A weekly reckoning with life in a warming world—and the fight to save it |
|
|
|
|
Tricia Mangan skis during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games. Sean M. Haffey/Getty |
|
|
|
|
|
It takes a lot to get me to read a piece about skiing. Like many who didn’t grow up around the sport, I’ve always regarded ski culture with a wariness bordering on resentment. But I have to admit: I found Eric Margolis’s piece about what climate change may do to skiing, and how the ski industry is responding, fascinating. As the Winter Olympics continue this week, the women’s skiing competition airing on NBC tonight at 9:30 Eastern, it’s a timely moment to take a closer look at the article, published Monday. Eric writes that we may not have too many good seasons left: |
The American West has … been hit hard, with the mountains there losing 20 percent of their snowpack since the 1970s. By the end of the century, the Rockies, the Sierra Nevada, and the Cascades could stand to lose another 50 percent. Mario Molina, executive director at nonprofit climate advocacy group Protect Our Winters, based in Boulder, said these changes are already apparent. “What we see is the unpredictability of the winter season across the country. We’re no longer able to rely on the onset of winter toward the end of November,” said Molina. |
|
|
|
|
Global warming’s effect on snow is complicated, Eric explains. Sometimes warming can temporarily increase snowfall because, as one expert told him, “the warmer the air, the greater potential moisture it can hold.” But the amount of snow on the ground is decreasing, rapidly. “Between 1982 and 2016, levels of snow cover saw an average drop of 41 percent in the United States,” Eric notes. This could turn an incredibly powerful recreational industry into the next big climate lobby: |
|
|
|
In 2007, professional snowboarder Jeremy Jones founded Protect Our Winters to mobilize the sports community on climate change. The organization now operates in 40 countries and has started focusing on climate messaging in key congressional districts: With 50 million people estimated to be involved in outdoor recreation annually, the pool of potential activists that could be mobilized, the group thinks, could be huge.… [Aspen Snowmass president of sustainability Auden] Schendler has told numerous journalistic outlets in the past few years that he wants the outdoor community to mobilize as aggressively as the National Rifle Association, which has an outsize impact on American politics despite being less than one-tenth of the size of the outdoors community. “Why wouldn’t this group of people, all of whom are environmentalists to one degree or another, become a movement, a climate movement, which is taking out all the things that these people love?” he told me. |
|
|
| {{#if }} Our writers and editors are bringing you vital reporting, explanation, and analysis to understand the current climate crisis—but they need your help. Here’s a special offer to subscribe to The New Republic. |
—Heather Souvaine Horn, deputy editor |
|
|
|
|
| {{/if}} Snow, and its absence, is going to be one of the most obvious symbols of global warming in the coming decades. And so another thing Eric focuses on is how snow-lovers are learning to balance appreciating the moment and fighting for change. That’s a theme a lot of TNR contributors have pointed to over the past few years. Reading Eric’s piece, I thought of Aaron Regunberg’s article on child-rearing during the climate crisis: “Of all the disastrous lessons a parent could transmit to a child born in 2021,” Regunberg wrote, “teaching them to avoid the light that exists now because of the darkness that may be coming in the future must rank among the very worst.” I thought of Liza Featherstone’s essay about climate anxiety: “The way out of this confusion is neither feel-good solutionism nor submitting to the apocalypse,” she wrote. And I thought of Audrey Gray’s report from Line 3 in Minnesota, where an activist enjoying the Willow River despite pipeline construction spoke about this kind of balance: “I acknowledge what you are doing here on this site, I see you, and I can be present with the beauty of what’s around me.” Fighting climate change effectively, without becoming overwhelmed, is tricky. As the first Winter Olympics with no natural snow continues, that’s something a lot of viewers may be starting to appreciate. —Heather Souvaine Horn, deputy editor |
|
|
|
|
That’s how much sea levels are set to rise on U.S. coasts by 2050, according to a new multi-agency report. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Last week, a federal judge reversed a Trump administration decision and restored the Endangered Species Act protections for gray wolves. TNR contributor Liza Featherstone wrote last month about the important ecological role played by apex predators like wolves, and why demonizing them is harmful. Read it here. |
|
|
Corn-based ethanol is probably worse for the climate than straight gasoline, according to a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (The ethanol lobby is predictably pissed about this finding.) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Elsewhere in the Ecosystem |
The New York Times published a piece last week about the rise of climate anxiety and the therapists who specialize in counseling people through it. That piece, if you haven’t read it, is worth your time. But so is Mary Annaïse Heglar’s response to it in her and Amy Westervelt’s Hot Take newsletter. The therapy profession, she points out, doesn’t have a great track record on this issue: |
If the mental health industry is finally going to take climate grief seriously, it needs to take a critical look at all the ways it’s failed, and all the people it’s hurt, in the extremely recent past. I’ve heard so many horror stories of therapists who wound up gaslighting and silencing their patients due to their own shitty knowledge about the crisis. They tried to convince them that it was all in their heads, that they had a savior complex, that they were catastrophizing.… And that brings me to the real heart of the matter: the fact that the mental health field has failed so horrifically is yet more evidence of the woeful miseducation of the entire American public. Of course my therapist didn’t know how serious climate change was: no one had told her. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
What Subscribers Are Reading |
Among the less-discussed parts of Build Back Better: It would help keep people from drowning. |
|
|
The Labour Party has proposed a one-year tax hike to help low-income customers handle rising energy prices. Shell and BP oppose it. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|