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People filming in a field with cameras for a climate journalism program while others work on the crops, green hills and cloudy sky in the background.

Reinventing climate journalism by tapping the collective brainpower of the world’s leading public research university.

Climate journalism is at the heart of Berkeley Journalism’s mission.

In this time of wild weather and increasing economic, political and social turbulence sparked by environmental crises, how can journalists tell the climate story in a way that inspires people to practical, equitable, and effective action? How can we do so without shrinking from journalism’s obligation to hold the powerful to account as they delay in implementing creative and potent solutions?

Through the Berkeley Climate Journalism Lab, UC Berkeley seeks to reinvent climate journalism, tapping the collective brainpower of the world’s leading public research university — some 300 researchers located in more than 20 programs across the campus — who are confronting the problem of climate change.

We’re working to shift popular narratives from passive despair to active hope and possibility. We’re building an engaged, informed, and change-oriented community for fact-based, inspired climate journalism across the UC Berkeley campus and beyond.

The program includes several components: an introductory course in climate reporting and second-year interdisciplinary thesis seminar for students at Berkeley Journalism, opportunities for research and publishing, and a speaker series and other public programming for the Bay Area community.

Students

A person in a hoodie and cap operates a video camera in a windy field with wind turbines under a cloudy sky, capturing footage for a climate journalism program.

Berkeley Journalism offers one of the most robust climate journalism programs in the country, which includes courses, research projects and publishing opportunities.

First-year students: In the fall semester, first-year students are invited and encouraged to attend a series of brown-bag lunches with guest speakers, who are cutting-edge researchers, journalists and filmmakers. In their Spring semester, they are offered an “Introduction to Climate Reporting” seminar, which provides students in all tracks the fundamental knowledge and skills to report on climate change, culminating with a story pitch for the second-year Climate Journalism Lab. 

The course also provides resources and contacts for students to engage with the wider campus network of climate change research and action (hundreds of faculty and dozens of groups, along with University of California labs and field stations). In 2023–2024, the focus of the introductory class was “Food, Water and Equity in California.” In the 2024–2025 academic year, the focus will be “Why Climate Change is Everything: Reporting on Politics, Business, Water, Food, Energy, Biodiversity, Cities and More in a Time of Epic Disruption,” co-taught by Professor Jason Spingarn-Koff and lecturer Mark Schapiro.

 

Starting fall 2025, students can apply to participate in the Berkeley Climate Journalism Lab thesis seminar. This is the focal point of the climate journalism program, in which students create work across all media for the broad public, in partnership with funders and publishers. Depending on student interest, the Lab may include several projects or a larger collaboration on a theme — and can involve documentary films, multimedia packages, podcasts and narrative writing. The Lab is designed to complement work in other production classes, including the Documentary Workshop (students would enroll in both classes and produce one capstone project). Additionally, the Lab welcomes select graduate students from other programs across the University, who add expertise in environmental science and policy, and gain experience in climate journalism.


Research projects: The climate journalism program includes ongoing research and publishing projects. 

  • Some students work with Professor Spingarn-Koff as Graduate Student Assistants and interns on documentary film projects. 
  • In 2023–2025, internships are available with the Climate Equity Reporting Project. A collaborative effort between Berkeley Journalism and UC Berkeley's Energy and Resources Group (ERG), funded by a grant from the state of California, the project aims to produce a series of articles for various publications that explore the intersection between climate and equity, with a focus on greenhouse gas reduction efforts. Led by Professor Spingarn-Koff and writer/editor Twilight Greenaway. 

University-wide courses: Students are encouraged to take courses in other Berkeley schools and colleges on specialized subjects spanning food, water, biodiversity, energy, economics and more. (Note these are at the discretion of each department and instructor and subject to student bandwidth, factoring in course credits and J-School requirements.) Find the Climate Course Guide.

Featured Faculty and Student Work

A hand reaching towards an octopus, with multiple award nominations and positive reviews for "My Octopus Teacher" displayed, illustrating the impact of climate on marine life.

My Octopus Teacher

In his former role as Director of Original Documentary Programming at Netflix, Professor Jason Spingarn-Koff was network executive producer of the Academy Award winning documentary My Octopus Teacher. 



