It's our home. This Earth Day, see our planet as our Artemis II astronauts saw it with these new images from the mission. Load image Load image Load image Load image
The planet can spell your name – literally. This Earth Day, see your name written in landscapes captured by Landsat: go.nasa.gov/4ak4Cdu Load image 22 KB
— NASA's Kennedy Space Center (@NASAKennedy) April 22, 2026
The young people in our @ObamaFoundation Leaders program give me hope. One of those leaders, Luisa Neubauer, is working to fight climate change and recently traveled to Antarctica. This Earth Day, I hope you'll check out her incredible story. 1:02 4 MB Load video 1K
This Earth Day, I am thinking about the images from the Artemis II crew of our planet hanging in the blackness of space, small and irreplaceable. We only get one. It’s up to all of us to protect it. (Thanks again to @AstroReid for this INCREDIBLE video of Earth) Quote Reid Wiseman @astro_reid · Apr 19 0:53 Only one chance in this lifetime… Like watching sunset at the beach from the most foreign seat in the cosmos, I couldn’t resist a cell phone video of Earthset. You can hear the shutter on the Nikon as
The best view in the universe is the one we call home. Earth is the only home we have ever known, and from space its beauty is undeniable. This Earth Day, we honor the astronauts who see it from above, the scientists who study it from below, and the teams at Johnson Space Show more Load image
— NASA's Johnson Space Center (@NASA_Johnson) April 22, 2026
keep that earth day post in the drafts if you use ai/vote republican bruh
Michael Jackson’s “Earth Song” is a call to action for us all and should inspire everyone to help protect our planet. Today is Earth Day - the annual event that is a platform to do just that in the spirit of Michael’s environmental activism: earthday.org/earth-day-2026/ 0:21 2 MB Load video
EXCLUSIVE FROM ZOHRAN MAMDANI’s NYC-DSA Later today, the @nycDSA will launch its new line of merch: Decompose the Rich. The NYYRC exclusively obtained the email they sent to internal members about their Earth Day event, where they intend to distribute these shirts. Does Show more Load image 6 KB Load image
— New York Young Republican Club 🇺🇸🗽 (@NYYRC) April 22, 2026
Earth Day History
Earth Day seeks to highlight and promote efforts dedicated to the protection of the environment. As we enter the 21st century, we face many environmental crises including global warming, deforestation, endangered wildlife, shortages of potable water, and widespread pollution. These crises negatively affect our planet’s resources, and they pose serious risk to our long-term lifestyles and health.
In 1970, a US Senator named Gaylord Nelson was inspired to raise public awareness about environmental problems. He campaigned across the nation with the hopes of gathering public support. He hoped to have environmental protection included in the national political agenda. His efforts were rewarded later in July of 1970 when the United States Environmental Protection Agency was created. With it the came the passing of the Clean Air, Clean Water, and Endangered Species Acts.
Today, Earth Day is celebrated by billions of people around the world and is observed in over 190 countries. Worldwide, Earth Day celebrations utilize educational programs to inform people of ways that can help protect the environment and its natural resources. It is observed annually on April 22nd.
Top 10 Facts for Earth Day in 2026
The official theme for the 2026 global observance is Our Power, Our Planet, a call to action specifically focused on the urgent necessity of tripling the world's clean energy capacity by the year 2030.
This upcoming celebration marks the 56th anniversary of the movement, which has grown from a grassroots demonstration into the largest secular civic event in the world, now involving more than one billion people across 192 countries.
The specific date for the event was originally selected by Gaylord Nelson to fall between spring break and final exams on college campuses, ensuring maximum participation from students who were already energized by the anti-war protests of the late 1960s.
Before its official naming, the event was conceptualized as a national environmental teach-in, an educational format designed to mobilize public consciousness regarding the detrimental impacts of air and water pollution.
The legacy of the first demonstration in 1970 is directly linked to the passage of landmark environmental legislation in the United States, including the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act.
A major highlight for 2026 is the The 25% Revolution, an initiative explaining how a committed minority can change social norms and drive market transitions toward a green economy.
The Paris Agreement, the most significant international climate accord in history, was notably opened for signature on Earth Day in 2016, cementing the date's importance in global diplomacy.
Participants often perform a unique global tribute by singing the Earth Day Anthem, a song composed by Abhay Kumar that has been recorded in all official languages of the United Nations.
Major mobilization efforts for the year include The Great Global Cleanup, a campaign that organizes millions of volunteers to remove waste from parks, beaches, and neighborhoods worldwide.
The The Canopy Project remains a core focus of the organization, aiming to plant tens of millions of trees to combat deforestation and support ecosystem restoration in some of the most at-risk regions of the world.
Try not to use your car for the entire day. Instead, use public transit, walk, or ride your bicycle.
Change your traditional incandescent light bulbs to energy saving LED or CFL light bulbs.
Organize a group of volunteers to help clean up and restore a green space. Some suggestions include planting trees and adding waste receptacles.
Watch a documentary or movie that touches on an ecological issue. Our favorites are: An Inconvenient Truth (2006), the Burning Season (1993, 2008), Elemental (2012) and The Day after Tomorrow (2004).
Read one of many books that relate to environmental issues such as, The World Without Us (Alan Weisman), Hell and High Water (Joseph Romm) and Natural Capitalism (Hawken, Lovins and Lovins)