1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

10 actions for climate protection

Gero Rueter/ cbDecember 15, 2015

With a new global agreement to guide governments toward climate protection, personal action is more important than ever. From riding your bike to shopping organic, here are some simple ways you can help save the climate.

https://p.dw.com/p/1HMCD
windmills. (Photo: Oliver Berg)
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

1. Use less energy

Most greenhouse gases are emitted by power plants, industry and traffic. By using energy efficiently, you can save fossil fuels and protect the climate. So switch lights and appliances off when you aren't using them, and make sure your buildings are well-insulated so you don't waste energy on heating and cooling.

Peope in Ruanda set up solar panels on a roof. (Photo: Mobisol)
Image: Mobisol

2. Produce clean energy

Electricity doesn't have to come from fossil fuel-fired power plants. Alternatives like solar are even getting less expensive. Producing power yourself isn't hard - there's lots of space for solar panels on your roof, and by now the technology is well-established.

A group of people in front of a large solar panel. (Photo: Gemeinde Saerbeck)
Image: Gemeinde Saerbeck/Ulrich Gunka

3. Support good ideas

More and more communities, companies and cooperatives are investing in renewable energies and selling clean power. The solar park pictured above belongs to Saerbeck. The German town with 7,200 inhabitants produces more power than it needs, and is an international role model.

Projection of "Fossil Free" on the Münster cathedral. (Photo: Linda Choritz - licht-gestalten.net/)
Image: 350.org/Linda Choritz

4. Pull your money out of climate-damaging businesses

The number of citizens, funds, insurance agencies, universities and cities that are divesting from fossil fuels is growing. Münster is the first city in Germany to have joined the divestment movement. Globally, 57 cities have already done the same. Investors of all stripes can divest from fossil fuels, making for a dynamic global movement.

Cyclists in Amsterdam. (Photo: Gero Rueter/ DW)
Image: DW/G. Rueter

5. Switch to bike, bus and tram

Traveling by bike, bus or train saves a lot of CO2. Compared to a car, a bus is five times more climate-friendly - and an electric-powered train is 15 times more climate-friendly! Most people living in Amsterdam bike everywhere. The city takes good care of its cyclists, with its well-kept bike lanes.

Burger with two meat patties. (Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Image: Getty Images/J. Sullivan

6. Eat less meat

Methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, is generated in the stomachs of cows, sheep and goats. Eating less meat means fewer animals are generating methane. Another reason that large-scale livestock farming and meat consumption are bad for the climate is that it uses such a large amount of resources, including water, and land to grow feed. Rainforests are even cut down to grow soy that is then fed to cows.

Two people in a green field. (Photo: imago/ P. Lueger)
Image: imago/R. Lueger

7. Buy organic

Laughing gas is no laughing matter - the damaging gas contributes up to 6 percent toward the greenhouse effect. It's generated in power plants and engines - but mostly by artificial fertilizers in industrial agriculture. Use of the gas is prohibited in ecologically oriented farming, so the more that happens, the less laughing gas is emitted. And that helps protect the climate.

Two girls putting mud on a bamboo wall. (Photo: Oliver Ristau)
Image: Oliver Ristau

8. Build and consume sustainably

A lot of carbon dioxide is produced from production of steel and cement. Wood and bamboo, on the other hand, bind CO2. Consciously choosing products made from sustainable materials helps the climate. The same is true for other everyday consumer choices: drinking a cup of coffee at the cafe uses less resources - and fossil fuels - than getting a cup of coffee to go.

A group of children looking at a solar panel. (Photo: Gemeinde Saerbeck/U.Gunnka)
Image: Gemeinde Saerbeck/U.Gunnka

9. Take responsibility

How can we keep down greenhouse gas emissions so that all children across the world - and their children - can live without climate catastrophes? Make responsible choices. These students are fascinated by clean energy and see it as an opportunity for their future.

Pro-climate demonstrators at the Eiffel Tower during COP21 in Paris
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/T. Camus

10. Don't act alone

Perhaps one of the best things an individual can do is not be an individual. Climate activist Bill McKibben points out that coming together in movements is likely to be more effective in changing the systems and structures that are causing the problem.