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My grandma is my north star and my mentor in nature. She is a beacon of hope for those committed to protecting and appreciating nature and all that the outdoors has to offer. She thrives in nature and she works, with relentless determination, to get those she loves outside to explore the wondrous beauty of the natural world.

When I was young, many weekends were spent packing up the car and driving hours away from the busy day-to-day of our lives, filling our weekends with outdoor adventures. Adventures varied from hut-to-hut hikes meeting inspiring thru-hikers who chatted with us about their times on the trail, cross-country skiing in the early mornings in search of grazing moose, ice skating across broad lakes, learning to kayak properly whilst fishing, playing games identifying small critters plants and flowers, to trekking through snowy woods to secluded huts warmed only by small fires. While these adventures were intended as fun weekends away from our routine, they were also lessons in how to engage with and respect the natural world as we enjoyed the playgrounds it offered.

While my grandma served as our leader in engaging with the environment, she let nature be our teacher. She knew that she too would always find new things to wonder about. So, through her eyes, we got to see it and appreciate its beauty. Today, at 83, she still regularly goes camping, hiking, and xc skiing, but with a more adamant demeanor, because she knows that she has only a limited time to have these adventures. Although this is true, and she has slowed down. She has watched my siblings and I grow older and as we continue to engage with nature, to respect it, and to learn from it. Although she has watched her natural playground be threatened and shrink because of climate change caused by human powers, she has also seen a growth in those willing to fight for it; those like you and me who cherish this natural playground and who want to protect it for our future generations. In her day she was the anomaly, today those convictions to cherish and protect our planet are felt by so many of us so that we can take on that beacon of hope for our planet.

What I grasped from these naive childhood explorations of nature is that our world is colorful and magnificent, that everything is connected.

That it is enduring, and I am lucky to have been able to see nature and all its connections in the ways that I have. As I have grown older, have lived across continents, and have seen and learned more about the complexities of humans, ecosystems, and our changing climate, those childhood lessons have transformed into a deeper recognition that we must respect and embrace the natural harmonies of our world, just as my grandma has always done.

My climate story is fortunate; I’ve never faced the climate disasters that are displacing communities or forcing evacuations from homes due to extreme weather occurrences.

Still, I have seen the lake that I used to skate on as a child stop freezing over during the winter, and I’ve stopped swimming in certain lakes and rivers due to dangerous levels of toxins from algal blooms and bacteria. And I no longer see moose wandering through forests and grasslands in more southern parts of New England. These changes are not themselves the story but are little, tiny pieces to a much larger story of climate change.

While those childhood experiences may, very well, only ever again be a childhood memory, I know that I must help protect those natural ecosystems and climate so that they continue to endure and work in harmony with each other and so that future generations get to see and experience the colorful magnificent nature in the same way that I got to.

I want my climate story to be one of hope. So, I hope to inspire our current generations to do as my grandma did – to guide others into nature so they, too, can learn to embrace and respect those natural systems that are integral to the climate and our world. Those childhood lessons, combined with the knowledge we have today in our current climate crisis, can and must be used to empower and motivate communities, societies, and humanity to protect the harmonious systems of nature so that they endure for us and for the wonderous ecosystems that depend on it.

Alyssa van Eyndhoven

Alyssa is a graduate Public Health Student at Lund University in Sweden. Originally from New England, USA, she grew up in the mountains and is passionate about making sustainable systems in public health.

The post My North Star to Nature appeared first on Climate Generation.

My North Star to Nature

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Emergency Drawdown at Flaming Gorge Hits Its Recreation Economy

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The drought-induced draw to save downstream Lake Powell is wreaking havoc on Wyoming-Utah’s beloved recreation area.

As campers with boats flocked to Buckboard Marina at the start of Memorial Day weekend, Tony Valdez was busy issuing refunds and repairing broken boat ramps. One older Green River man, who walked with two canes, left with his money refunded for the season after discovering he could not safely make it down to the boat slip. Due to dropping water levels at Flaming Gorge Reservoir, the ramp is now buckled, angling up and down like a pitched roof.

