My ears perked up hearing my teen children express their despair due to the climate crisis.
This information stirred something in me that was new and made me want to do something to hopefully show my kids that I valued them, their future on the planet, and the earth herself.
I decided to enter grad school at the ripe age of 47 to get my masters in environmental education. This step was big for me, as my past school experiences were never something I relished. Though I love learning, I had been convinced I wasn’t cut out for traditional learning experiences. Imagine how thrilled I was to find out that this time was different. I finally had a great school experience that incorporated hands-on learning, connecting me more deeply to the planet and to others who care about her, too.
After I graduated in 2023, filled with gratitude and inspiration, I was fortunate enough to hear about a job opening for an environmental educator at Fox Island County Park in Fort Wayne, Indiana. I pursued this opportunity to have the chance to educate and inspire the surrounding community. I hoped to achieve this by teaching school kids coming for field trips and mixed ages of visitors who might come to public programs I’d offer throughout the year.
When I went to the park for my interview, I was overwhelmed by the destruction that had taken place. On June 13, 2022, a Derecho swept through Fox Island County Park, destroying nearly 4,000 trees with its 98 mile an hour wind. Clean up crews of loggers and park staff worked thousands of hours to clear all the debris and open up the blocked trails. Despite the massive amount of work already done, it was still staggering to see with my own eyes what this severe weather had done to the park where I was hoping to work. Long-time visitors to Fox Island County Park would likely feel big emotions due to how different things look now.
“Solastalgia,” Bella Garrioch, a Window Into COP26 Delegate expressed, is a concept coined in 2003 by philosopher Glenn Albrecht that describes the emotional or existential distress caused by environmental change. Often people use this word “to describe how they feel, seeing natural locations they love being impacted by climate change.”


While the devastation and changed appearance of Fox Island is very real, I had come to the park only once before the Derecho swept through and so have a different outlook. When Fox Island County Park reopens, it will be important for me to be sensitive towards park visitors needing to process the new look, as well as willing to hold space for those grieving what they had known and have lost.
The thing that I did notice that was different from my first visit was how loud the man-made noise is now because of all the trees that are now gone.
The noise from the highway, the train, and the air-traffic is unignorable without all the trees. This change has been the hardest adjustment for me, as it makes it more difficult to hear birdsong, which is something I love about nature that calms me and lifts my spirits.
The climate crisis is impacting many communities around the globe, including mine. For me, educating people about nature and our interdependent relationship with her is the proactive effort I contribute to hopefully slow the process, even if just a little. Even so, the earth is truly amazing and resilient, and this gives me some comfort. The earth is more resilient than people, but people have a great ability to adapt as well, if they choose to make the needed changes.
Though it will take longer than my lifetime, someday the trees in Fox Island County Park will again grow tall and be a place where the hopeful sounds of birdsong can be an audible reminder that there are people who care about all of life on this beautiful planet.

Eva Webb is the environmental educator at Fox Island County Park in Fort Wayne, Indiana where she will lead field trips to school kids and offer nature programming and drum circle events to the public. While she waits for her park to reopen she is getting acquainted with the property and offering off-site program for school kids and taking drum circle facilitator classes. Eva lives in Huntington, Indiana with her husband and 3 kids.
The post Recovering From a Derecho appeared first on Climate Generation.
Climate Change
Congress Grills Officials About the Potomac River Sewage Spill
Months after a collapsed pipe pushed nearly 250 million gallons of raw sewage into the river, residents say the area still smells.
Members of a congressional subcommittee this week questioned utility leaders and state officials about their knowledge of preexisting problems with the sewage line that collapsed on Jan. 19 near the Potomac River.
Congress Grills Officials About the Potomac River Sewage Spill
Climate Change
China’s Shark Finning Could Lead to US Seafood Sanctions
A formal petition to the U.S. government calls for sanctions on Chinese seafood imports as it highlights China’s loophole-ridden illegal shark fin trade.
For migrant workers trapped onboard Chinese distant water fishing fleets, cutting the fins off sharks as they writhe violently on rusted decks in the Indian Ocean isn’t accidental. It’s an intentional and lucrative act that marks the start of a bloody half-a-billion-dollar offshore supply chain, tacitly supported by Beijing yet covertly concealed from port inspectors globally.
Climate Change
New data shows rich nations likely missed 2025 goal to double adaptation finance
New data on international climate finance for 2023 and 2024 suggests that wealthy countries are highly unlikely to have met their pledge to double funding for adaptation in developing nations to around $40 billion a year by 2025 amid cuts to their overseas aid budgets.
