Green Daily
Give climate action the old college try

Over the past couple of weeks, while COP29 negotiations dragged on in Baku, students on college campuses in the US got fired up about climate. The incoming Trump administration has provided an inadvertent inspiration. You can read this story, as well as our COP29 coverage, for free on Bloomberg.com

Giving climate action the old college try 

By Ethan M Steinberg

While President-elect Donald Trump has yet to take office, his promise to roll back climate legislation is helping inspire a new generation of green-minded progressives.

Since the election on Nov. 5, young activist leaders have traveled the US holding mass meetings, organizing school protests and hosting online calls that have drawn thousands of people. The idea is to turn up the volume on environmental concerns and convince policymakers to block legislation that will worsen climate change.

“We’re heartbroken about the election, but we’re really going to do everything in our power to build up locally and win in the states,” said Michael Greenberg, co-founder of Climate Defiance, which calls for “disruptive direct actions.” In the past this has included interrupting a speech by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and descending onto the field during the Congressional Baseball Game.

Climate activists chant on stage after interrupting a speech by Jerome Powell, during the 24th Jacques Polak Annual Research Conference in 2023. Photographer: Celal Gunes/Anadolu/Getty Images

“The climate crisis won’t be solved by 55-year-old nonprofit bureaucrats in a cubicle farm on K Street,” he said, referring to a famous avenue for lobbyists in Washington.

Polling data has previously found that few likely voters — people who have gone to the ballot box previously — identified climate change or other environmental issues as their main priority. The lack of voters selecting global warming as a major worry in the 2024 election comes despite the US having faced some of its most devastating and expensive disasters, including Hurricane Helene, during what’s likely to be the hottest year on record.

By some measures, President Joe Biden has been one of the more progressive US leaders on climate, passing the Inflation Reduction Act, which was poised to slash US greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2050. (The US has also had record oil and gas production on Biden’s watch.) Trump has already signaled he aims to dismantle parts of the law, while also vowing to boost oil production and pull out of the Paris Agreement.

Yet there are arguments that Trump may offer more motivation than Biden to get climate-conscious young people more politically engaged.

One of the most consequential youth movements in recent years happened during Trump’s first term. Swedish activist Greta Thunberg was only a teenager when she addressed delegates at the 2018 United Nations climate change conference in Poland, and the subsequent global climate protests preceded a boom period for net-zero goals and environmental social governance investing.

Since Trump’s re-election, students have staged protests at colleges across the US, from Princeton to Michigan State to the University of California, Berkeley. A call held by the Campus Climate Network, which helps student groups organize, drew 70 climate activists from dozens of campuses, according to its co-founder Jake Lowe.

Climate protestors at Princeton University this month. Photo credit: Sunrise Princeton 

“Social movements do a much better job of pushing back when they have a common enemy,” said Dana Fisher, a professor at American University who studies climate activism and authored the recent book Saving Ourselves: From Climate Shocks to Climate Action.

Trump’s election will unify climate activists and bring more of them into the streets. “There’ll be a lot more people outraged and willing to do something,” she said.

One person who has begun doing so is Aru Shiney-Ajay, the 26-year-old executive director of the Sunrise Movement. She sprung into action almost immediately as vote tallies poured in on election day, flying from Wisconsin to Philadelphia and later traveling to Washington, D.C., to organize campaigns to grow her movement.

The group’s goal is to block legislation that undoes incentives to reduce pollution. It is also planning to pressure local and state politicians to prioritize climate.

An online call drew more than 1,600 people, another 360 registered to host in-person events for the group, and students at 80 high schools walked out of class just days after the election with the help of Sunrise’s organizing, she said. New chapters have already formed at Emory University, in rural Dalton, Pennsylvania and in Evanston, Illinois.

For activists like Shiney-Ajay, what happens over the next four years could have longer repercussions. The planet is already on a dangerous warming path, which could make the world a much less hospitable place in their retirement.

“It feels a little like the next four years are down to the wire,” she said. “This feels a little like our last shot.”

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This week we learned

  1. Subways, buses and bike lanes won big in November. Of the 26 mass transit initiatives on the ballot in states across the US, 19 passed for communities including Columbus, Ohio; Maricopa County, Arizona; and metro Denver, Colorado.
  2. There’s been a solar boom in Pakistan. In the first nine months of the year the country has  imported 17 gigawatts of solar modules from China, more than a third of Pakistan’s total power capacity.
  3. EV drivers are frustrated with Tesla’s “walled garden.” Tesla promised to open its Supercharger network to other EVs two years ago, but only about 100 of its 2,500 US Supercharger stations feature the necessary adapters.
  4. Buildings can be good for the planet. Or at least that’s the hope. A new trend for architects and developers to claim “positive” impact from their projects — whether in carbon or energy. It’s a laudable aim that goes beyond “carbon neutral” or “net zero.”
  5. You may find a tree in your usual parking space in Paris. By 2030, the city will have removed 60,000 parking spaces and replaced them with trees. That’s one of the goals outlined in the French capital’s new 2024-2030 Climate Plan.

Worth your time

Artificial wave pools are popping up across the world, raising the climate impact of the usually green sport of surfing. One of the more astonishing examples are the plans for DSRT Surf, one of four surf parks that had been planned in recent years for this water-stressed stretch of the Sonoran Desert southeast of Los Angeles. Yet proponents point out that the DSRT Surf lagoon is expected to use about 8% of the water of a typical 18-hole golf course in the Coachella Valley. And the resort will offset the wave pool’s annual 23.8 million gallon consumption of drinking water by replacing some of the surrounding golf course turf with drought-resistant landscaping. Still, generating tens of millions of freshwater waves around the world requires enormous amounts of water, electricity and carbon-intensive concrete. As surf parks proliferate, so will the scrutiny of their climate footprint. Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

A rendering of the DSRT Surf resort currently under construction in Palm Desert, California.  Photographer: Courtesy of Beach Street

Weekend listening

At COP29 in Baku, Akshat Rathi was joined on stage at Bloomberg Green’s live event by Ali Zaidi, the White House national climate advisor. Zaidi argued that it would be “economic malpractice” for the Trump administration to abandon the energy transition. Plus, veteran climate diplomat Jonathan Pershing explained why he believes global competition will result in an “acceleration of action” on green policy. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple,  Spotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

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