The United Nations Environment Programme has called World Environment Day 2026 a moment to heed the urgent signals the Earth is sending, and to decide what signal humanity sends in return.
Today, 5 June 2026, the Zimbabwe Environmental Law Organisation (ZELO) joins the global community in commemorating World Environment Day, held under the theme: “Inspired by Nature. For Climate. For Our Future.”
We do so at a time when human activity continues to push the planet towards dangerous ecological limits. The triple planetary crisis of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss is no longer a distant warning. It is visible in degraded catchments, polluted rivers, shrinking wetlands, recurrent droughts and increasingly fragile rural livelihoods.
Yet nature does more than send distress signals. Although deeply affected by climate change, nature remains one of the most effective, affordable and inclusive foundations for climate action. Healthy forests, wetlands and river systems regulate water, store carbon, protect communities from climate shocks, sustain agriculture and support livelihoods.
On this World Environment Day, ZELO reaffirms its commitment to ecosystem-based approaches grounded in the environmental rule of law, community participation, environmental justice and accountable governance. We call on national and local government institutions, private actors and development partners to prioritise the protection, restoration and sustainable management of forests, wetlands and river systems as central pillars of climate resilience.
For Zimbabwe, healthy ecosystems are essential to water security, food production, disaster risk reduction, climate adaptation and sustainable livelihoods. Protecting and restoring these ecosystems is therefore not merely an environmental preference – it is a constitutional, legal and developmental obligation.
ZELO further calls for the strengthening of community-led natural resource management. Communities that manage and derive their livelihoods from natural resources must be meaningfully involved in their governance, including planning, policymaking, monitoring and benefit-sharing.
Inclusive governance creates incentives for responsible resource use and ensures that conservation and restoration measures are socially just, locally owned and sustainable. Where ecosystem services, including carbon sequestration, water regulation and biodiversity conservation, generate financial value, communities must be recognised as rights-holders and as beneficiaries of that value, not passive recipients of external decisions.
ZELO also recognises the importance of development and responsible investment in Zimbabwe. However, development must not come at the expense of ecological integrity, community rights or intergenerational equity. In a context where mining, agriculture, infrastructure and energy development increasingly place pressure on fragile ecosystems and vulnerable communities, investment must comply with environmental laws, prevent pollution, support ecosystem restoration and contribute to long-term national resilience.
As we commemorate World Environment Day 2026, ZELO calls for a renewed national commitment to environmental protection, climate justice and nature-based solutions. The message of this year’s theme is clear: nature is not peripheral to climate action. It is the foundation of water security, food systems, livelihoods, biodiversity and shared survival.
Inspired by Nature. For Climate. For Our Future.