A Documentary, Educational Platform and Climate Action Campaign
The Climate Revolutionary tells the story of one man’s fight for climate justice.
The documentary provides the foundation for a climate action campaign to inspire audiences with a sense of global responsibility; to take action in their daily lives in solidarity with fellow humans in the Global South – people who are suffering disproportionally because of the climate crisis.
The Climate Revolutionary transforms climate change discourse from an abstract debate into a human story about justice, responsibility and action.
The film aims to spark debate with at major climate events in 2027, such as:
- World Economic Forum in Davos
- London Climate Action Week
- New York Climate Action week
- UNFCCC COP32, Addis Ababa
- The World Conference for Ecological Restoration, Lisbon
- UNFCCC Regional Climate Week Core Learning Workshops
- Climate Justice Camp

Distribution, Screenings & Outlets
- Community Screenings & Discussion sessions
- Partnerships with climate justice groups, foundations and charity organisations
- Online screenings and discussion sessions with major global advocacy networks
- Streaming on major platforms such as Apple TV, Prime Video, Tubi, Docsville etc.
- Educational and academic screenings and discussions via schools, universities, librabries and Educational VOD platforms.
The Climate Action Platform

The project is designed not only as a documentary film but as a broader engagement platform that helps audiences understand the real-world consequences of climate change and explore practical responses.
In addition to screenings of the main documentary, an online climate action kit and immersive storytelling platform will form the backbone of the project offering additional stories, videos, downloadable information, discussion guides and educational material.
Kit content will cover the following example topics:
- The Science
- Stories, short documentaries, video diaries and updates from around the world
- Discussion kits for educators, community groups and screenings
- Innovations – stories about communities, companies and new technologies
- Government and politics
- Personal responsibility and action. How to make a difference and be a “Climate Revolutionary”
- Choosing suppliers and utilities – what to look out for
- Saving energy in the home
- Transport – cars, trains and ‘planes
- Working with your community
- Political action: voting, protesting, campaigning
- Starting or running a community group.
The Story

For communities in northern Ghana, climate change is not a future threat—it is destroying livelihoods today.
Issifu Sulemana works with smallholder farmers to improve food security through ecological agriculture and sustainable farming techniques. Yet increasingly severe droughts, floods and extreme weather are undermining those efforts.
Frustrated that vulnerable communities are paying the price for emissions produced elsewhere, Issifu embarks on a mission to bring the voices of his people to COP31 and challenge global leaders to act.

