Event details
Dates:
20 - 28 June 2026
Where:
London, United Kingdom
Physical event
Buildings
Climate resilient buildings
Energy efficiency in buildings
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Join us at London Climate Action Week to engage with global leaders on climate action and green solutions.
Denmark is taking part in London Climate Action Week, an annual city-wide climate festival founded in 2019 that brings together policymakers, business leaders and organisations to accelerate global and local climate action.
The week showcases a range of events focused on driving decarbonisation, resilience and cross-sector collaboration as part of wider efforts to tackle the climate emergency.
State of Green is actively looking for partners and activities during LCAW to support dialogue, connect stakeholders and promote focus areas across sectors and industries.
Keep updated on this page, or reach out if you want to learn more.
During London Climate Action Week State of Green will be hosting and participating in following sectors.
The disappointing outcomes of COP30 have once again demonstrated the magnitude of the challenges facing international climate cooperation. Despite strong intentions from many governments, the conference fell short of delivering robust, actionable progress — especially regarding the phaseout of fossil fuels, accelerating the adoption of renewable energy, and enhancing global energy efficiency..
Data centres are rapidly becoming critical infrastructure underpinning the digital economy, supporting everything from cloud services and artificial intelligence to financial systems and public services. At the same time, their accelerating growth risks turning them into pressure points for both energy systems and local water resources. As electricity consumption rises and cooling needs intensify, datacentres are increasingly shaping infrastructure planning, grid stability and resource availability.
Europe’s dependence on imported energy has become one of the most significant structural vulnerabilities the continent has faced since World War II— with far-reaching consequences for economic stability, industrial competitiveness, energy security, and social welfare. Yet the scale of the challenge far exceeds what public financing alone can address.
The architecture of global energy supply is under visible stress. Geopolitical disruptions from the Red Sea to the Strait of Hormuz are exposing the fleet’s dependence on fuel it cannot control. At the same time, regulatory pressure to decarbonise is accelerating with the FuelEU Maritime and the IMO legislation potentially implemented. Whether security of supply or decarbonisation, the goal remains the same: reducing fossil fuel dependence.
Partner news
Electricity grid
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