A meticulously curated global directory of programmes designed to equip the next generation of environmental leaders.
Select up to five programmes and see them side by side — tuition in your currency, deadlines, curriculum and career paths in one view.
Start with the end in mind: pick the job you want, and work backwards to the programmes that lead there.
Sometimes you need more than a directory. Choosing the right study, writing a motivation letter that lands, weighing a job prospect, untangling a challenging assignment — or simply talking to someone who has worked in this field for many years and hearing how the journey actually goes. That's what these 30-minute calls are for.
Answer a few questions and get a shortlist tailored to you.
A living map of the directory: countries deepen in green as programmes are added. Hover to see how many, click to dive into them.
What a career in this field actually feels like, told first-person by the people living it — the reports, the font meetings, the friend groups, and why we keep going anyway.
A career in sustainability can be a roller coaster. The prospect of saving the world from planetary boundaries overshoot is alluring — and then the first corporate job where you thought you would be saving marine life from extinction has you writing reports about marine life extinction. Not bad, to be busy with the object you love. Then come the meetings.
Most people around you working in "sustainability" — unless you're at an NGO — care more about the wrong font you selected, and whether the report should have 5 pages or 50.
Will legal allow you to write climate crisis, or does it become climate "situation" — a softened out and completely dumbed down version, stripped of any objective sense to avoid their litigation risk?
One friend spends his days on Ansys creating meshes for turbine fluid dynamics and has never heard of SBTi. Another writes finance KPIs for the sustainability statement in the annual report. No overlap — all of it "sustainability".
"Say no to the tragedy of the commons; we are the commons."
Because if I leave — then what? Reports still need to be written to give stakeholders transparency; deep tech still needs to be developed in garages and labs across the world, at the massive scale and speed that is needed. From the tegels you replace in your own little garden to the square kilometres of green rooftops you convince your employer to deploy: the revolution is local, and it is taking over the world.
Every major green taxonomy, disclosure law, carbon price and due-diligence rule on Earth — what it is, who it hits, and when. Organised by region, topic and status, with the official source one click away.
Not legal advice. This atlas is an orientation map for sustainability professionals and students. Spotted an error or a missing instrument? Suggest a correction — sourced tips make the map better for everyone.
Anonymous, unvarnished stories from the people who study sustainability and the people who practise it — the debt, the job hunt, the greenwash, the salaries, and the things you could never say in a LinkedIn post. Every story is reviewed and stripped of identifying details before publication; employers are only ever described in broad terms.