Climate Tech Communication: Why Science Storytelling Matters

This summer, I took a real break: hiking and rock climbing in Banff with my husband, kids, and close friends. It’s been a learning curve to build a business I can step away from, but we’re getting there. For a week, I was just present in the mountains, enjoying laughter and the outdoors.
The alpine beauty was staggering: ancient glaciers, pristine valleys, the kind of landscape that reminds you what we’re fighting for. But those same glaciers are shrinking. That same wilderness is under threat. And when I reconnected with my friends from DC, the stories they shared made the connection impossible to ignore: brilliant scientists being pushed out of the very agencies tasked with understanding and protecting these places.
This moment clarifies something I’ve known for years: when public science infrastructure weakens, private innovation must not only accelerate—it must communicate better. Climate tech companies are no longer just competing on technology. They’re competing to be heard, understood, and funded in an environment where the scientific credibility infrastructure we once took for granted is crumbling.”
The Cost of Abandoned Science

These cuts have particularly targeted climate science programs, including the elimination of NOAA’s climate research division and the cancellation of the National Climate Assessment.
Fully operational satellites—instruments taxpayers already funded—are being abandoned. These provide critical data for weather forecasts, storm warnings, climate research, and agriculture. Without them, industries and communities are more vulnerable.
- NASA’s carbon dioxide monitoring mission threatened (NPR)
- Budget cuts endanger weather satellites (CNN)
- Climate satellites on the chopping block (NYT)
These aren’t abstract losses. We just missed wildfire season in Banff, but air quality at home has been fluctuating since (read more about wildfire aftermath visuals). Every cut affects the satellites and instruments that make climate science possible, the research that helps us understand environmental change, and the scientists who operate these tools and interpret the data for the public. Without their expertise, critical research goes undone, early warnings are delayed, and communities face extreme weather with less protection.
The Opportunity for Climate Tech
For climate tech companies, this shifts everything. As public science infrastructure weakens, the burden of explaining and validating climate solutions falls more heavily on private innovators. You’re not just building better batteries or more efficient carbon capture—you’re also carrying the responsibility to communicate why it matters, how it works, and why it’s trustworthy, often without the credibility scaffolding that government research once provided.
This is exactly the gap we fill: translating complex climate science into compelling narratives that stand on their own merit. Whether that’s communicating sustainability impact through strategic visuals or explaining breakthrough technology to investors, this work has never been more critical.
How Private Sector Innovation Can Communicate Trust

I came home from Banff with both gratitude and urgency. Gratitude for time with family and the reminder of why I do this work. Urgency, because we cannot afford to squander the tools and people we need to address the climate crisis.
At SayoStudio, I’m doubling down on my mission to work with sustainability-focused companies and climate-first technologies. Not because private industry can replace public research infrastructure—it can’t. But because in this moment, the companies innovating in carbon capture, renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, and climate monitoring need to communicate their science with absolute clarity.
We can amplify the work that is happening. We can help bring the stories of climate innovation forward. And we can do it with the scientific accuracy and visual power that this moment demands.
This isn’t just marketing—it’s mission-critical infrastructure for the climate fight.
If you’re building technology that addresses climate change, the world needs to understand what you’re building, and we need to make sure that story is told right. This is my small part in pushing for a future where science is valued, climate is prioritized, and hope outweighs fear.
