New Four-Year, $4
Million Open Climate Campaign Will Open Knowledge to Solve Challenges in
Climate and Biodiversity
August 30, 2022
Mountain View, CA
30 Aug 2022:
Creative Commons, SPARC and EIFL today announce a new 4-year, $4-million (USD)
grant from Arcadia Fund, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and
Peter Baldwin, to fund the Open Climate Campaign.
This grant, which builds on $450,000 (USD) in planning
funds from the Open Society Foundations, will fund a four-year campaign to
accelerate progress towards solving the climate crisis and preserving global biodiversity
by promoting open access to research.
“While the reality of climate change and the resulting loss
of biodiversity is certain, the research about these global challenges and the
possible actions to tackle them are too often not publicly accessible. In order
to solve these pressing problems, the knowledge about them must be made
immediately and freely open to all,” said Heather Joseph, Executive Director at
SPARC.
“The Campaign has assembled experts from across the fields
of climate change, biodiversity, open science, scholarly publishing and open
education to develop a campaign that we believe will lead to the open sharing
of research outputs as the norm for researchers, governments, funders and
environmental organizations,” said Rima Kupryte, Director at Electronic
Information for Libraries.
The Campaign will:
- Bring attention to the issue of
access to knowledge on climate change and biodiversity.
- Work directly with national
governments, funders and environmental organizations to create open access
policies and make it easier to share their climate change content.
- Identify, engage and contribute
to draft international frameworks to include open access policy
recommendations.
- Identify important existing
climate and biodiversity research publications not already open access and
help them move to open access where possible. We will also explore tactics
to facilitate changes in publisher actions to ensure climate and
biodiversity research is open access.
- Engage with researchers,
universities and policy makers in traditionally excluded geographical
regions to ensure inclusive outcomes throughout.
“Climate change is the most pressing global challenge
facing humanity. When research and data are closed behind paywalls and people
are excluded from the conversation, progress is stifled and we all lose out.
This campaign will ensure inclusive, just and equitable access to the essential
knowledge we will all need to fight the climate crisis,” said Catherine
Stihler, CEO at Creative Commons.
“OSF is thrilled to partner with the Arcadia Fund to
support Creative Commons, SPARC, and EIFL, global leaders of the open access
movement, to launch the Open Climate Campaign. The quick response from the
international research and publishing communities to make all research on
COVID-19, and now monkeypox, openly available, demonstrates that to properly
address the world’s greatest challenges, research needs to be open. OSF has called
for all research to be made openly available, since we helped to define open
access to research twenty years ago. I believe the Open Climate Campaign will
serve as a model for opening research in other critical fields,” said Melissa
Hagemann, Senior Program Officer at the Open Society Foundations.
More information can be found at openclimatecampaign.org.
About
Creative Commons
Creative Commons is a nonprofit organization that helps overcome legal
obstacles to the sharing of knowledge and creativity to address the world’s
pressing challenges.
SPARC
SPARC is a non-profit advocacy organization that supports systems for research
and education that are open by default and equitable by design.
EIFL
EIFL (Electronic Information for Libraries) works with libraries in Africa,
Asia Pacific and Europe to enable access to knowledge for education, learning,
research and sustainable community development.
Arcadia Fund
Arcadia is a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin. It supports
charities and scholarly institutions that preserve cultural heritage and the
environment. Arcadia also supports projects that promote open access and all of
its awards are granted on the condition that any materials produced are made
available for free online. Since 2002, Arcadia has awarded more than $910
million to projects around the world.
Open Society Foundations
The Open Society Foundations, founded by George Soros, are the world’s largest
private funder of independent groups working for justice, democratic
governance, and human rights.
Media Contact
Nate Angell <press@creativecommons.org>
Director of Communications & Community
Creative Commons
Category:Open access Open Climate Campaign Open data Press
Tags:open access, Open Climate Campaign, open science, press release
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