Deadline for Everything Change Climate Fiction Contest is Feb. 28


Postcard for a climate change writing contest

In the wake of Earth’s hottest year on record, the effects of climate change are more apparent than ever. But how do we come to grips with what climate change looks like for real people in actual places?

The Imagination and Climate Futures Initiative at Arizona State University is looking for stories that illustrate, explore or illuminate the impact of climate change on humanity and/or the Earth. The deadline for submissions to the Everything Change Climate Fiction Contest is Feb. 28.

Individuals may submit up to one work of short fiction under 5,000 words. Work will be selected and judged by New York Times bestselling author Kim Stanley Robinson.

The winning story will receive a $1,000 prize. Selected work will be published in an anthology by the Imagination and Climate Futures Initiative.

For more information and guidelines, or to download a postcard or flier, visit the contest website at https://climateimagination.asu.edu/clificontest/.

The submissions page can also be accessed directly at https://everythingchange.submittable.com/submit. Last year’s anthology can also be downloaded for free.

More Environment and sustainability

 

Industrial room in a water purification plant with large metal pumps, pipes and valves connected to machinery; gray gridded flooring with textured yellow patterns for traction highlights a workspace.

Public education project brings new water recycling process to life

A new virtual reality project developed by an interdisciplinary team at Arizona State University has earned the 2025…

A red lobster wedged between two rocks.

ASU team creates decision-making framework to improve conservation efficiency

Conserving the world’s ecosystems is a hard job — especially in times of climate change, large-scale landscape destruction and…

Dew drops that have condensed from water vapor in the air adorn a leaf of a nasturtium plant.

Mapping the way to harvesting water from air

Earth’s atmosphere contains about 13 trillion tons of water.That’s a lot of water to draw upon to help people who are contending…