Verde Volume 21 Issue 3

Page 33

THE TIME IS NOW

ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVISM IN THE NEW DECADE Text by KYLIE MIES and ZOË WONG-VANHAREN

“P

EOPLE ARE SUFFERING. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing.” These are the words of Greta Thunberg, the 17-year-old Swedish activist whom many have come to know as the face of the movement to address the climate crisis. In a speech at the September 2019 United Nations Climate Action Summit in New York City, she called for politicians to take measures towards preventing world-wide disaster. As we step into 2020 and look back at the previous decade, the implications of climate change has been evident, and the consequences are only mounting. Palo Alto student activists and other community members have stepped up efforts to combat these environmental issues. Palo Alto High School senior Alexandra Lee is an intern at non-profit organization Menlo Spark, which collaborates with local government, businesses and residents to make the Bay Area more environmentally sustainable. Menlo Spark is currently spearheading the Fossil Free Building campaign, which works with different cities to develop new reach codes, which go beyond preexisting state requirements in place to conserve resources and energy. “I think there’s a lot to be done,” Lee said. “Turning off natural gas, moving our resources closer and closer to renewable energy, increasing incentives to walk or bike, and increasing and improving public transportation and incentives for electric vehicles.”

Photo by ZOË WONG-VANHAREN Zander Leong, a junior and Paly’s ECO Club president, is working to bring awareness of the climate crisis to students. “Just bringing attention to the issue and providing solutions is important,” Leong said. “A specific goal [at Paly] is to improve our waste by sorting it better and reducing it overall.” Locally, the City of Palo Alto has made a pledge to reduce the city’s environmental impact, according to the City of Palo Alto website. “Palo Alto drafted its first Climate Action Plan in 2007, and then we updated it in 2016 and made it a Sustainability and Climate Action Plan,” Christine Luong, the City of Palo Alto sustainability manager, said. “In 2016, that’s when the Council adopted our ‘80 by 30’ goal.” The “80 by 30” goal aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80% below the 1990 greenhouse gas baseline and to divert 95% of waste from landfills. The sustainability department is approaching “80 by 30”with small, achievable goals that will collectively have a large impact. “The four current issue areas — energy, mobility, electric vehicles and water — we’re still going to do,” Luong said. v CLIMATE ACTION NOW Fremont High School students with painted faces stand in protest on Embarcadero Road before marching downtown to Congresswoman Anna Eshoo’s office on March 15, 2019.

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Quizzical Kayla

4min
pages 61-64

Social Media Ads

3min
page 60

Emo Culture

40min
pages 58-59

New Year’s Resolutions

3min
page 57

Science Imbalance

3min
page 56

Lizzo

2min
page 47

Mac Miller’s Circles

4min
pages 48-49

ROOH

4min
pages 52-53

Thrift Stores

5min
pages 50-51

Little Women

4min
pages 54-55

Oscar Nominations

6min
pages 44-46

Taco Truck

4min
pages 42-43

Laughing with ComedySportz

2min
pages 34-35

New Environmental Decade

2min
page 33

Giselle Toth

5min
pages 38-39

Hitting the Ice

4min
pages 36-37

Changing Role of Religion

8min
pages 30-32

Shen Yun Exposé

5min
pages 28-29

Iranian Americans

3min
pages 40-41

Fact-checking Salvation Army

5min
pages 26-27

Math Laning

6min
pages 16-17

Farewell Principal Paulson

2min
page 15

The Kentucky Cycle: Student Play

5min
pages 18-19

News

9min
pages 12-14

Privacy in Tech

7min
pages 24-25

Launch

3min
pages 10-11

Voter Guide

10min
pages 20-23

Editorials

7min
pages 6-9
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