, advocating for government and industry to change their practices to be more sustainable.
Resilience is an increasingly important aspect of dealing with climate change. In the face of this existential threat, many people in society feel hopeless, exhausted, and daunted by the challenge that climate change poses. We encourage society to build resilience by first acknowledging the issues facing their communities locally, regionally and globally, and then by providing actionable solutions: a path towards building a better future. This is an important part of building resilience. Eco-anxiety is highly impactful to our efforts, and we must reflect on our circumstances, validating our situation, not as a way to give up, but as a way to carry on making positive change to ourselves, and the world around us.