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Originally published on Globalnews.ca

Public concern about the impacts of climate change is the highest it’s been, but so, too, are our planet’s temperatures — and the level of carbon emissions that are driving them up.

Warnings from scientists and environment agencies about what’s happening to our climate aren’t in short supply. Still, we’ve ended up at a point where we now have less than 12 years to change course — to curb our carbon emissions enough to prevent the Earth’s temperature from rising more than 1.5 Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Beyond that point, according to the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, we’ll see even more catastrophic impacts in the form of extreme temperatures, droughts and more intense storms.

The problem is that even people who express concern about our changing climate don’t necessarily connect with messages like that and automatically feel compelled to change how they live and make sacrifices to lessen their own impact on our climate.

Keep climate action simple (to start)

Engaging people takes a more simple approach, according to Dr. Jessica Thompson.

“I think that we’ve been assuming that information transfer, knowledge, will help people. If we just give them the science, they will miraculously be aware of the impacts and start changing their behaviour,” says Thompson, an associate professor of environmental communication at Northern Michigan University.

She explains people can “feel paralyzed by all of the information” because they can’t possibly take it all in and then they just “check out.”

“Scientists speaks science,” Thompson said. “Society does not.”

What tips the balance for a lot of people is communication with those around us and the power of influence — social shifts like in years past with rise of recycling or the decline in smoking.

“As a child in the 90s,” Thompson recalled, “I taught my parents how to recycle. I learned how to recycle at school, I brought it home and I literally guilt-tripped them into making the changes.”

But it’s small actions like recycling, something that becomes a habit when everyone around us is doing it, that serve as a starting point for someone who may be inactive or complacent about climate-conscious behaviour.

“If we start to give people little things that help them self-identify as someone who cares — someone who cares about the planet, who cares about their community, who cares about the impacts of what we’re witnessing — then they’ll start to develop bigger questions,” Thompson says.

Climate change over coffee

But if you wonder just how big a difference small steps like that can make, just look at Tomás Regalado. He’s the former Republican mayor of Miami, and he has his youngest son to thank for his climate change awareness — and it all started with a father-son cup of coffee at 4:30 in the morning.

Regalado took office in 2009, on the heels of the real estate crash and the great recession. He was by no means a climate change denier, but it wasn’t a priority at a time when many Miami residents were just trying to survive the economic turmoil in the U.S.

Plus, he thought climate change wouldn’t really be a concern anytime soon.

“I was one of those Americans… that used to believe that this is not going to happen in my lifetime, that this is something that not even my children or my grandchildren will have to suffer,” he told Global News.

But his son, Jose, was incredibly concerned. As an underwater photographer, he was noticing the impact of climate change below the sea’s surface. So, Jose started waking up in the wee hours and driving home.

“My son would wake up too and say, ‘Listen. I read this report. I want to you to read this report. I’m going to tell you about this. You know the scientists are saying this,” Regalado recounts.

“He kept pounding and pounding and pounding.”

When the younger Regalado travelled to the Paris Climate Conference in 2015, he saw a presentation explaining how Miami would be one of the cities worst affected by sea level rise — something the city was already experiencing with coastal neighbourhoods flooding every time there was a king tide. It was time for another early morning discussion with dad.

Reglado’s climate awakening may not have happened overnight in the figurative sense (it sort of did in the literal sense), but he soon became a climate change activist for the city of Miami.

He went up against his “pro-development” city council, which he says wasn’t too keen on spending money on addressing climate change and sea-level rise. It took him about two years, but by the time he left office in 2017, he rallied the voters of Miami to approve a $200 million plan for the city to prepare and adapt for the climate reality it’s facing.

How does the greenhouse effect work?

Changing the channel on climate change

The Regalados’ morning coffee climate change chats exemplify the importance and efficacy of person-to-person communication, but the reality is that many of us learn about the issue through the media.

The news bridges the gap between climate scientists and the public, but Dr. Genevieve Guenther says there’s room for improvement when it comes to the message being delivered.

She started the organization EndClimateSilence.org to push media organizations to keep climate change front and centre on a daily basis.

“We’re already pretty much too late to stave off some of its worst effects,” Guenther said, “and [people are] not going to realize some of those things unless the media — which is literally mediating reality for most people — represents climate change accurately and with the frequency and sustained coverage it deserves.”

She says climate change should be seen as a topic that transcends news beats.

“Climate change is really on everyone’s beat at this point, unfortunately,” she says.

“All journalists — political journalists, local journalists, anchors who are going to be interviewing politicians — everybody has to have a basic understanding of climate change, the science and the arguments against denialism,” she says. “Because those arguments are still getting circulated.”

Nick Yukon Profile Photo Nick Logan is a journalist working with Canada’s Global News network. He’s currently a producer on the network’s flagship newscast, Global National. Prior to that, Nick was an national online reporter for 3 years, covering world news and current affairs for Globalnews.ca. He was also the original web producer for what is now known as Global Halifax, where he covered local news for the four Atlantic Canada provinces and had a weekly on-air segment reporting on trending topics.

Nick is originally from Atlantic Canada but has lived in places big and small: from Tokyo to the remote Japanese island of Okinoerabu, from Sydney, Australia, to the tiny village of Rabinal in central Guatemala. He also spend a period of his life living on board a passenger liner sailing around the world for 3.5 months at a time. An avid traveller, Nick has visited nearly 50 countries. He is currently based in Vancouver, Canada.

Human rights reporting is one of my greatest passions in journalism. Here’s a collection of my reporting on various human rights issues.

