WRI is a global research organization working to improve people’s lives, protect nature and halt climate change 🌍 But it doesn’t have to be this way. Change It.
WRI works to improve people’s lives, protect and restore nature and stabilize the climate. As an independent research organization, we leverage our data, expertise and global reach to influence policy and catalyze change across systems like food, land and water; energy; and cities. Our 2,000+ staff work on the ground in more than a dozen focus countries and with partners in over 50 nations.
** O
ur Challenge **
The world faces converging crises. Widening inequality threatens communities around the globe. Unsustainable production and rampant consumption degrade the forests, clean water and other natural resources on which we all depend. And the impacts of climate change, from withering heat to devastating floods, grow ever more destructive. The causes of these crises are not isolated but intertwined, rooted in economic, financial, and governance systems that have strained the planet’s health while benefiting only some. Much as today’s challenges are interconnected, so, too, are the solutions. Done right, action to curb climate change and protect nature can also fundamentally and equitably benefit all people. We are working toward a future where everyone can enjoy clean air, walkable cities, healthy landscapes, good jobs, nutritious food and affordable energy. Ecosystems are thriving. The climate is stable.
** Our Approach **
We know that a better future is possible. But it won’t be achieved through piecemeal solutions. Rather, we must overhaul the unsustainable production and consumption patterns driving today’s crises. WRI is focused on transforming the human systems that profoundly impact people, nature and the climate. This includes how we manage food, land and water; produce and use energy; and design and manage cities. To enable change at the pace and scale needed, we also work to shift the economic, finance and governance structures that shape people’s decisions and behaviors. We zero in on the countries and solutions most important for driving this global transition. WRI works with a diverse range of stakeholders to develop pathways toward equitable, low-carbon, and resilient economies that are tailored to local contexts. And we measure our success not by internal benchmarks but by visible progress in the world. This bold vision requires a formula for success. We call ours “Count It. Scale It.”:
> Count It: Our work is guided by timely, independent research. WRI experts use cutting-edge methods to collect and analyze data, pinpoint problems, assess potential solutions and evaluate real-world outcomes. Our research is subject to rigorous peer reviews to ensure it is both credible and actionable. For example, our Aqueduct project uses open-source, peer-reviewed data to map water risks like floods and scarcity around the world. It reveals which countries and areas will face the greatest water-related threats in the coming years and advises governments and companies on strategic water management practices.
> Change It: We then use our research to inform action on the ground. We start locally, partnering with communities, companies and government agencies to pilot innovative solutions with widespread potential. We help clear barriers to implementation and then monitor progress to learn what works — and what doesn’t. In rural Africa, we work with local electricity planners to analyze data from our Energy Access Explorer tool, identifying areas that lack power and where clean energy can support local development. We have collaborated with partners to install distributed solar at rural health clinics, often providing affordable and consistent electricity to these facilities for the first time.
> Scale It: Once tested, we strive to expand our successes nationally, regionally and globally. We work with stakeholders ranging from community members to national governments to adapt leading approaches to their needs and mobilize resources. And we make our learnings accessible through partnerships, publications and tools so others can follow suit. In India, WRI experts spent over two years working side-by-side with the government to develop a national electric bus plan that will deploy tens of thousands of e-buses in cities across the country. This deep local engagement is informing how we collaborate with cities in Latin America, Africa and Asia to scale up local e-bus adoption and spur global momentum toward cleaner public transport.
** Where We Work **
WRI works in settings ranging from UN climate negotiations to city halls. While we lead and support initiatives around the globe, many of our efforts are concentrated in countries with the most potential to unlock global transformation. These focus countries house many of the world’s most vulnerable people, contain vitally important natural landscapes and produce significant greenhouse gas emissions — or will in the coming years as their economies and populations expand. We have country offices in Brazil, China, Colombia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mexico, Rwanda and the United States, as well as regional offices in Africa and Europe.
06/23/2026
Today at , the Coalition for High Ambition Multilevel Partnerships (CHAMP) kicked off a new era of climate action.
Representing 40% of the 🌍’s emissions with 77 countries and the European Union, the coalition is already leading the way. Of the endorsers that submitted NDCs 3.0 at in 🇧🇷, 90% increased the integration of city-level partners, and they were 3.5 times more likely to achieve an “A+” rating from UN-HABITAT on urban integration than their counterparts.
As we plan for the next 3️⃣ years of climate action, the 🆕 CHAMP Implementation Roadmap will build on this momentum and supercharge impact on the ground.
WRI Ross Center for Sustainable Cities Bloomberg Philanthropies C40 Cities Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy UN-HABITAT Climate Group
06/23/2026
🌡️🥵Deadly heat waves have become the new norm in recent years for Europe, the world’s fastest-warming continent.
With air conditioning in only 20% of the Europe’s buildings, city leaders face a pressing dilemma: how to keep people cool without worsening the climate crisis driving rising temperatures in the first place.
The cycle of rising heat, greater demand for cooling and growing emissions can be broken. Here, we look at data on Europe’s rising urban heat and explore how cities can adapt by pairing efficient, low-carbon air conditioning with long-term passive cooling solutions such as green roofs, reflective materials, tree planting and climate-smart building design➡️ https://go.wri.org/heat-air-dilemma-fb
06/22/2026
Tune in to WRI at London Climate Action Week! 🌍🇬🇧
Our experts will lead discussions on climate finance, nature based solutions, sustainable cities, energy transitions, food systems, ocean conservation and more.
Stay tuned this week as we share insights from the ground☀️
🌊One of the most promising areas for climate action has been largely overlooked and underinvested: the ocean.
Ocean-based climate solutions can deliver over a third of the annual emissions cuts needed in 2050 to limit temperature rise to 1.5°C, a globally agreed target to avert the worst outcomes from climate change.
🔋By 2035, global volumes of retired EV batteries are projected to exceed 300 GWh. That's equivalent to roughly 4.6 million batteries.
This chart shows how quickly this supply builds across regions, with China accounting for at least the half.
How this capacity is managed will shape both battery value chains and energy storage markets over the next decade👉 https://go.wri.org/ev-second-life-fb
06/19/2026
⏳ 5 years ago, countries pledged to cut emissions by 2030. But are the G20 on pace to deliver?
Only 5 of 14 economies are trending in the right direction.
For the remaining 9, including the US, EU and UK, efforts would need to accelerate significantly, in some cases more than double: https://bit.ly/4vPswXj
06/19/2026
🥗Vegetarian and vegan diets are still a hard sell. Fortunately, the science on how to change this is getting clearer.
🔒After 35 years, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency shuttered its environmental justice offices. But the movement has not been undone.
🌱Local communities and governments across the U.S. are holding polluters accountable, shaping environmental decisions and building resilient communities.
⏳ Four years to 2030, the year countries promised to deliver on. The plans exist. Now comes the proof.
New WRI Climate analysis of G20 Biennial Transparency Reports finds that many countries still face major implementation gaps between their 2030 climate targets and current emissions trajectories.
The reports provide a detailed snapshot of where progress is happening, where ambition is falling short, and what governments must do next to turn commitments into action.