The media has been taken to task for doom-laden climate crisis presentations, in a speech at an international workshop, and told to tell the full story.
Former Marshall Islands president Hilda Heine made the comments as the keynote speaker at the East West Centre's international media conference in Hawaii.
She said the media could sharpen people's awareness about climate change, but too often the audience was overwhelmed with the problem, while there was little discussion of the solutions.
This could leave the public with an overall sense of powerlessness, she said, and suggested media should also uncover stories about sustainability.
"For example, in the dry and frequently drought-ridden northern Marshall Islands, families there place high value on sun-dried food preservation processes - for seafood as well as seasonal local food plants, including pulp from the pandanus fruit - we call it nogun."
Heine said when dried over several days nogun becomes a healthy sweet snack that can last for months, and was useful for long ocean voyages across the Marshall Islands.
Sustainable practices were living examples of positive human interaction with the planet, and publicising positive sustainable practices could help change the planet, she said.
"They tell us it is possible to never exploit labour and land. There are numerous other practices, and it takes the media to scale up such practices by widely disseminating the knowledge to others.