Alam-Pedja Nature Reserve in Tartu County, Estonia
© Sven Zacek/Nature Picture Librar
The power of protest. Earth Day
Earth Day didn't knock gently. It kicked the door wide open. In 1970, oilsoaked beaches, burning rivers and toxic air mobilised millions into street protests. When looking away was no longer an option, conservation was forced onto political agendas, sparking landmark environmental laws and flipping planetcare from fringe concern to global priority. Every 22 April, over 190 countries pause, reflect and reassess.
The 2026 theme, 'Our Power, Our Planet,' sets an ambitious target: triple renewable energy capacity worldwide by 2030. But action isn't only about turbines and solar panels. It's also protecting the natural engines already doing heavy lifting. Take AlamPedja Nature Reserve in Estonia, captured here. Since 1994, it has safeguarded one of Europe's largest wetland systems. How? By letting it be. Rivers run freely, bogs store carbon and floodplains soak excess water without concrete barriers. Elk, lynx and black storks thrive as seasons redraw the map. AlamPedja teaches that restraint can be the boldest move—to step back and let nature lead the way.
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