ICOMOS Climate Literacy Training and Tallinn Seminar for European Historic Homes

On December 3-5, the Estonian Committee of the international expert organization for heritage conservation, ICOMOS, in cooperation with the ICOMOS Climate and Heritage Working Group, the ICOMOS European Energy Directive Working Group, the ICOMOS Energy Efficiency Scientific Committee, the Tallinn City Government, the Estonian Heritage Board, the Ministry of Culture, the Life HeritageHomes project team, heritage communities and several other partners, will organize a climate and heritage training program with open seminars. The training and seminars, which will take place in Tallinn and online, are aimed at heritage specialists and communities in Estonia and the European countries.

Registration link https://forms.gle/viFxHiDFzRyKac9i8

This is a three-day program consisting of training and open seminar:

  1. Climate Literacy Training for Cultural Heritage Experts on December 3rd from 10 am to 4 pm at the Statehood House and Zoom. In English
  2. Open Seminar and Think Tank “European Heritage Homes in Climate Change” on December 4th from 10 am to 3 pm in Tallinn and web. In English and Estonian, simultaneous translation.
  3. Expert Study Tour in Tallinn Old Town and Kalamaja on December 5th

On December 3rd, ICOMOS Climate Literacy Training for Heritage Specialists (CLTH) will take place in the Statehood Building and online. In English.

The ICOMOS Climate Literacy Training for Heritage Specialists (CLTH) has grown out of the “Preserving Legacies” project developed by the ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group (CAWG) and funded by the National Geographic Society. It is suitable for all people working in the cultural heritage sector and does not require prior knowledge of climate change. The content of the CLTH is in line with key international documents, including the UNESCO Policy Document on Climate Action for World Heritage, the Paris Agreement on the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, and is an important step towards achieving the goals of the Global Adaptation Goal, which calls on Parties to develop “adaptive strategies to preserve cultural practices and heritage sites and to build climate-resilient infrastructure, guided by traditional knowledge, indigenous knowledge and local knowledge systems”. The training modules are (1) climate science and its impacts; (2) carbon footprint and vulnerability; (3) adaptation and mitigation; (4) climate justice and equity; (5) implementation of the World Heritage Climate Policy Guidelines; (6) global initiatives for heritage adaptation. The training will be held in English. The training materials will be translated into Estonian.

On December 4, an open seminar “European Heritage Homes in Climate Change” will be held in Tallinn and hybrid format. In English and Estonian, simultaneous translation.

The importance of European historic buildings in achieving climate goals is a central topic in the world and in Europe in light of the Energy Directive, and this is also the main topic of the open seminar to be held on December 4. Speakers from Europe will present the experiences of different countries in achieving climate goals for historic buildings, including examples from Great Britain, Ireland, Belgium, and Estonia. We will present the results of the ICOMOS EPBD working group on European experience in implementing the Energy Efficiency Directive. Climate and heritage guidance material is being compiled within the framework of the Estonian Heritage Homes project. We will discuss the guidance materials for historic buildings prepared by this project and the preparation of a heritage charter. The seminar, which will be held with the participation of well-known European experts, is a good opportunity for international cooperation on heritage and climate issues in Estonia. We invite all those involved in historic buildings to participate and contribute to the discussion. The seminar will be held in a hybrid format. The working language of the seminar is English, with simultaneous interpretation in Estonian.

Programme/programm:

10 -13 Historic Buildings and Energy Efficency – European Policies and Cases

Moderated by Ave Paulus, president of ICOMOS Estonia and Focal Point of ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group

10.00-10.10 Introduction and Welcome addresses

10.15 Andrew Potts, Climate Heritage Network- World and European Policies in Climate Action and Cultural Heritage

10.45 David Hughes, ICOMOS ISCES President, Ireland. Embodied Carbon and Energy Efficiency of Historic Buildings

11.15  Robert Woodside ICOMOS UK, Europa Nostra. Climate heritage activities in the UK at present

11.45 Tor Bostrom, Uppsala University, Sweden. Energy efficiency in historic buildings. Doing the right things in the right buildings – a district perspective with Swedish case studies

12.15 Riin Alatalu, ICOMOS Vice President, ICOMOS EPBD WG Leader. Report on the Implementation  of EPBD Directive Across Europe

12.45-13.30 Lunch

13.30  Historic Homes of Estonia – Policies and Cases. Moderated by Tarmo Elvisto

13.30 Setting the scene – Lori Ferriss, Architecture 2030 Decarbonizing the Built Environment through Heritage

14.00 Kadri Kallast and Üllar Alev. Project of Heritage Homes and Estonian Charter of Heritage Homes: linkages between cultural heritage and energy efficiency

14.300 Murel Truu. Climate risks and vulnerability of heritage buildings

15 -17 Roundtable on ICOMOS EPBD WG report,  Estonian Heritage Charter and on the impact of the EPBD recast on historic buildings across Europe moderated by Riin Alatalu and Ave Paulus

On December 5, an expert study tour will be held in Tallinn Old Town and Kalamaja for participants of the previous training days in cooperation with the Tallinn City Government, ICOMOS Estonia and Center of the Sustainable Renovation

For more information and registration for the full training program, please contact ave.paulus@icomos.org.

