How are you feeling about the climate crisis these days? I have been a little more worried than usual lately. You see, my daughter lives in the Bay Area. She’s a healthy 23-year-old and a recent college grad, excited about a new job and new apartment. But she had to live in wildlife smoke-filled air for weeks and was texting me that her chest hurt when she got up in the morning. My niece, a college freshman in Portland, was confined to her single dorm room due to wildfire smoke just a few weeks after arriving on campus — and with her parent’s home in California also under threat. And tonight, the smell of wildfire smoke hangs heavily in the air when I step out my back door in Denver. So my family joins those many people around the world for whom the consequences of climate change have become deeply personal. How about you? Have the consequences of climate change caught up with your family?
I just read a recent poll that 72% of all American voters support climate action. But less than 20% of Forbes’ 100 most sustainable companies in 2020 are located in the US. We’re all well aware of the models, predictions, and statistics about the disastrous impacts of a warming climate. We all understand the many political, economic, and social obstacles to action in this country. But I need a better explanation. Why aren’t individual Americans doing more to protect ourselves from wildfires, hurricanes, floods, and drought? What’s really slowing us down? What do you think? How can we change it?