Climate change causes more extreme weather and natural disasters such as tornadoes, wildfires and hurricanes. Are we are running out of time to mitigate it?

Victoria A.F. Camron, Digital content specialist

April 20, 2021

4 Min Read
earth day 2021 graphic
Getty Images

Are we making progress against climate change? It's a good question to ask as Earth Day approaches, but it's a hard question to answer.

Not suprisingly, the 51st Earth Day is celebrated around the world with numerous live and virtual events. Among the many movies, seminars and lectures available Tuesday, three caught our eye:

  • For the latest Gen Z perspective on climate change, tune in to You Tube at 10 a.m. EDT Thursday to watch teenage Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg testify before Congress. The House Oversight Committee's hearing is titled "The Role of Fossil Fuel Subsidies in Preventing Action on the Climate Crisis."

  • Also on Thursday, PBS is airing a three-part documentary, Greta Thunberg: A year to change the world, that was produced by the BBC. The show focuses on the teen activist's conversations with climate experts. Check your local PBS station for times.

  • At the EarthX film festival, Percy vs Goliath will be screened at 7:30 p.m. CDT via the event's website. The movie tells the story of a farmer fighting a large corporation to protect farmers' rights and the food supply. A limited number of free tickets was available Tuesday morning.

Here, for more in-depth perspectives, we compiled five articles that present the good news, the bad news and the complications.

1. We're facing a crisis of our own making.

The theme of Earth Day 2021 is "Restore Our Earth," something we need to do before global warming wipes us off the face of the planet.

Climate change causes excessive heat waves; hotter, more frequent and more damaging wildfires; more droughts; and more frequent and stronger hurricanes. Between 2008 and 2019, more than 265 million people had to relocate because of storms, floods and wildfires, according to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center.

"Climate change has always happened on planet Earth, but there is overwhelming scientific evidence that the Earth's globally averaged temperature surface temperature has been rising due to anthropogenic factors."—Rescuing the planet is still possible: The case for a global Green New Deal

2. What does biomass power mean for the planet?

"Here's a multibillion-dollar question that could help determine the fate of the global climate: If a tree falls in a forest—and then it's driven to a mill, where it's chopped and chipped and compressed into wood pellets, which are then driven to a port and shipped across the ocean to be burned for electricity in European power plants—does it warm the planet?"

Scientists and environmentalists say it does, because clear-cutting forests and burning the trees warms creates greenhouse gases. But politicians in Europe and the United States consider it a "green climate solution."—The 'green energy' that might be ruining the planet

3. Batteries won't solve the transportation problem.

Imagine a world without the noise and odors from gas-burning engines. A world in which we can all walk around our cities without plugging our ears or coughing from a blast of exhaust—with an economy that works for everyone. We're going to need bigger batteries, right?

"A shift to electric transport is inevitable, [but] a single solution response will not be sufficient to meet increased demand for sustainable transport and infrastructure solutions. Investing in innovations such as hydrogen fuel cell technology will be key."—Sustainable transport can't just depend on batteries. Here's why

4. Cincinnati, Ohio, could lead all cities in grass-roots, green innovation.

In June 1969, the Cuyahoga River in southeast Cleveland, Ohio, caught fire.

Well, actually an oil slick on the river caught fire, but the images of black smoke pulsing into the air as flames flickered from the water's surface triggered a flux of water pollution initiatives and resulted in the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Clean Water Act and more.

Now, the Midwestern city is at the forefront of climate change mitigation.

"Grassroots organizations and community leaders have been addressing the crisis for years through on-the-ground efforts, policy, and investing in green innovation. Amid a global pandemic that has exacerbated existing socio-economic inequities and climate injustices, the fight continues."—Thinking Beyond: How Cincinnati is tackling the climate crisis and building back from the pandemic

5. We're better off than we might think.

Marcel Alers, head of energy at the United Nations Development Programme, starts this article by pointing out that the world is not on track to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 7, the goal of having "universal access to clean, affordable and reliable energy."

Turns out, though, that Alers is optimistic about our clean energy future: "The clean energy solutions that can get us there exist, and there is growing momentum to make them political and investment priorities." Point by point, he proceeds provides the evidence we need to share his outlook, including the fact that in most countries, it's cheaper to convert to solar energy than it is to build a new coal-powered electrical plant.—5 reasons to be optimistic about clean energy in 2021

About the Author(s)

Victoria A.F. Camron

Digital content specialist, New Hope Network

Victoria A.F. Camron was a freelance writer and editor contracted with New Hope Network from 2015 until April 2022, when she was hired as New Hope Network's digital content specialist—otherwise known as the web editor.

As she continues the work she has done for years—covering the natural products industry for NewHope.com and Natural Foods Merchandiser; writing up earnings calls and other corporate news; and curating roundups of trends and information for the website—she is thrilled to be an official part of the New Hope team. (She doesn't mind having paid holidays and vacations again, though!) Victoria also compiled and edited newsletters, and served as interim content director for Delicious Living in 2016.

Before working as a freelancer, she spent 17 years in community newspapers in Longmont, Colorado, and St. Charles and Wheaton, Illinois. Victoria is a Colorado native and a graduate of Metropolitan State College of Denver.

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