Climate Action Network Zimbabwe (CANZIM)

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Climate Action Network Zimbabwe (CANZIM) banner
Climate Action Network Zimbabwe (CANZIM)

Climate Action Network Zimbabwe (CANZIM)

@CANZIM11

National network of 120+ CSOs, CBOs, & Academia groups fighting the #ClimateCrisisNow to achieve social justice through #PayUp #EndFossilFuels #FastFairForever

Zimbabwe Beigetreten Nisan 2022
6K Folgt2.1K Follower
Climate Action Network Zimbabwe (CANZIM) retweetet
Green is a mission
Green is a mission@Greenisamissio1·
Love of nature does not only extend to a one-sided enjoyment on our part, but requires a high degree of respect and care for nature.💚🌿🌱☘️🌲🌳🍀💚
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Webdev Zimbabwe
Webdev Zimbabwe@WebdevZimbabwe·
Show your business some love. Get a professional email address with your own domain and enjoy reliable email hosting with Webdev.
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Community Podium
Community Podium@communitypodium·
📢 In today's information landscape, fact-checking is a critical habit that helps you move beyond simply doubting information to actively verifying it so you can make decisions based on clear, accurate, and well-understood information. 5 steps to consider...👇 #communitydiaries
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Power Shift Africa
Power Shift Africa@PowerShftAfrica·
NEW ANALYSIS: Implications of ICJ Advisory Opinion on the Climate Obligations of African States In July 2025, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivered a unanimous opinion confirming countries’ international law obligations to advance climate action. Importantly, they ruled that there can be legal consequences arising from acts and omissions that cause significant harm to the climate system and other parts of the environment. While the advisory opinion is not legally enforceable and binding, it carries significant legal implications for states. It, therefore, ought to influence how African countries make decisions relating to climate policy in the future, as our experts @K_Mokgonyana and Meshack Mboya find in this analysis. ‘‘The ICJ decision provides authoritative legal guidance from the world’s highest international court, cementing the importance of state climate obligations,’’ the duo says. Read the policy brief here: powershiftafrica.org/publications/i…
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Leena WLF
Leena WLF@Leena_LiveNow·
@CANZIM11 @CANSouthernAfri @powershiftafri 0.1% says everything. I keep hearing pledges while the real need is systems: water security, resilient power, food infrastructure. Communities don’t run on promises. They run on what actually works.
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Emma Wright
Emma Wright@lakesdoglover·
@CANZIM11 Climate justice demands grant-based support, not loans. Vulnerable communities need adaptation resources without debt traps for crises they didn't create.
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Power Shift Africa
Power Shift Africa@PowerShftAfrica·
The Earth has a fever. And it just won't break. 11 consecutive years of record-breaking heat. Human activity caused this. Fossil fuel dependence caused this. Every emission, every cleared forest, every fossil fuel burned has pushed the Earth's temperature higher. This Wednesday, the world celebrates #EarthDay. But the Earth is not in a celebrating mood. Share this if you're ready to see the Earth in a better state!
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Power Shift Africa
Power Shift Africa@PowerShftAfrica·
Celebrating 1,000 days of PACAR 🥳 1,000 days ago, a group of African adaptation advocates gathered in Arusha, Tanzania, with a shared conviction that Africa's voices on climate adaptation were too important to remain on the margins of global climate conversations. That meeting gave birth to the Pan African Coalition for Adaptation and Resilience. Known simply as PACAR. Since then, the coalition has grown into a powerful, multi-stakeholder platform uniting civil society organisations, technical experts, and community leaders across the continent. In South Africa, PACAR members helped transform a polluted river into a thriving ecosystem. In Cameroon, women farmers are growing drought-tolerant crops and feeding their families despite unpredictable rainfall. In Kenya, indigenous seeds that were disappearing are now being preserved in community seed banks. In Ghana, young people are shaping national adaptation plans. In Nigeria, farmers are making better decisions because they finally have access to timely weather information. This is what 1,000 days of PACAR looks like in practice. Some familiar faces have moved on to new chapters. But the work they poured into this coalition lives on in every community it has touched. Your work matters. It has always mattered. Here is to 1,000 more days of PACAR!
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