Please register yourself, spaces are limited https://forms.gle/viFxHiDFzRyKac9i8h.

4-day Programme Structure:

  • Capacity: Up to 30 participants per session, open seminar for 100 persons
  • Format: 3. day intensive programme (consists of separate modules that can be taken separately)
  • Partners and workshop participants: ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group and ICOMOS Estonia in collaboration with ICOMOS Europe EPBD WG and ISCES; Ministry of Culture, Heritage Board of Estonia, Tallinn City Government, Estonian Academy of Arts
  • Previous registration – ave.paulus@icomos.org for the workshop, registration link for the full programme and seminar will open on 15.11

More about Climate Literacy training:

ICOMOS Climate Literacy Foundational Training Module targeted for North Europe

ICOMOS Climate Literacy Training for Heritage Professionals (CLTH) builds on a resource designed by the ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group (CAWG) through the Preserving Legacies project funded by the National Geographic Society and aims to develop place- and cultural heritage-based climate adaptation actions, transforming conservation practice as a field to meet the challenges of the climate crisis.

The climate literacy training for heritage professionals addresses key topics identified as baseline competencies for heritage professionals in the ICOMOS Future of our Pasts Report (2019). These, in turn, reflect the key pillars of climate action outlined in the UNFCCC Paris Agreement (UNFCCC 2015). It is built around four cross-cutting themes. These are: 

  1. Climate Science and Impacts – This module will introduce participants to climate change and how it impacts both the world and heritage.
  2. Carbon Footprints and Vulnerability – This module will encourage participantsto understand the carbon footprint of the heritage sector and introduce vulnerability and how it is assessed.
  3. Adaptation and Mitigation – This module will encourage participants to consider their own, and heritage’s, contributions to climate action through sustainable adaptation and mitigation pathways
  4. Climate Justice and Equity – This theme will is addressed throughout other modules and discusses the important topics of climate justice and equity, focusing on how we can ensure respectful and equitable interactions and engagement in climate action.

In addition, there will be special module on Climate Action for World Heritage

Trainer: William Megarry. Hybrid format. Please, register in advance ave.paulus@icomos.org. Maximum number of places 30.

Contact: Ave Paulus, ave.paulus@icomos.org

COP 30 – Heritage and Resilience: Safeguarding Culture and Community in a Changing Climate 

14 November 2025, 11.00-12.00, Thailand pavillion, Blue zone

Participating Organizations: Architecture 2030, World Monuments Fund, ICOMOS, Thai delegat

Session Description: 

While global discussions on climate mitigation often focus on technology and infrastructure, cultural heritage offers a parallel pathway for transformation—one rooted in community, identity, and lived experience. Heritage embodies systems of knowledge, design, and stewardship that have long supported sustainable ways of living. As societies pursue energy transitions and systemic decarbonization, these cultural resources can inform more equitable and locally grounded mitigation and adaptation strategies.

Heritage and Resilience: Safeguarding Culture and Community in a Changing Climate explores how cultural heritage—both tangible and intangible—can strengthen resilience while contributing to just and inclusive climate transitions. The session brings together voices from heritage conservation, academia, and community practice to share examples of how traditional knowledge, local craftsmanship, and place-based practices intersect with modern sustainability and energy goals.

By recognizing heritage as both a source of wisdom and innovation, the discussion highlights how preserving culture can help reimagine climate solutions that honor the past while shaping a resilient, low-carbon future.

Speakers:

Welcome and moderation – Lori Ferris, Architecture2030, Climate Heritage Network

Ave Paulus, ICOMOS, ICOMOS Activities and Heritage Adapts Campaign

Meredith Wiggins, WMF, Rehabilitation of traditional water systems for urban resilience and water security

Kotchakorn Voraakhom, UNESCO Juror. Thailand Ayutthaya example

Billie Faircloth, CHN/Cornell Atkinson

COP30 “What Can We Learn from Climate Smart Traditional Buildings”

ICOMOS, Climate Heritage Network, Architecture 2030, Knowledge Foundation

Nov 14 from 13:15 – 14:45– Blue zone, COP UNFCCC side event, side event room 4

Traditional buildings and knowledge embody centuries of ecological intelligence, offering culture-based climate mitigation and adaptation solutions. This session presents examples of traditional knowledge in meeting carbon neutrality targets while advancing resilience and environmental justice.

