When I was little I thought it was the cloud factory
The European community has taken concentrated action on climate change, proposing laws to protect the environment, including a ban from 2035 on the sale of petrol and diesel cars. But what happens outside its political borders?
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), 90% of the world population breathes polluted air. However, in the Central Balkans the situation is particularly serious, since Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro are primarily responsible for air pollution on the European continent. The UN Environment Programme has revealed that concentrations of pollutants in the region are five times higher than the limits set by the European Union. This is mainly due to old industrial and energy production systems, consisting mainly of coal-fired power plants, and a corrupt system where governments do not provide official data on pollution and people with diseases that can be linked to it. Of the 10 most polluting sites in Europe, 8 are located in the Balkans. In 2016, 16 coal-fired plants in the Balkans emitted the same amount of pollutants as 250 plants in the EU.
‘When I was little I thought it was the cloud factory' is a photographic journey into the heart of the central Balkans, which began in 2022. The project stems from the objective of documenting the consequences of pollution on the environment and the communities most affected by these "monsters", which reflect a new form of neo-colonialism, often run by foreign companies.
The communities living in these places, often the most fragile and poor, can hardly afford to create a new life for themselves in a healthier place and are left with no choice but to accept the future that has been imposed on them.
According to this evidence, how can we ignore the need to address these problems and act for sustainable development? Should governments start looking at climate change with a new and common perspective, abandoning the concept of national borders?
The project, after focusing on Bosnia and Herzegovina, will continue in Serbia and Montenegro to document those abandoned areas submerged in the ashes of pollution.












