When Bill Gates published his recent open letter on climate action, critics rushed to accuse him of going soft on climate change. But the real story isn’t about retreating, it’s about redefining how we move forward. And he’s right: fear-based messaging, however accurate, has reached the limits of its effectiveness. If we want to unlock action at the scale required, we need a new narrative that brings more people along, one that doesn’t overwhelm, and instead shows people how climate solutions can enhance health, strengthen communities, and improve financial well-being.
Consider what’s happened in just the past few years. In eastern China, air pollution has fallen as a massive buildout of wind, solar, and clean energy coupled with strong air pollution policies have begun to curb reliance on coal. In Brazil, nearly 90% of electricity now comes from clean energy sources, enabling communities from São Paulo to small towns in the Amazon to power their daily lives with renewables. These aren’t isolated success stories; they reflect global action that has already pulled down our projected warming trajectory from about 4°C to closer to 2.7°C.
We’re headed in the right direction. In 2024 alone, 92% of all new electricity capacity added worldwide was from clean energy sources. That is an unprecedented 585 gigawatts that now power millions of homes and businesses. For the first time, solar energy generated more electricity than coal across the European Union. And in the United States, California’s grid achieved 100% clean power for several hours on most days so far this year – a milestone that reflects a record jump in clean energy use across the state.