READ MORE
Aerial view of a coastal landscape with blue water, green islets, and surrounding hilly terrain under a clear sky—a testament to nature's resilience amid the changing climate.

Parties, jetskis, second homes: how tourism threatens one of the world’s only bioluminescent bays

The delicate spectacle of light has long been a local treasure – but it’s been threatened by a demand for housing by locals and tourists alike who desire a front-row seat to the show. Coral Murphy Marcos ('24) writes for the Guardian. 

READ MORE
A group of people holding signs that say "END FOSSIL FUELS" and "DEFEND ENVIRONMENTAL DEFENDERS," advocating for climate action.

Give Climate Change the Name It Deserves: Fossil-Fueled Destruction

Lecturer Mark Schapiro writes in Capital & Main about the need to name who is to blame and how we need to shift from the "stiff and one-dimensional" term climate change. 

READ MORE
Topographic maps of the Chowchilla and Madera Subbasins, showing boundaries, streams, and GSA areas in different colors, provide essential data for climate programs.

Madera farmers and groundwater agency in limbo waiting for court decision on fees

The end of a two-year legal fight over who should pay, and how much, to replenish the groundwater beneath Madera County could be in sight. Hannah Frances ('25) writes for SVJ Water.

READ MORE
A finger points to a cylinder related to an electric vehicle.

California Wants Homes to Go All Electric, But What if You Don’t Have Enough Money?

Twilight Greenaway, writer and editor for the Climate Equity Reporting Project, reports for The San Francisco Chronicle



READ MORE
A man in glasses stands smiling in front of a house with a porch, wind chimes, and a parked car in the background, looking like he's ready to embark on his next journalism program.

Will PG&E's new rates help people electrify their homes?

Or could middle income people end up paying more than their fair share of energy costs? Kele Ogu ('24) writes for the KneeDeep Times. 

READ MORE

Public Events 

The Climate Journalism Program includes speakers series, flagship public events, symposia and premiere screenings of the best in documentary films.

Life on Our Planet Screening: Executive produced by Steven Spielberg, with filmmaker Q&A at BAMPFA in Berkeley.

Rebecca Solnit: Acclaimed activist and writer Rebecca Solnit in conversation with the San Francisco Chronicle's John King.

Kim Stanley Robinson: Bestselling author Kim Stanley Robinson speaks at UC Berkeley

Rosanna Xia: Los Angeles Times environmental reporter and author of “California Against the Sea” spoke at a brown bag lunch at Berkeley Journalism.

 

A speaker addresses a full audience in a modern auditorium, with a large image of Earth projected behind them, emphasizing the critical role of climate journalism in today's world.
A group of people stand near a garden. they are students and professors.
Climate reporting class visits Berkeley’s Edible Schoolyard.

Meet Our People

A bald man in a green corduroy jacket and black-and-white checkered shirt sits in front of a wooden background, looking directly at the camera with a neutral expression.

Jason Spingarn-Koff

Professor and Knight Chair in Climate Journalism

Jason Spingarn-Koff (he/him) is an award-winning documentary filmmaker, journalist and media executive. He is working to reinvent how stories about climate change are told, unite the brainpower of top science experts on the UC Berkeley campus with the expertise of the journalism school, and build partnerships with media organizations and broadcasters to cover multidimensional issues around climate change. From 2015–2022, he served as Director of Original Documentary programming at Netflix, where he oversaw more than 100 global films and series, with honors including four Academy Awards for the company.

Faculty Profile

Faculty and Staff

Jason Spingarn-Koff, Professor and Knight Chair in Climate Journalism. View more about his films and series. 

Mark Schapiro, Continuing Lecturer

Twilight Greenaway, Writer and Editor



Climate Equity Reporting Project

The Climate Equity Reporting Project is a collaborative effort between Berkeley Journalism and UC Berkeley's Energy & Resources Group. Funded by a grant from the state of California, it aims to produce a series of articles for various publications that explore the intersection of climate and equity, with a focus on greenhouse gas reduction efforts such as electrification, building density, and waste management. The project is being executed by Climate Writer and Editor Twilight Greenaway and Professor and Knight Chair of Climate Journalism Jason Spingarn-Koff along with several journalism students. It also involves building a climate cohort within the California Local News Fellowship program.

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