Greenstorm Unveils Winning Images Celebrating the World’s Most Beautiful Wetlands

July 21, 2025

A house sits alone among mist in layers of rice terrace fields, in Viet Nam

Grand Prize winner from Vietnam for the 2025 Greenstorm Photo Festival
Photo credit: Steven Triet

From Vietnam’s misty terraces to Costa Rica’s mangrove dwellers, the winning images from ‘Greenstorm Photo Festival’ inspire awe and urgency in equal measure.

Kochi/Bonn, 21 July 2025 — The winners of the 16th Greenstorm Global Photography Festival were announced today at a virtual ceremony that brought together leading environmental voices, visual storytellers and an international audience.

Themed ‘Beautiful Wetlands’, the festival, which is now in its 16th year, attracted 11,835 entries from 155 countries.

The Grand Prize of USD $10,000 was awarded to Steven Triet from Vietnam.

Hanifi Koç (Turkey), Aref Tahmasebi (UAE) and Pepe Manzanilla (Costa Rica) received Special Jury Mentions, each carrying a prize of USD $1,000.

Dr Muralee Thummarukudy, Director of the (G20 GLI) of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) announced the Festival’s winners.

A frog sits on a twig in a river, poking out of water, in Costa Rica

Photo Credit: Pepe Manzanilla

G20 Global Land Initiative sponsored the Festival for the second year running. It is using photography to both shine a light on the loss of terrestrial ecosystems and inspire actions all over the world to keep wetlands healthy in a bid to reach its ambition of reducing degraded land by 50 percent by 2040.

Dr Musonda Mumba, Secretary General of the Convention on Wetlands, and Chief Guest at the event, said: “Wetlands are our planet’s natural infrastructure. They store carbon, clean water, protect us from floods and droughts, and sustain life in all its forms. But they are being degraded and destroyed faster than any other ecosystem.”

“The Global Wetland Outlook 2025 shows the consequences of this loss and the solutions already working around the world. COP15 in Victoria Falls next week is our moment to change course—through global commitment, national action and local innovation,” Dr Musonda Mumba added while speaking at the ceremony.

According to the 2025 Global Wetland Outlook, released last week, wetlands are disappearing at a faster rate than any other ecosystem. About one-fifth of the world’s remaining wetlands are expected to vanish by 2050 without urgent action. The loss is valued at USD 39 trillion in benefits that support people, economies, and nature.

Some of the winning photos will be on display from 23-30 July 2025 at the 15th meeting of the Contracting Parties of the Convention on Wetlands taking place at Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe.

Nature conservation through an artistic lens

The winning pictures, from the lush paddy fields in Vietnam to flamingoes in a lagoon in Tunisia, offer a breathtaking glimpse into the beauty and ecological diversity of the world’s wetlands.

From serene water bodies reflecting vibrant skies to the quiet resilience of marshland life, each photograph tells a story of balance, survival and the urgent need for conservation.

The winners were selected through a two-tier jury process. The first-level jury included Alex Wides (Italy), Anilkumar (India), Dilek Yurdakul (Turkey), Jaclyn Bringuez (USA), Sahar Al-Zarei (UAE) and Thomas Onyango (Uganda).

The Global Jury curated the finalists and selected the winners. Renowned photographers Charlie Waite (UK), Latika Nath (India), and Nick Hall (USA) made up the Jury.

A flamboyance of flamingos take their time in the sea, in Dalyan, Turkey

Photo Credit: Hanifi Koç

They observed that this year’s entries covered a remarkable spread of subjects and pushed the boundaries, offering a clever, unusual and deeply human way of seeing wetlands.

They stressed that in a world increasingly shaped by artificial images, photographs grounded in nature give us hope and reconnect us.

What’s more, they remind us that even while we’re caught up in our routines, nature is still out there, shapeshifting under sun, wind and tide.

“For 16 years, the Greenstorm Festival has harnessed the power of visual storytelling to ignite a passion for nature conservation among young people worldwide. These evocative images not only showcase nature’s beauty but drive meaningful behaviour change, inspiring the next generation to protect and restore our planet’s vital ecosystems,” said Mr Dileep Narayan, Founder and Managing Trustee of Greenstorm Foundation.

Narayan started the festival 16 years ago to raise awareness about the earth’s fragile ecosystems.

Greenstorm Foundation runs the annual global photography festival, and is based in Kochi, India.

Aerial view of veined lands protruding into the sea in UAE

Photo Credit: Aref Tahmasebi

About Greenstorm Foundation

Inspiring Environmental Responsibility Through Creative Storytelling

Launched in 2009 by Organic BPS, the Greenstorm Foundation is a purpose-driven creative conservancy that uses photography, campaigns and youth engagement to drive environmental awareness. What began in Kochi, India, has grown into one of the world’s largest youth-driven environmental photography movements, reaching over 12 million people in 150+ countries.

In 2023, Greenstorm partnered with the G20 Global Land Initiative of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) to amplify its mission and message globally.

For media enquiries, please contact:
Mr Avinash Ashok
Associate Festival Director
+91 96459 43996
green@greenstorm.green