Presenters

  • Dana Firas, ICOMOS, Climate Heritage Network, Jordan. Cultural Heritage Based Climate Action
  • Lori Ferriss, Architecture 2030, USA. Decarbonizing the Built Environment through Heritage
  • Christine Lemaitre & Thomas Auer. SHIFT: Southern Heritage and Insights for Transformation
  • Ave Paulus, Focal Point of ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group, President of ICOMOS Estonia. On the Importance of Local Knowledge in Global Climate Action, With Examples from North Europe.
  • Aline Viera de Carvalho, ICOMOS, Brazil. Brazilian Charter of Cultural Heritage and Climate Change
  • Hu Xinyu, China. Vernacular Architecture of Beijing
  • Mokolade Johnson. Vernacular Architecture of Nigeria

COP 30: Cultural Heritage Based Climate Action in the Built Environment 

Date: 11/13/2025

Hour: 17:00-17:45

Venue: Pavilhão Cidades Resilientes – Blue Zone

Organizers: International Union of Architects (UIA), World Monuments Fund (WMF), International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and Climate Heritage Network (CHN)

Painelists:

  • Meredith Wiggins (WMF)
  • Ave Paulus (ICOMOS)
  • Lori Ferriss (CHN)

Moderation: Lori Ferriss (CHN)

Ave Paulus is a leading expert on cultural heritage and climate action. She serves as the focal point for the ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group and President of ICOMOS Estonia. She has worked over 20 years in the Environmental Board of Estonia as a cultural heritage specialist. She is an expert member of the UNESCO panel of experts on Climate Change and World Heritage and  EU OMC Group “Cultural Heritage Resilience for Climate Change”the IPCC’s Seventh Assessment Report (AR7). Her work focuses on traditional knowledge and rights-based heritage management in the face of climate change.

Meredith Wiggins: Dr. Meredith Wiggins is an archaeologist and project manager who works at the nexus of climate and culture; currently serving as World Monuments Fund’s Senior Director of Climate Adaptation. She joined World Monuments Fund from the field of international development, where spent five years designing and implementing climate mitigation and adaptation projects for USAID and MCC. Before that, she spent 16 years in the UK, working for Historic England and English Heritage in the areas of research, urban planning, and heritage protection. Dr. Wiggins currently runs a global WMF program entitled Cultivating Resilience, which focuses on risk assessment and adaptation in biocultural landscapes. She also acts as WMF’s Focal Point for the Group of Friends of Culture-Based Climate Action and is Focal Point for WMF in their role as part of COP30’s Activation Group 19: Culture, Cultural Heritage, and Climate Action.

Lori Ferriss, AIA, PE is Co-Founder and Executive Director of Built Buildings Lab, a Senior Fellow of Architecture 2030, and a Steering Committee member of the Climate Heritage Network. An internationally recognized expert, Lori works at the intersection of climate action and cultural heritage. Her award-winning work as an architect, structural engineer, and preservationist blends policy development with technical expertise to position the built environment as a climate solution. Lori co-developed Architecture 2030’s CARE Tool, estimating carbon benefits of building reuse. She is the past Chair of the American Institute of Architects Committee on the Environment and is an expert member of the ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Energy and Sustainability.

COP30 – Local Adaptiation Award Ceremony

Preserving Legacies has won the 2025 Local Adaptation Champions Award in the Science category by the Global Center on Adaptation! 🏆💚

This global recognition celebrates our mission to bridge science, culture, and community in protecting the world’s heritage sites from climate change — and honors the incredible custodians leading locally led, values-based, and science-driven adaptation across the globe. 🌱

We’re proud to share this honor with the inspiring winners in the other categories — Citizen Science, Health, Nature-based Solutions, and Women’s Livelihoods — whose visionary work showcases the transformative power of locally led climate action.

During the ceremony, Her Royal Highness Princess Dana Firas of Jordan, UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for Cultural Heritage and President of the Board of the PNT – Petra National Trust, delivered powerful remarks on the vital importance of embedding culture in climate action. She highlighted Preserving Legacies’ “Heritage Adapts 3000 by 2030” initiative — a global call to safeguard 3,000 culturally significant sites from the impacts of climate change — as a model for how heritage can drive resilience and inspire global collaboration.

