Burson: UNCCD’s The Land’s Voice

Person with curly hair interacts with a digital display featuring a woman's face fused with cracked soil and greenery, evoking nature and technology.

Burson: UNCCD’s The Land’s Voice

Giving nature the mic at COP16

The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) is tackling a critical but often overlooked crisis: the degradation of our planet’s healthy land.

Despite affecting more than 3.2 billion people, UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 15: Life on Land remains one of the most underfunded global priorities. At COP16 in Riyadh, UNCCD set out to change that – to ignite global action, galvanise leaders, and make the land crisis impossible to ignore.

But instead of adding to the noise, Burson and UNCCD COP16 created something bold: a breakthrough AI-powered experience that transformed land degradation from a distant, scientific statistic into an immediate, emotional, and deeply human encounter – giving the Land a voice

At the heart of this world-first activation was “The Land’s Voice”: an AI-powered MetaHuman trained on decades of environmental data, scientific studies, indigenous wisdom and real-time conversation models. Designed to speak in both English and Arabic, this emotionally intelligent experience enabled two-way dialogue between people and the Land itself – a digital embodiment that turned environmental storytelling into meaningful connection.

Launched at the conference’s first-ever Green Zone, the installation invited thousands of visitors to listen, reflect and respond to the Land. And it didn’t stop there. Supported by global earned media, social amplification, out-of-home activations, stakeholder support and a full-page New York Times ad, “The Land’s Voice” campaign sparked a global conversation.

Burson UNCCD

The results? The UNCCD COP16 event reached over 1.3 billion people and generated more than 45,000 earned media articles. Public awareness jumped by 10%, and willingness to act rose by 7%. With 24,000+ attendees, the event secured over $12 billion in funding for SDG 15 and was hailed by CNN, Bloomberg and UN News as a global “turning point”.

But the true impact goes beyond the stats. Post-COP16 analysis showed a significant shift: land restoration is now being understood not just as a scientific or environmental challenge, but as a human rights and emotional imperative. Youth voices, diplomatic leaders and private sector players have carried the conversation forward – keeping SDG 15 in the spotlight well beyond the event.

This storytelling model is now influencing how environmental issues are communicated – moving from cold data to real human connection. And “The Land’s Voice” isn’t finished: the AI MetaHuman experience is already being planned for future UN events, ensuring SDG 15 continues to speak loud and clear.