Responsibility to Protect/Genocide

Are the Conservatives politicking with Responsibility to Protect?
World should have intervened in Syria a year ago: Dallaire
Responsibility to Protect: Does the world have to help Syria?
Guatemala’s genocide trial — a ‘tangled’ path to justice
Canada compares deplorable violence in South Sudan to Rwanda
Pope angers Turkey over Armenian genocide comment

Central African Republic

CAR crisis not next Rwanda but still needs response: Romeo Dallaire
Central African Republic’s forgotten human rights crisis is worsening
U.N. chief calls for end to CAR ‘bloodshed’
U.N., Europe sending more support to Central African Republic: reports

Child soldiers

Is Omar Khadr a child soldier? Explaining the murky debate
Is the world ready to deal with a generation of ISIS child soldiers?
Iraq Crisis: Why you should be concerned about ISIS recruiting children
Were Amanda Lindhout’s Somali captors a product of a failed state?

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia has a terrible human rights record. Why are they still Canada’s ally?
Saudi King Abdullah: ‘proponent of peace’? Human rights abuser? Both?
Calls for Saudi Arabia to halt beheading of young activist Ali Mohammed al-Nimr

Mining and human rights

Romanians protest Canadian-owned gold mining operation
Protests, cyanide concerns may halt Canadian-Romania gold mine project
Canadian mining companies under fire for Latin America operations

U.S. Race Relations

From Selma to Ferguson and NYC: ‘This action is now a movement’
Analysis: Trying to understand the tensions in Ferguson
How many black people have been killed by police in the US? Depends who’s counting
What lead paint had to do with Freddie Gray’s tragic life
Why some Baltimore leaders say ‘thug’ is the wrong word to use
Who are the Baltimore cops charged in Freddie Gray’s death?
Study finds ‘no racial bias’ in US police shootings. But do the numbers add up?
Police treatment of Waco suspects ignites backlash, comparisons to Baltimore
Cleveland police release video of Tamir Rice being shot by officer
Why some people think dashcam video of Sandra Bland’s arrest was edited
Sandra Bland arrest: Comparing dashcam footage to arrest video
Sandra Bland autopsy indicates death was suicide, but family points to booking inconsistencies

Sexual Violence

Female refugees endure sexual violence, exploitation as they escape war-torn Syria, Iraq: Amnesty
Analysis: Mumbai gang rape case highlights lingering gender issues in progressive Indian city
Will Indians get to see the gang rape documentary ‘India’s Daughter’?
Why are women in Pakistan and India at risk of brutal violence?
Pakistan stoning: Farzana Parveen’s husband says he killed first wife
Over 1 million call for justice following alleged gang rape in Kenya
Kenya’s chief justice calls for action on high profile gang rape case
Brazilian teen speaks out after gang rape video posted online
This man saved 40,000 women. Will he win the Nobel Peace Prize?

Indigenous issues

Every big story has a backstory or side story. Breaking down topics and ideas in the daily news cycle.

Why you should care about a syndrome that’s killing millions of bats in North America
The Canadian wine you buy might not be as Canadian as you think
How police are using drones in the search for Chase Martens and other missing people
Is Omar Khadr a child soldier? Explaining the murky debate
How does Canada’s intelligence oversight compare to other countries?
Zika outbreak puts spotlight on Latin America’s strict abortion laws
Hong Kong protesters use FireChat to organize off the grid
Verifying videos of the alleged chemical weapons attack in Syria
Why does Mohamed Fahmy have to give up citizenship for freedom?
Why ransoms are big business for terrorists and why the U.S. won’t pay
Israel-Gaza conflict: What are flechette shells and are they legal?
Israel’s mobile missile defence system: What is the Iron Dome?
4 questions about lead in Flint, Michigan’s water
4 things to know about an anti-abortion group’s Planned Parenthood videos
Cecil the lion was just one of many killed by rich, foreign trophy hunters. Why is that permitted?
Harriet Tubman and the Canadian connection to new US $20 bill
Pokémon GO: What parents should know about playing safely
How easy is it to travel with a Canadian passport?
Thailand military coup: What travellers need to know
Scotland referendum: Will a ‘Yes’ vote mean higher scotch prices?
Scottish referendum: What could change or stay the same?

My reporting on LGBTQ2 issues for Globalnews.ca and as an Atlantic Canada-based freelance reporter for Xtra.

On Globalnews.ca

Vigil for slain Halifax activist Raymond Taavel draws hundreds
Orlando shooting: Why LGBTQ Pride and gay bars still matter
Orlando shooting:Pulse owner says club will honour lives lost in massacre
Could prioritizing gay Syrian refugees do more harm than good?
Leaving home a choice between life or death for some LGBT refugees
Is Stoli back in LGBT community good graces after vodka boycott?
Obama looks to end LGBTQ ‘conversion therapy’, still legal in Canada
Happiness index ranks best and worst countries for gay men
Anti-gay pastor Fred Phelps dead at 84
Ellen page takes on Ted Cruz at Iowa State Fair over LGBT rights
It’s okay to be gay at the Olympics as long as you don’t talk about it: Russia
Rights group releases video of Russia anti-gay attacks ahead of Sochi
Gay men who fled Russia seeking refuge in Vancouver
Luge parody ad points out Olympics have always been a little gay
Nick Symmonds dedicates running medal to LGBT friends at championships in Russia
Openly gay teacher inspired by unexpected show of support from tough kids in class
Girl Scouts pull in $260,000 after donor says no money for transgender souts
Caitlyn Jenner ESPY Award garners mixed reaction but award has always been about more than sports
Huckabee’s transgender comments cause stir after Caitlyn Jenner cover

On Xtra.ca

Gay couple burned from PEI home
Trans student protests school gender policies
Fredericton Pride sets sights on first parade
Fredericton trans rally draws 100; School administrators work to be supportive
New Brunswick teachers and students hold GSA conference
NB hockey team battles homophobia on the rink
LGBT activists gather in Moncton for community forum
Meet the new regional coordinator at the Global Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS