Uppsala finalist for Sweden's Climate City of 2026

Uppsala is one of three finalists for Sweden's Climate City of 2026, alongside Malmö and Lund. The municipality's work on sustainable travel, circular flows and collaboration is highlighted. The winner will be announced this summer.

Uppsala municipality has been named a finalist for Climate City of the Year 2026, an award from the World Wide Fund for Nature WWF. Alongside Malmö and Lund, Uppsala is competing for the Swedish title in the One Planet City Challenge, a global initiative involving nearly 400 cities from over 50 countries. Of 21 Swedish municipalities, three remain in the final.

The municipality's efforts in sustainable travel, circular flows and the Uppsala Climate Protocol for collaboration with businesses and organizations are particularly highlighted. "The work to reduce the municipality's climate impact is ongoing and continues to be one of the municipality's most important issues for a sustainable future," says Ida Lindman, director of safety and sustainability at Uppsala municipality. "We constantly develop our work but still have a lot left to do."

Uppsala has a strong track record, winning the global category in 2018, the national title in 2020 and a finalist spot in 2024. The award provides strategic feedback and boosts action competence. The Swedish winner will be announced this summer and advance to the global final.

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Elderly leaders at the front of a massive climate protest march in Stockholm, banners urging emission cuts.
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Elderly at forefront of climate march in Stockholm

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Several thousand people gathered in Stockholm on Thursday for a large climate march led by elderly demonstrators. About 80 organizations, including Naturskyddsföreningen, PRO and Svenska kyrkan, united under the slogan 'Listen to the scientists – reduce emissions now' to put climate on the agenda ahead of the autumn election.

Uppsala Municipality will take part in Almedalsveckan from 22 to 26 June 2026 in Visby with discussions on urban growth and infrastructure.

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Uppsala Municipality has opened voting for the five finalists in the 2026 architecture prize. The prize, awarded since 2020, recognizes buildings, parks, facilities, or urban environments with high architectural quality and sustainable solutions. Voting runs until April 26.

Uppsala municipality has started controls to ensure valid documents and compliance with laws in its building projects.

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Following a vote with strong engagement, Uppsala's new festival for people with disabilities has been named Uppsala Tillsammans – en glittrande funkisfest. The event, organized by Uppsala municipality this autumn, aims to create an inclusive meeting place. An open stage will take place as early as Thursday, May 28, at Kulturhuset Grand.

Naturvårdsverket reports that Sweden's climate emissions fell three percent in 2025 compared with 2024. The drop is still not enough to meet climate targets.

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Uppsala municipality has prepared a detailed plan for the new railway station in Bergsbrunna south of the city. The planning and building committee decided on Thursday to send the plan for consultation starting May 8. The station is set to handle 30,000 passengers per day when it opens in 2034.

 

 

 

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