100th Eco Church Goes for Gold – A Rocha UK Celebrates

100 churches reach gold!

Last week, A Rocha UK saw the 100th church achieve an impressive Eco Church gold award!

Any church achieving gold tells a story of hard work, prayer and committed action, and the 100th, St Francis Church in High Heaton, Newcastle, is no exception. First registering as an Eco Church in 2016, they were awarded bronze just a year later in 2017. Three years on in 2020, they reached their silver award, and after five years, they are now celebrating reaching gold! 

Why is reaching 100 significant? Hope in action

To achieve gold, churches demonstrate that care for creation is truly embedded and sustained in their collective life and worship for the long term. Through reaching this milestone, we know that more and more churches are deepening their engagement with caring for creation. 

Reaching 100 gold awards is an inspiring story of what God is doing in and through his churches, and should give us hope. It’s easy to read news stories and feel overwhelmed at what is going on in the world and the threats to the environment, yet God has always used his church to communicate hope to a broken world and an invitation to live differently. 

Churches across England and Wales of all shapes and sizes have achieved gold awards. To mention just a few activities, among so many, in Wales, Beulah URC in Cardiff is raising awareness through creativity, creating community artwork with regular outside wall art, and has hosted a sustainable flower festival and fashion show. Peterborough Quakers have created a wildlife corridor around their car park, allowing native wildflowers and long grassy areas to provide a source of food for pollinators, and a quiet garden for reflection. And Trinity Methodist Church and Community Hub in Clitheroe, Lancashire, have around 80 different groups meeting in their buildings, who have all been influenced in one way or another by the church’s care for creation! 


A Rocha UK. “100 churches reach gold!” A Rocha UK (blog post), 2025. A Rocha UK website: arocha.org.uk/100‑gold‑eco‑churches.