Climate Literacy Training – Amman, Jordan

Are you a heritage professional passionate about tackling climate change? 
Join us in Amman for a 3-day Climate Literacy Training to explore how cultural heritage can drive climate action. The training takes place from 28.10 to 30.10 in Hamman, Jordan.

 Organized by:
Petra National Trust & ICOMOS Jordan,
in collaboration with the ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group, Queen’s University, and EAMENA – Oxford University.

Open to heritage professionals eager to link climate science with cultural heritage.
Please note: The training is self-funded (no scholarships or sponsorships).

Deadline to apply: 25th September 2025
Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1h4DcZ6kcJr_eM2LSvNJeOwgdv6X_gcAGUfNXZzBSpGY

Let’s build climate-smart strategies for heritage together! 💚

Photo: Amman. Author: Will Megarry

“The Living Heritage – Living the Heritage”

ICOMOS CAWG is contributing to the ICOMOS SDWG Mondiacult side-event “The living Heritage” on 1.10 at 13.30-14.30. During the preparations, posters of the ICOMOS Working Groups were produced. Here you can see the ICOMOS CAWG poster

ICOMOS CAWG Mondiacult side event “Trust and Synergies- Communities Combating Global Challenges”

ICOMOS CAWG is organising, in cooperation with Climate Heritage Network, UNITWIN Culture in Emergencies, Culture for the Planet, Entertainment+ Culture Pavilion Mondiacult, an official side event “Enhancing Trust and Synergies with Culture – Communities Combating Global Challenges”. The event takes place on 30 September from 14:30 to 15:30 in Barcelona Convention Centre. Link MONDIACULT 2025 Official Side Events | UNESCO

This side event aims to explore how culture, heritage, and artistic expression can serve as powerful tools for resilience, adaptation, and community empowerment during times of crisis, including conflict, climate disasters, and digital transformation. It will foster dialogue across disciplines and generations to highlight the synergies between traditional knowledge systems, cultural practices, and sustainability frameworks. By spotlighting the role of trust and collaboration, the event seeks to deepen understanding of how culturally grounded approaches can inform adaptation pathways and shape more inclusive and just climate and crisis responses. Additionally, it will explore the importance of transformative indicators and cultural metrics in advancing sustainable development, informing policy, and valorising the contributions of the arts and culture sector in global resilience strategies.

Keynote speakers and panellists elaborate on the following themes: How can culture and heritage contribute to resilience in times of crisis? What role does traditional knowledge play in climate adaptation? How can we build trust and foster synergies across sectors? What indicators are needed to recognise and scale the impact of cultural and artistic responses to global challenges?

Agenda 30.09, 14.30-15.30

Opening remarks by Ana Filipa Vrdolijak, UNITWIN University of Technology Sydney


Panel 1. Highlight presentations
Krista Pikkat, UNESCO Angela Martins, African Union Comission
Andrew Potts, Climate Heritage Network, ICOMOS
Jorge A. Sánchez Cordero Dávila, Mexican Center of Uniform Law (MCUL)


Panel 2. Discussion
Mounir Bouchnaki, UNESCO (Former ADG)
Giovanna Gray Nassralla, Culture for the Planet
Isaac Eseet, Climate Heritage Network African Coordinator
Ave Paulus, ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group
Moderated by Samuel Rubin, Entertainment + Culture Pavilion


Closing remarks by Jenny Hay, Climate Heritage Network and Alicja Jagielska-Burduk, UNITWIN

Organiser on behalf of ICOMOS – Ave Paulus, ave.paulus@icomos.org

Ave Paulus is among IPCC AR7 experts

    Ave Paulus, Focal Point of ICOMOS Climate Action Working Group, has been selected among the experts of IPCC AR7 report, working group II “Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability” drafting the IPCC AR7 Europe chapter (11).

     Press release IPCC concludes selection of authors for its Seventh Assessment Report — IPCC

    The IPCC is a scientific body of the United Nations that draws on the expertise of thousands of scientists from around the world to assess the science of climate change.The IPCC Assessment report is considered the world’s most authoritative source of information on climate change. It gives policymakers around the world a scientific assessment of climate change and its impacts, and provides governments with options for adaptation and mitigation. The report is produced every 5-7 years and is the scientific foundation for international climate policy negotiations at the annual Conference of the Parties (COP) climate policy negotiations under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

    News and events ICOMOS Climate Literacy Training and Tallinn Seminar for European Historic Homes