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Climate Action to the Table: Second Set of Project Events

Bringing Climate Action to the Table

From the community



Climate Action to the Table: Second Set of Project Events

by Hana Turšič, Umanotera

Fundesplai from Barcelona, Spain and Umanotera, The Slovenian Foundation for Sustainable Development from Ljubljana, Slovenia are the two partner organisations of EUKI’s Climate Action to the Table project. As part of the project, both organisations have been holding live and online events on the topics of climate friendly and sustainable food.


Autumn and winter project events of Climate Action to the Table

In the second half of 2022, Umanotera organised two events about the intersection of climate and food. The first was an in-person event, titled “Climate crisis and rising food prices – how to solve two problems at the same time?” (September 26, Hiša EU). Experts from various backgrounds (academic, NGO, farming) discussed the following question: What are the key vulnerability factors and especially which are the changes at both the consumer and systemic level that are needed in order to ensure quality, safe and accessible food while reducing the impact on climate change?

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Climate crisis and rising food prices – how to solve two problems at the same time?, Photo: ©Umanotera

Programme of the event

Recording of the event

Photographs from the event

The second event by Umanotera was titled: “Climate and environment-friendly food: Plant-based meat alternatives” (October 6, online). Speakers held presentations and discussed the necessity of addressing the topic of climate-friendly food and explained what plant-based meat alternatives are, which types are available on the market today and how they differ from each other. They also discussed consumers’ motivation for purchasing plant-based meat alternatives and current market trends in this field.

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Climate and environment-friendly food: Plant-based meat alternatives, Photo: ©Umanotera

Programme of the event

Recording of the event

Umanotera was not the only partner organisation within the project to organise an event in October, as Fundesplai followed soon with a conference: “Advertising, Food and Childhood” (October 18, Fundesplai HQ). The event featured Aitor Sánchez, dietician-nutritionist and science communicator. The need to regulate food advertising of unhealthy foods to children and during childhood was emphasised.

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Advertising, food and childhood, Photo: ©Fundesplai

Recording of the event

In the beginning of 2023, Fundesplai organised another two events. The first was an online event, titled “School Agroecology: realities, challenges, and perspectives” (January 26, online). Three talks by an EUKI representative, an environmental educator and an agronomist were held, during which the themes of intra-European cooperation on climate action, educational resources for working at schools and agroecology in Catalonia among other topics were discussed.

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School Agroecology: realities, challenges, and perspectives, Photo: ©Fundesplai

Recording of the event

On the last day in January, Fundesplai held the last event in the cycle of conferences as part of the Climate Action to the Table project. The event “Insects or macroalgae, new sources of protein in the diet of the future” (January 31, online) included four examples of protein sources alternative to meat consumption, their viability in the market and the benefits their consumption could bring to the future diet.

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Insects or macroalgae, new sources of protein in the diet of the future, ©Fundesplai

Recording of the event

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Climate Action to the Table: Educating on food sustainability

Bringing Climate Action to the Table

Slovenian organisation Umanotera and Spanish organisation Fundesplai have been hosting a series of educator trainings and visits to schools on the topic of healthy and climate-friendly food as part of EUKI’s Climate Action To The Table project.

This theatre play was developed and written by the REFE project members and deals with climate action and love.

Cyclurban+ Lessons Learned Report


Cyclurban+ Lessons Learned Report 2022

It is inevitable that cities improve eco-friendly and sustainable transportation alternatives in the future. This is important not only from an environmental perspective but also from an urban development point of view by organising urban space in a way that supports all interests, favours road safety and reduces emissions.

This lessons-learned report by EUKI project Cyclurban+ highlights its pilot-cases and possible measures for local authorities. All are designed to improve the cycling infrastructure whether with political, financial or social approaches and were developed and tested in the course of project. Several examples give evidence that they were successful.

Download PDF in English

Cyclurban+: Mobility Change, not Climate Change

This manual by EUKI project Green Rural Deal informs about the transformative potential of public policies in the context of the green transition and includes strategies, instruments and tools for European policy makers.

House with solar panels in Dolní Lomná, Moravian-Silesian Region, Czech Republic

Czech Climate Journalism Begins to Take off

Climate and Energy Fellowships for Journalists in Europe

From the community



Czech Climate Journalism Begins to Take off

by IJP Fellow Elena Kolb

Unbearable heat in summer, forest fires, water shortages – the consequences of climate change in the Czech Republic are very similar to those being felt in Germany. The tenor of reporting is also gradually changing, although the handful of climate reporters in the Czech Republic still face widespread scepticism about climate change and accusations that they are driving activism.


‘Until very recently, we still had to explain to many people in the Czech Republic that there is actually such a thing as anthropogenic climate change,’ Czech journalist Filip Rambousek says. With his colleague Štěpán Vizi, he produces the Czech-German climate podcast ‘Karbon’ (Carbon) [Czech/German], which aims to broaden understanding of the Central European take on the climate crisis.

