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Poverty and Climate Change


Media contacts
Rachel Wolff
253.394.2214
Request an interview




Fuel-efficient cooking stoves:
A triple win for child health, development, and the environment
(PDF)

World Vision's response to climate change

Poor communities around the world—whether rural farmers, pastoralists in semi-arid regions, or the urban poor in coastal cities—can live or die by the health of their natural environment. Today, climate change threatens the world’s poorest regions with more frequent and damaging storms, erratic rainfall, deadlier cycles of drought and flooding, and other climate-related disasters. World Vision is committed to holistic and sustainable solutions that empower these vulnerable communities to be agents of change, not victims. Read more...




When disaster strikes, contact us
for expert interviews, photos, b-roll
and other resources.
A boy in Malawi helps plant a tree.
Re-vegetation acts as an anti-erosion mechanism that leads to enhanced water filtration, reduced flooding and stable agricultural production. Photo ©2007 David DuChemin/World Vision

Local Haitians construct a watershed wall.
This innovative watershed protection program in Haiti prevented significant flooding damage, saving both lives and crops.
Photo ©2008 Cynthia Colin/World Vision


Oxen plowing in Ethiopia.
World Vision Ethiopia provides improved livestock varieties and veterinary care to encourage farming and biodiversity.
©2009 Jon Warren/World Vision



Media contacts

Johnny Cruz
National director
Email Johnny
253.815.2072 (o)
206.653.4689 (c)
Amy Parodi
Seattle bureau
Domestic news & operations
Email Amy
253.709.3190 (c)
Laura Blank
International news
Disaster response
Email Laura
708.872.5265 (c)
More media contacts


World Vision
Phone: 1-888-511-6548
P.O. Box 9716
Federal Way,WA 98063-9716
© 2013 World Vision Inc.
World Vision, Inc. is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. All donations are tax deductible in full or in part.