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Climate Planet Foundation is a foundation-style educational project platform focused on climate change and biodiversity action. The main resources presented on the site include the Climate Planet film, the Wild by Nature nature-education game, the 2030 NOW SDGs book, and the Climate Planet Experience dome installation that toured in 2017–2018. It is not an online course platform in the traditional sense; it is more like a collection of climate education resources for schools, the public, and businesses.
In terms of subject areas, the platform focuses on climate science, biodiversity, nature education, and the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals. The Climate Planet film is its main educational resource. It runs for 36 minutes and is described as a science-based climate science “tour-de-force,” covering topics such as PPM concentrations, the Keeling Curve, ocean currents, methane, pH values, the IPCC, and the Rio Convention. The film is divided into 16 chapters, making it easy for teachers to embed it into existing lessons in a “plug-and-play” format. It is essentially a pre-recorded/video-based resource. Wild by Nature, meanwhile, uses the Useeum app in Thy National Park to help children and families understand species relationships and biodiversity through a story-driven game, though the site notes that the game is available only in Danish.
Pricing information is limited. The site only clearly states that the 2030 NOW book can be purchased via Saxo and Amazon; it does not specify whether watching the film or using it in schools requires payment. The film’s narrator, Jesper Theilgaard, can be booked for visits or lectures, with inquiries handled by email. In terms of language, the Climate Planet film has English and Dansk entry points; the Wild by Nature game is available only in Danish. As for institutional background, the foundation previously operated a traveling dome experience measuring 20 meters and five stories high, which visited Aarhus, Copenhagen, Bonn, and Utrecht and hosted large numbers of public visitors and students. This suggests practical experience in public-facing climate education and outreach.
The strengths are its clear thematic focus, emphasis on scientific facts, teacher-friendly chapter-based film design, and interactive nature experience for children. The drawbacks are the lack of a complete course syllabus, learning-outcome assessment, certification, learning platform features, and transparent pricing. As a result, it is better suited as introductory material for school climate lessons, a teacher preparation resource, a children’s nature-education activity, or corporate SDGs communication content. It is less suitable for learners who need structured training, assignment feedback, or a completion certificate.
The site does not provide information about access from China, payment methods, or localization. Actual accessibility will depend on the website and any third-party video/app services used, so it should be considered unknown. Chinese users looking for more systematic online courses may compare climate change and sustainability courses from UN CC:Learn, Coursera, and edX. For children’s science education, alternatives such as NASA Climate Kids and WWF educational resources may also be worth considering.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on climateplanetfoundation.org official site.
climateplanetfoundation.org is an Denmark Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach climateplanetfoundation.org directly.