At the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow in 2021, all countries agreed to “urge” developed nations to at least double their funding for adaptation in developing countries from 2019 levels of around $20 billion by 2025. Funding for adaptation has lagged behind money to help reduce emissions and remains the dark spot even as the data showed overall climate finance rose to a record $136.7 billion in 2024.
A United Nations Environment Programme report warned last year that wealthy nations were likely to miss the adaptation finance target and the data released on Thursday by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) shows that in 2024 adaptation finance was just under $35 billion.
The OECD, an intergovernmental policy forum for wealthy countries, said the increase between 2022 and 2024 was “modest”, adding that meeting the doubling target would require “strong growth” of close to 20% in 2025.
More cuts likely
The OECD’s figures do not go up to 2025, but several nations announced cuts to climate finance last year. The most notable was the abandonment of US pledges to international climate funds by the new Trump administration but the UK, France, Germany and other wealthy European countries also pared back their contributions.
Joe Thwaites, international finance director at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said developed countries were “not on track” to meet the adaptation funding goal.
Power Shift Africa director Mohamed Adow said adaptation finance is needed to expand flood defences, drought-resistant crops, early warning systems and resilient health services as the world warms, bringing more extreme weather and rising seas. “When that money fails to arrive, people lose homes, harvests and livelihoods – and in the worst cases, their lives,” he warned.
Imane Saidi, a senior researcher at the North Africa-based Imal Initiative, called the $35 billion in adaptation finance in 2024 “a drop in the ocean”, considering that the United Nations estimates the annual adaptation needs of developing countries at between $215 billion and $387 billion.
If confirmed, a failure to meet the goal is likely to further strain relations between developed and developing countries within the UN climate process. A previous pledge to provide $100 billion a year of total climate finance by 2020 was only met two years late, a failure labelled “dismal” by the UAE’s COP28 President Sultan Al Jaber and many other Global South diplomats.
Missing that goal would also raise doubts about donor governments’ commitment to meeting their new post-2025 adaptation finance goal. At COP30 last year, governments agreed to urge developed countries to triple adaptation finance – without defining the baseline – by 2035.
African and other developing countries have pointed to lack of funding as a key flaw in ongoing attempts to set indicators to measure progress on adapting to climate change.
Speaking to climate ministers from around the world in Copenhagen on Wednesday, Turkish COP31 President Murat Kurum stressed the importance of climate finance. “It is easy to say we support global climate action,” he said, “but promises must be kept.”
He said the COP31 Presidency will use the new Global Implementation Accelerator and recommendations in the Baku-to-Belem roadmap, published last year, to scale up climate finance – and will hold donors accountable for their collective finance goals.
He noted that developed countries should this year submit their first reports showing how they will deliver their “fair share” of the new broader finance goal set at COP29 in 2024, to deliver $300 billion a year in climate finance by 2035. They are due to report on this once every two years.
Broader climate finance
The OECD data shows that the overall amount of climate finance – including funding for emissions cuts – provided by developed countries grew fast in 2023 before declining in 2024. In contrast, the amount of private finance developed countries say they “mobilised” increased in both 2023 and 2024, pushing the top-line figure to a record high.
While the OECD does not say which countries provided what amounts, data from the ODI Global think-tank suggests that the 2024 cuts to bilateral climate finance were spread broadly among wealthy nations.
Thwaites of NRDC welcomed the fact that overall climate finance provided and mobilised by developed countries exceeded $130 billion in both 2023 and 2024. He said that this was “well above earlier projections” and “shows that when rich countries work together, they can over-achieve on climate finance goals”.
But Sehr Raheja, programme officer at the Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment, said these figures are “modest” when set against the new $300-billion goal.
“While the headline total figure of climate finance remains alright,” she said, “declining bilateral climate spending raises important questions about the predictability of high-quality, concessional public finance, which has consistently been a key demand of the Global South.”
She also lamented that loans continue to dominate public climate finance and that mobilised private finance is concentrated in middle-income countries and on emissions-reduction measures rather than adaptation projects. “Private capital continues to follow bankability rather than climate vulnerability or need,” she added.
Ritu Bharadwaj, climate finance and resilience researcher at the International Institute for Environment and Development, said the figures painted an outdated picture as climate finance has since declined as rich countries shrink their overseas aid budgets and increase spending on defence.
Last month, the OECD published figures showing that international aid – which includes climate finance – fell by nearly a quarter in 2025. The US was responsible for three-quarters of this decline. The OECD projects a further decline in 2026.
With Thursday’s climate finance report, the OECD is “publishing a victory lap for 2023 and 2024 at almost the same moment its own aid statistics show the funding base eroding underneath it,” Bharadwaj said.
The post New data shows rich nations likely missed 2025 goal to double adaptation finance appeared first on Climate Home News.
New data shows rich nations likely missed 2025 goal to double adaptation finance
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