The Sound of Climate Change is a tactile climate experience that turns rising atmospheric carbon dioxide into sound and vibration. It allows audiences to hear and feel the changing carbon signal that is usually only seen as a graph.

The work uses climate data, including the Keeling Curve, to translate increasing CO₂ into low-frequency sound. Visitors sit in an infrasound chair or stand on a vibrating platform while listening through headphones. The result is a quiet but physical encounter with climate change, where the rise of atmospheric carbon can be felt directly through the body.

The experience connects climate science, acoustics and public engagement. It draws on the physics of greenhouse gases, infrared absorption, atmospheric measurement and data sonification to make an invisible environmental change tangible.

Rather than presenting climate change only through numbers or images, Sound of Climate Change creates an embodied experience of carbon pollution. It helps audiences understand that the problem is not carbon itself, but carbon in the wrong place, moving too fast through the atmosphere.