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Is it spring? It feels like it. Normally, here in Minnesota we’d still be slogging through the snow. Usually, we would see a snowstorm in April. If this were a normal winter, we would call the balmy temperatures ‘false spring’. There is nothing normal or usual about the extreme weather we are experiencing; it is surreal and frightening.

And for just today I want to revel in the returning bird songs, find delight in the blooming snowdrops and budding pussy willows, turn my face towards the warmth of the sun and ground myself in the promise that is spring. This promise that we will move through the darkness of winter, the incubating of life, and come to this time of rebirth and renewal.

Spring is the season of hope. The daylight hours lengthen and the landscape slowly turns green. As journalist Doug Larson once said, “Spring is when you feel like whistling even with a shoe full of slush.”

So let’s turn that whistle into a song that demands love for all living things, a song that calls us to take action for climate justice. What will you do this balmy March, in spite of the slush in your shoe, to ensure we have a just future on this planet? It’s a great time to start some tomato or pepper seeds in a sunny window for transplanting outdoors after the last frost; growing your own food is an excellent way to break free from our carbon heavy food system. Take advantage of the warmer temperatures and get an early start on your environmentally friendly commuting strategies and bike or take public transportation to work. Join one of the many neighborhood clean up efforts scheduled for April.

Let us spring together into a better world.

Susan Phillips

Susan Phillips
Executive Director

The post Springing Into Hope appeared first on Climate Generation.

Springing Into Hope

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Trump Administration Dropped Controversial Climate Report From Its Decision to Rescind EPA Endangerment Finding

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When the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rescinded its bedrock endangerment finding Thursday, it explicitly excluded a controversial report issued last year by the U.S. Department of Energy that argued the dangers of human-induced climate change were being overstated.

Trump Administration Dropped Controversial Climate Report From Its Decision to Rescind EPA Endangerment Finding

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Five Years Into a Fishing Ban, the Yangtze River Is Teeming With Life

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A doubling of fish biomass along Asia’s longest river shows hope for large-scale conservation efforts and a lifeline for the endangered finless porpoise.

Flowing almost 4,000 miles from the Tibetan Plateau to the East China Sea, the Yangtze is China’s “Mother River.” From the emerald-green rice paddies of Hunan to the industrial hubs of Wuhan and Shanghai, the river basin generates 40 percent of the nation’s economic output. Yet, 70 years of rapid development had, until recently, wreaked havoc on its delicate marine ecosystem.

Five Years Into a Fishing Ban, the Yangtze River Is Teeming With Life

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