Digital collage featuring climate activist Elizabeth created for Oxfam by Nigerian visual artist Alexis Chivir-Ter Tsegba.
We need trust and solidarity to collectively solve the nature and climate crisis we're facing.”
Kenyan climate activist Elizabeth Wathuti.
Climate Action
The climate crisis isn't in the future, it's here now. Pushing people deeper into poverty. Polluters must pay for the damage they've caused. So all of us can thrive.
The true cost of luxury travel
Private jets and superyachts are some of the most polluting ways to travel, yet they fly under the radar when it comes to taxes.
Let’s tax extremely polluting luxury travel to fund urgent action on the climate crisis.
What is Climate Justice?
In our unequal world, the rights of a few to profit from pollution is being protected while the rest of us pay the price.
The world-over, millions of us are speaking out about this injustice. We are calling for climate justice, led by those facing the worst of the climate crisis right now.
The front page Image: Max van Woerkom/ Oxfam
The richest 1% emit as much planet-heating pollution as two-thirds of humanity says Oxfam's report Climate Equality: A Planet for the 99%, published ahead of the UN Climate Summit, COP28.
Listen: Hali Hewa podcast
Listen to young energy expert and climate activist Abigael Kima on the Hali Hewa Podcast. Episode 1 features Elizabeth Wanjiru Wathuti, founder of the Green Generation Initiative...
Act with communities for climate justice
- Join an Oxfam Student Network to take climate action at university.
- Download our School Education Resources.
- Join the Constituency Campaigner Programme.
A Changing Climate
Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and South Sudan produce 0.1% of global emissions.
The richest 10 percent of the world's population accounted for over half of the emissions added to the atmosphere between 1990 and 2015.
The money needed to help people affected by extreme weather-related emergencies like floods or drought is eight times higher than 20 years ago.