In our backyard: What climate change in Canada looks like
Climate change is no longer theoretical. It’s in our backyard.
Here are four snapshots of this new reality — and what we’re doing about it.
In our backyard: What climate change in Canada looks like
Climate change is no longer theoretical. It’s in our backyard.
Here are four snapshots of this new reality — and what we’re doing about it.
The Biggest Lesson About Climate Change From 2019
More than anything else, these two events — the recognition of a truly fresh voice and the market’s embrace of the company with the single largest carbon footprint in the world — tell us where the world stands on climate change. Thunberg, who this time last year was holding a lonely vigil outside the Swedish Parliament as part of the nascent “School Strike for Climate,” represents the rise of a strong climate activist movement, one that has embraced increasingly radical tactics and is backed up by growing public support. Aramco represents how entrenched fossil fuels remain in the global economy, despite all that effort. Thunberg shows us how far we came in 2019, while Aramco’s multi-trillion dollar valuation shows us how far we still have to go.
4 encouraging ways climate politics went mainstream in 2019
The kids took matters into their own hands. In 2019, millions of youth activists took to the streets to make it known that they vehemently disapprove of the job adults are doing to curtail rising emissions. Following in the footsteps of generation Z, teachers, parents, and employees of some of the world’s biggest companies walked out in protest of government inaction on the crisis. These climate strikes took place on multiple Fridays throughout the fall of 2019, in cities around the world like Islamabad, Seoul, Berlin, New York, and Seattle. They will continue in 2020, as a global movement sparked, in part, by the courage of an autistic Swedish teenager continues to grow.
The year the world woke up to the climate emergency
And, like harbingers of the apocalypse, the Extinction Rebellion
movement embarked on a campaign of peaceful civil disobedience that
spread worldwide, armed with little more than superglue and the
nihilistic motto: “When hope dies, action begins.”
In New Jersey, a slow-motion evacuation from climate change
Some neighbourhoods in this town of over 100,000 residents just off the
bustling New Jersey Turnpike are projected to be partly or fully
underwater in coming decades as global sea levels rise.