2023
February
22
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 22, 2023
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Earlier this month, I picked my girls up from elementary school, drove north from our town in western Massachusetts, and hoped that we would eventually get to winter.

Although it was mid-February, the ground was bare at our house, and the nearby ponds fully liquid. There had been no sledding, and our one sad attempt at a snowball fight earlier in the year had ended once eager mittens had scraped away the thin layer of white.  

As the Monitor’s climate reporter, I know better than to confuse “weather” with “climate,” let alone the global warming caused by humans. This winter has been warm in the Northeast. Next year might be cold. 

But there is something disheartening here about no snow in February, and the trend overall is unmistakable. According to the nonprofit research group Climate Central, 238 locations in the United States experienced an average winter warming of 3.3 degrees Fahrenheit between 1970 and 2022. New England is warming even faster, with Burlington, Vermont, increasing by 7.1 degrees and Concord, New Hampshire, by 6 degrees.

There are myriad implications of this shift – scientific, biological, economic. But there is also something emotional. 

It took us an hour and a half in the car and about 300 feet of elevation to find winter.

Lake Morey, in Fairlee, Vermont, had just frozen solid enough for us to join a group of friends who gather every year to venture onto its 4.3-mile skate trail, advertised as the longest in the U.S. The scene is joyous, with children swirling and laughing, and adults playing without a smartphone in sight.

We gathered together by the frozen shores, and a number of parents shared our relief that there was actually ice. We wondered how long our kids would be able to continue this tradition, but mostly we were grateful. 

I remembered what Adam Cramer, the CEO of the advocacy group Outdoor Alliance, told me for an upcoming piece. Hope, he says, “arises from the personal connection one has to a place.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Patrick Lantrip/Daily Memphian/AP
At Tom Lee Park, attendees watch as a plank signed by the family of Tyre Nichols is placed atop a canopy dedicated to Mr. Nichols, Feb. 10, 2023. The park in Memphis, Tennessee, is under renovation.

Tyre Nichols’ death seemed only to confirm a portrait of Memphis as defined by crime and poverty. But in all their city’s contradictions, Memphians see something else, too: promise.

When it comes to transforming a country, do motives matter? Progress in the Philippines may be short-lived if the Marcos administration is more concerned with international image than freedom and justice.

Historically Black Colleges and Universities have grappled with a long history of being ignored financially. What’s different today, several presidents say, is that people outside of HBCU circles are starting to notice the inequities.

Natalie Alcoba
Charlie (second from left) and a group of Fundación Sí volunteers sit together on the stoop where he lives in downtown Buenos Aires, Feb. 7, 2023.

Argentines are no strangers to economic crises. But, as inflation climbs and the economy falters once again, more people are stepping up to offer their time and limited resources to help. 

Points of Progress

What's going right

Our progress roundup highlights the potential of young people. In Latvia, the popular Minecraft game is empowering kids to think about civic improvements. And in India, trees planted to celebrate newborn girls have greened a mining town.   


The Monitor's View

Reuters
A Hyundai Xcient truck, fueled by hydrogen, stands at a filing station in Berlin, Germany, Jan. 11.

For decades, climate change activists have called on governments, consumers, and industries to move away from fossil fuels to save the planet. That transition has finally reached a watershed. Global investment in renewable energies reached parity with capital for hydrocarbons in 2022 and is poised to blow past it, according to BloombergNEF.

In crossing that threshold, the world may now be focusing more on the quality of “green” energy projects. Do they cause other environmental harm? Do they upset local communities? A good example of this focus is a decision in Chile to hit the pause button on a massive project to produce hydrogen as a fuel by relying on renewable energy.

Hydrogen is the post-carbon dream fuel. It has the potential of powering long-haul land, sea, and air transportation, solving the limitations of electric vehicles while emitting only water in its use. Although global investments in hydrogen accounted for only a small fraction of the $1.1 trillion put into renewables last year, hydrogen is the world’s fast-growing part of the energy sector.

To be commercially viable, however, the cost of producing hydrogen needs to drop. And for the fuel to be called “green,” or climate friendly, the power source must be fully renewable. Last week, the European Union, which has allocated $5.2 billion for hydrogen projects, sought a way around that limitation by designating nuclear power an acceptable source.

Few countries are better endowed than Chile in tapping renewable energy sources. The country’s southern landscape is sparsely populated and buffeted by near-constant winds. The government promises to become one of the world’s top hydrogen exporters by 2040. It already has 41 green hydrogen projects underway, including a $74 million pilot that makes synthetic gasoline from hydrogen with a single wind turbine. The plant’s foreign investors are planning a second, larger operation.

But the project is on hold to address local concerns. Environmentalists worry about the impact of more wind turbines and busier shipping lanes. Residents have raised concerns about Indigenous land rights and the cohesion of their communities. “We realized there was still more dialogue to be had” with residents and officials, Clara Bowman, chief operations officer at HIF Global LLC, the project’s lead developer, told Bloomberg.

Solving climate change, notes Terry Yosie, former president and CEO of the Washington-based World Environment Center, poses societal challenges at least as large as economic ones. That is also an opportunity. “Whether for selfish or moral reasons,” he wrote in Greenbiz in December, “the greater mobilization of coalitions that can yield climate progress is an essential reaffirmation of our common humanity and the ability of people to govern themselves.”

Managing the green transition means not repeating the kind of mistakes that led to global warming: a low regard for others living on Earth. On Chile’s windy southern pampas, a pause in pursuing renewable energy shows a new emphasis on the bonds of a caring society.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

When all around seems to be chaos, we can find peace and protection by trusting God’s law of harmony. 


Viewfinder

Khalil Ashawi/Reuters
Syrian artists Aziz Asmar (right) and Salam Hamed (on ladder, left) paint images of hope on the rubble of buildings damaged in the aftermath of a deadly earthquake, in the rebel-held town of Jandaris, Syria, on Feb. 22, 2023. Aid has been slow to arrive in opposition-held areas.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come back tomorrow, when columnist Ned Temko will discuss China’s relationship with Russia and Beijing’s desire to play a diplomatic role in the Ukraine crisis.

More issues

2023
February
22
Wednesday

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