Filip Rambousek

Filip Rambousek is one of the journalists behind the podcast ‘Karbon’ (Carbon), which provides information on the energy transition in Czech and German. Photo: private

‘Now that we are actually seeing the impacts of the climate crisis in the Czech Republic, it is easier to communicate the fact that we need to adapt,’ says Rambousek.

Like Germany, the Czech Republic suffered extreme droughts [German] last summer, resulting in water shortages and widespread forest fires. Polls indicate that the majority of Czechs now accept the existence of the climate crisis.

It would be more difficult to communicate those emissions also need to be reduced, however. ‘It is a far more abstract concept,’ Rambousek explains. The Czech Republic is a highly industrialised country, and many jobs depend on the automobile industry. According to the European Parliamentary Research Service, the country’s per capita greenhouse gas emissions were the third highest in the EU in 2019.

Renewables could help cut emissions. But writing that one day the Czech Republic could meet all its energy needs from renewables ‘feels like science fiction’, the journalist Jiří Nádoba [Czech] says. He reports on energy and economic affairs for the Czech weekly magazine Respekt.

Nuclear power rather than renewables

To date, the country’s energy mix has been dominated by fossil fuels such as coal, gas and oil, followed by nuclear power. Less than six per cent of power is generated from renewables. The Czech Government is focusing on nuclear power [German] to reduce the country’s dependence on fossil fuels and is planning to build small modular reactors (SMRs) [German].

Germany’s position on nuclear power is very different from the stance of the Czech Republic. ‘Most people here are in favour of expanding the use of nuclear power,’ says journalist Jiří Nádoba.

The Czech landscape largely consists of gently rolling hills, broken only by bushes and fences. Not a wind turbine in sight.

‘People here associate renewable energy with fraud and corruption,’ says Nádoba, explaining that the Czech Republic saw a solar boom around 2010 from which it was primarily individual investors who reaped the profits.

And there is a widely held belief that the country does not offer suitable geographical conditions for renewable energy because of a lack of wind and sun, he adds. ‘The Czechs think of themselves as a very small country that can’t really do much for climate action.’

Nádoba recently won [Czech] Czechia’s Ekopublika award for environmental journalism for an article he wrote about Denmark’s plan [German] to build an artificial island for renewable energy. The weekly magazine he writes for frequently addresses climate-related issues. ‘Just because of that, some readers say we are ‘progressive’ or ‘climate activists’, Nádoba tells us.

House with solar panels in Dolní Lomná, Moravian-Silesian Region, Czech Republic

Solar pioneers are few and far between in the Czech Republic. The Czech solar programme was monopolised by major companies. Photo: Michal Klajban/​Wikimedia Commons

A new generation

In Brno, in the east of the Czech Republic, Žaneta Gregorová is organising the country’s first seminar on climate journalism at Masaryk University. Czech media have been publishing more climate content in the last few years, with a tendency to focus more on local issues than on global ones, she says. The tabloid media in particular often fail to provide background information on the climate crisis or to put extreme weather events in a wider context.

Gregorová flicks through the climate reports her students have written in the course of the seminar. They address activism, greenwashing and the country’s coal mining regions [German]. She aims to train a new generation of climate journalists.

‘Czech journalists reporting on the climate crisis today often do not see themselves as climate journalists,’ she says, adding that most editorial teams do not have a specific section for climate affairs, which is why there is still no nationwide network of climate journalists.

This nationwide networking in other European states has recently generated new impetus for reporting on climate issues. In France, Austria and Germany [German], climate charters have been published for the sector.

In the Czech Republic, climate reporting is gradually developing. In future, increased cooperation among Czech climate journalists within the country, and at transnational level, seems likely to offer considerable potential.

Elena Kolb is a freelance journalist who worked for eight weeks in the editorial office of the Czech weekly magazine Respect. She is also a fellow of the Climate and Energy Fellowships for Journalists in Europe project funded by EUKI and wrote this article originally for the German online magazine klimareporter.

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Elena Kolb, journalist

Back Seat for Cars in Bratislava

Climate and Energy Fellowships for Journalists in Europe

Bicycles, buses and trams are all set to play a more prominent role in the future urban landscape of the Slovak capital Bratislava. But the city’s planners have yet to factor in the differing patterns of mobility shown by men and women as journalist Sandra Kirchner experienced herself.

A Database Bears Fruit

EUKI project ‘Directing EU funds towards climate neutrality’ gave recommendations to about 100 representatives of national and local governments, business groups and academics in 8 countries on the climate-friendly spending of 240 billion EUR in total. Through analysing 58 best practices from these countries, the team also formulated policy recommendations on public infrastructure investments that reached over 75 mio. people.