Conservation

Climate Initiative

Audubon taps into people’s love of birds to protect them from climate change.

 

Climate change is an existential threat to birds and people. Audubon’s science report Survival By Degrees: 389 Bird Species on the Brink, published in October 2019, found that two-thirds of studied North American birds are at increasing risk of extinction from global temperature rise. The same climate-related threats, like fire, drought, and heat waves, that endanger birds endanger people, too.

The report also found that if we take action now, we can protect the majority of our vulnerable birds. By stabilizing carbon emissions and holding warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, 76 percent of vulnerable species will be better off, and nearly 150 species would no longer be vulnerable to extinction from climate change.

Addressing this threat requires sustained, targeted action in legislatures across the country, and Audubon's network—including 1.7 million members, 454 local chapters, 41 nature centers, and 23 state offices—is uniquely positioned to lead. By engaging our bipartisan network to advance effective climate solutions, Audubon not only makes progress on climate policy, but also builds public demand for solutions. We’re building the political muscle and grassroots momentum to drive both state and federal wins on climate, and we’re aiming high: Audubon has set a goal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 45 percent below 2010 levels by 2030, and reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

How Audubon Creates Effective Climate Solutions

State and Local Campaigns

By focusing on local and state-level policies on climate and renewables, we can get critical wins while also spurring appetite for federal climate action.

Grassroots Organizing

Because Audubon is local everywhere, we can mobilize people all across the United States to take action on local climate issues.

Credibility Across the Political Spectrum

Audubon is a centrist organization that focuses on market-based solutions and common-sense climate policies that resonate on both sides of the aisle in Congress.

Clear Renewable Energy Goals

Audubon works with industry to develop properly-sited renewable energy projects to help us move to a clean energy future.

Cutting-Edge Climate Science

Audubon uses science to understand the impacts of climate change on birds and the habitats they depend upon.

Our Bipartisan Membership

Our membership allows Audubon to create policy opportunities by building trust and relationships on both sides of the aisle. Capitalizing on our bipartisan membership, solutions-oriented approach, and presence in members’ states and districts around the country, Audubon is helping to shape solutions and mobilize the broad support to make them real. The climate crisis will not wait. Building consensus around a range of solutions, including market- and incentive-based policies, will help us accelerate the pace of successful and durable climate policy. We are committed to working with bipartisan leaders, business and centrist institutions.

 

Audubon's State and Local Campaigns

Audubon is local everywhere. With leadership in 23 states and with chapters and members in all 50 states, Audubon has the presence and a committed membership to advance climate solutions in communities across the country. We are leading grassroots campaigns in six states (both red and blue) to drive locally relevant solutions that build resilience or reduce carbon emissions. We do that by strengthening public and political support for solutions to address a changing climate. Securing a single victory in a state builds momentum for more, and progress in one place seeds progress in others.       

Audubon's Grassroots Organizing

Audubon is building a network of bipartisan advocates for climate solutions. By engaging with our 1.7 million members, and the more than 45 million Americans who consider themselves birders, we make complex environmental impacts tangible, and national and global issues local. Audubon brings people to climate action through their passion for birds: stewarding a beach to protect nesting shorebirds, planting native gardens that support bird populations, participating in a Christmas Bird Count or taking a bird walk at a local Audubon nature center. Each activity can provide a window into the impacts of a changing climate on the birds we care about.

Our Field Organizers

Audubon's field organizers, active in states with conservative to moderate constituencies, empower communities to take climate action through education, training, and organizational support. 

Audubon's Renewables Policy

Audubon supports reaching 50 percent renewable-power generation by 2030. Building on two decades of collaboration and advocacy for well-sited renewable energy projects, we will work with all stakeholders—energy developers, conservation organizations, local communities, and government agencies—to promote renewable energy policies at the local, state and federal levels, and to advance projects on the ground.

Audubon's Position on Wind Power
Greg_Latza_Wind_Power
Audubon's Position on Wind Power

Audubon strongly supports properly sited wind power as a renewable energy source that helps reduce the threat posed to birds and people by climate change.

Why Solar Power Is Good for Birds
Why Solar Power Is Good for Birds

Solar energy is a boon for the environment, but some methods can be harmful to birds and other wildlife. Here's how to go solar safely.

Strengthening our Network

Audubon members know that climate change is happening now, in their backyards, and it's happening to birds they love. They want to know what they can do now to take action no matter when and where political opportunities arise. 

To that end, Audubon's nature centers, chapters, and local partners have embraced our hands-on programs designed to address birds' struggles with climate change. These actions, which can be taken at home or in their local communities, empower and engage the public to champion climate solutions.

Plants for Birds
Climate Watch

Cutting-Edge Climate Science

In October 2019, Survival By Degrees: 389 Bird Species on the Brink revealed that climate change is a threat to the survival of two-thirds of North America’s bird species. The five-year science investigation, made possible by 140 million bird observations made by birders and scientists over many decades, sounded an alarm that made news around the world. 

Audubon applies its cutting-edge science in conservation, mitigation, and adaptation efforts across the United States and into Central and South America, where many of America’s climate-sensitive birds spend their winters.

Olympic National Park. Jon Bilous/Alamy
The Future of Birds in Our National Parks
North America threat map
Survival by Degrees: 389 Bird Species on the Brink
Climate Action Plan for the Americas
Audubon Magazine Climate Issue, Fall 2019
Climate Initiative National Leadership

Claire Douglass

Director of National Campaigns

Lisa Hardaway

Interim Chief Network and Communications Officer; Vice President, Communications

Climate News Feed

Four Ways Congress Can Help Birds And People This Year
January 17, 2024 — Returning lawmakers have an opportunity to help birds, the climate, and our own communities.
A small yellow and black bird perches on a vine amid out of focus green leaves.
Using Science to Craft Conservation Policy that Emphasizes Biodiversity in a Changing Climate
April 18, 2023 — As the Biden Administration implements the America the Beautiful initiative, a new study identifies areas most likely to provide refuge for plants and wildlife as temperatures warm.
Why Climate Matters for Birds, on Earth Day and Every Day
April 10, 2023 — Audubon is protecting birds and the places they need in a climate-altered world.
Mangroves, a Line of Defense Against Climate Change
July 27, 2022 — Julio Montes de Oca, director of Coastal Resilience for the Americas, shares how Audubon is advancing in Latin America and the Caribbean one of the priority hemispheric strategies.
See How Climate Change Will Affect Birds Near You
April 29, 2022 — Learn about Audubon's most recent science report: Survival by Degrees: 389 Bird Species on the Brink