With a busy week behind you and the weekend within reach, there’s no shame in taking things a bit easy on Friday afternoon. With this in mind, every Friday TriplePundit will give you a fun, easy read on a topic you care about. So, take a break from those endless email threads and spend five minutes catching up on the latest trends in sustainability and business.
By Suzanne Chew
Is climate change getting you down? This weekend, why not check out over a hundred cartoons that will make even the most fatigued among us crack a smile (or two)! Fish getting acid face peels? Polar bears getting it on with grizzlies? Noah's Ark becoming a bit of a squeeze? Quirky and with a fair bit of cheek, these are just a few of the cartoons in the new book "Little Climate: We need to talk about climate disruption."
Why cartoons?
Let me ask you this: When was the last time you talked to a friend or family member about climate change? Research by Yale University found that only 1 in 25 Americans hear people they know talk about it at least once a week. This rises to 16 percent who hear people they know talk about it at least once a month, but, perhaps unsurprisingly, a full quarter of Americans never hear people they know talk about it at all. What about you?
Why aren’t we talking more?
There are many reasons, but it probably doesn’t help that our most recognized climate change reports are practically unreadable. Research published in the journal Nature Climate Change tested the readability of reports by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and compared these with keynote physics papers by Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking. You can probably guess the result: Not only did the IPCC reports score lower, they scored exceptionally low.
When tested, coverage of research findings in the IPCC reports by quality newspapers scored 41 points. Tabloid papers scored higher with 52 points. What about the IPCC reports themselves? Fourteen points for the report summaries, with just seven points for the key report focused on our climate mitigation solutions.
This in itself might be rather worrying – after all, these reports are written for a non-technical reader, which many of our policymakers may be. But, how important is it really if most of us rely on the papers for our news? Turns out, the same research shows that the more readable the media coverage, the more pessimistic it’s likely to be.
If we think it’s all too awful to even talk about, how can we start reclaiming the power we have to solve it?
How much power do we have?
Behavioral change, tough though it may be, is one of the biggest hammers in our toolbox against climate change. Choices like moderating how much beef and mutton we eat, adjusting our thermostat by one degree, washing our laundry on a cold cycle, choosing an electric car – you've heard it all before, but now let's throw in some numbers!
Looking just within Europe, research by the European Commission found that realistic behavioral change could shave off around 600 million tons of carbon dioxide just from the continent in 2020.
Research by the PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency found that if we all chose a healthy diet, we could bring down the cost of limiting warming to 2 degrees Celsius by half. That’s a whopping 50 percent discount from following a healthy diet, as recommended by the Harvard Medical School for Public Health, of around 90 grams of meat and eggs a day. Just how much could all our everyday actions add up to?
Everyday conversations, everyday actions!
That’s where this little book of cartoons comes in – to bring climate change back into our everyday conversations, in the home and at the office, and hopefully spark a few everyday actions.
Happily readable and bubbling with fun facts, these cartoons crystallize key findings from the IPCC reports and other published papers, showcasing the science, solutions and many opportunities we have. Saving the world whilst laughing in the face of adversity? There’s no better way to start!
What about you? What are the everyday actions you’ve started or inspired in others?
"Little Climate" -- A sneak preview of the book:
All images from "Little Climate: We need to talk about climate disruption" by Suzanne Chew. Used with permission.
Suzanne Chew is the Founder and Director of Little Climate, an organization based in Singapore focused on building climate change awareness through innovative media. She is also the author of “Little Climate: We need to talk about climate disruption”, a fun book of cartoons with everything you need to know about climate change. Suzanne has worked in the climate change sector since 2007, and was previously the Director of a non-profit focused on low-carbon projects for poverty alleviation in Asia and Africa.
The digital book "Little Climate: We need to talk about climate disruption" is available for sale at www.littleclimate.com. Readers of TriplePundit enjoy a 35% discount with the promotion code “reachfor350ppm”.
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