Close encounters with Heat
Heat is not just a climate statistic. It is a lived experience, felt differently depending on who you are and where you live. Through storytelling and narrative-building, we surface the physical and emotional realities of heat that data alone cannot capture.
Working alongside women from deeply marginalised communities in Delhi, we are building a feminist understanding of heat: what it does to bodies, to daily rhythms, to the emotional texture of life.
Beyond being acts of witness, these stories are vehicles for change and narrative arcs that can travel into policy spaces, community dialogues, and the hands of decision-makers who rarely hear from those bearing the heaviest burden of the climate crisis.
At the heart of this work is a commitment to safety and co-creation that enables multiple stakeholders to come together, while ensuring that the women and communities most impacted are not just present in the room, but are the architects of the solutions that emerge.