Emergency Drawdown at Flaming Gorge Hits Its Recreation Economy

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More Coral Reefs May Survive Climate Change Than Scientists Once Thought

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A new global analysis maps reefs with the greatest potential to withstand warmer temperatures, strengthening calls for their protection.

For years, the outlook for coral reefs has been increasingly bleak. Mass coral bleaching events caused by severe marine heatwaves have fueled repeated warnings that reefs are rapidly on an irreversible path of decline. But new research is challenging that narrative.

More Coral Reefs May Survive Climate Change Than Scientists Once Thought

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Bonn Bulletin: Adaptation Fund stalemate puts people at risk, says head

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Dark clouds are gathering over adaptation finance. The US has all but stopped providing it and European countries are slashing their aid budgets to spend more on their militaries. Much of what is flowing comes in the form of loans and doesn’t reach the most vulnerable, as we’ve reported.

Over the years, one bright spark has been the Adaptation Fund and its grants to developing countries for pioneering work in communities. It has allocated $1.6 billion to 226 projects, benefiting 90 million people, its website says. And, while rich nations are failing to give the fund all the money it needs to finance its growing pipeline, new revenues are supposed to come in from the Paris Agreement’s new carbon market, known as Article 6.4.

Back at COP26 in Glasgow, governments agreed that the Adaptation Fund should get 5% of the proceeds from all Article 6.4 carbon credits – other than those based in small islands and least developed countries.

How much money that will amount to is uncertain. It depends on how many projects there are and the price of their credits. 

The fund got over $200 million from a similar share of proceeds under the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), although the price of those credits collapsed. 

While $200 million was a disappointment as ten times that was expected, the Adaptation Fund head Mikko Ollikainen told Climate Home News in Bonn that the sum was “not insignificant”. By comparison, the fund has been seeking $300 million per year from donor governments in recent years.

Hopes are that the CDM’s successor will yield bigger sums for adaptation. But for the fund to get its hands on the share of cash it is expecting from Article 6.4 projects , governments need to agree to transition the fund to “exclusively” serve the Paris Agreement. They are hoping to wrap up those talks in Bonn this week, so that they can rubber-stamp the decision early at COP31.

    It has not been plain-sailing. As small islands’ lead negotiator Anne Rasmussen told a press conference on Tuesday, this transition “is being blocked, frustrating efforts to replenish the fund and ensure that the crucial adaptation finance can flow to those that need it the most”.

    This issue, along with other finance complaints, leads small islands “to question whether the implementation of the NCQG [the 2035 finance goal agreed at COP29] is dead on arrival”, she added.

    The problem is related to who is considered a developed country at UN climate talks, with the responsibilities for providing climate finance that designation implies.

    Traditional donor countries, which have been pushing for years for some wealthier developing countries like Saudi Arabia and China to contribute to climate finance as well, want the Adaptation Fund’s board seats to be split between “developed” and “developing” countries. 

    They argue that these are the categories referred to in the Paris Agreement and so are appropriate for a fund that exclusively serves that accord.

    Developing countries – which have long opposed any of their members being considered developed – argue that the board seats should continue to be split between “Annex 1” and “non-Annex 1” countries. 

    These categories, based on lists of nations drawn up in 1992, are more rigid than “developed” and “developing”. While development status can change over time, you’re either on the Annex 1 list or you’re not.

    Ollikainen said a delay in agreement beyond COP31 – a risk if the issue is not resolved here in Bonn – would harm people in the real world where adaptation needs are rising sharply while the money to protect them from worsening climate impacts is not.

    “If we don’t address adaptation,” the fund’s head told Climate Home News, “that will lead to loss and damage and that’s going to be even more costlier than adaptation – and the cost will be borne by people who have done least to cause this problem who typically don’t have social safety networks to support them.”

    The post Bonn Bulletin: Adaptation Fund stalemate puts people at risk, says head appeared first on Climate Home News.

    Bonn Bulletin: Adaptation Fund stalemate puts people at risk, says head

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