Earth Day lands on Wednesday, April 22 this year, and its 56th anniversary arrives at a moment when the conversation around climate and conservation feels as charged as it did when the whole thing started. That origin story is worth knowing, because it was never really about holidays.
The idea came from Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, who had watched industrial pollution spread across the country with little political consequence. He found an unlikely partner in Representative Pete McCloskey of California, and together they modeled the event on the student anti-war protests that had been reshaping American public life. The first Earth Day was set for April 22, 1970, and it was designed to feel like a reckoning.
The book that set the stage
Before Nelson and McCloskey ever drafted a plan, a marine biologist named Rachel Carson had already begun shifting public consciousness. Her 1962 book Silent Spring documented the devastating effects of pesticides on wildlife and ecosystems, and it did something rare for a scientific text: it made ordinary people angry. The book is widely credited with laying the intellectual groundwork for the modern environmental movement, and its influence was still very much alive when Earth Day organizers began making their case eight years later.
Twenty million people showed up
The first Earth Day was not a celebration. It was a protest, and by most accounts it was a stunning one. Twenty million Americans participated in demonstrations, marches, and teach-ins across the country. To put that figure in perspective, it represented roughly 10% of the entire U.S. population at the time. College campuses served as the primary gathering points, and the energy was closer to a political uprising than a civic observance.
The impact was immediate and measurable. Within months, Congress had passed the National Environmental Education Act, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, and the Clean Air Act. Few single-day events in American history have produced that volume of legislative output in so short a time.
From a national protest to a global movement
What began on U.S. college campuses has since grown into the largest secular civic event on the planet, observed in more than 190 countries. The themes have shifted with each decade, from industrial pollution in the 1970s to ozone depletion in the 1980s, climate change in the 1990s, and the accelerating crises of biodiversity loss and ocean degradation in more recent years. The core argument has remained the same throughout: the health of the planet is not a partisan issue, and waiting for someone else to address it is not a strategy.
What Earth Day looks like in 2026
This year’s global events range from large-scale cleanups and tree-planting drives to policy forums and school-based environmental education programs. Advocacy organizations are using the occasion to press governments on commitments made under international climate agreements, many of which remain partially or wholly unfulfilled. In cities across North America, Europe, and Asia, community groups are organizing local demonstrations that echo, in spirit if not in scale, what happened on April 22, 1970.
Five ways to mark the day
Earth Day has always carried a practical dimension alongside the political one. Reducing single-use plastic remains one of the most straightforward individual contributions, given that roughly 90% of ocean trash is plastic according to the Marine Mammal Center. Recycling paper, cardboard, and metal conserves energy and keeps materials out of landfills. Choosing to walk or ride a bike instead of driving cuts carbon emissions without requiring any significant lifestyle change. Unplugging electronics when they are not in use eliminates the slow energy drain that occurs even when devices are switched off. And shortening showers or reducing outdoor water use helps preserve a resource that is under growing pressure from drought and extreme heat.
None of those actions alone will reverse decades of environmental damage. But the original premise of Earth Day was that collective small actions, taken by enough people, produce political and cultural momentum. Fifty-six years of evidence suggests that premise was not wrong.

