Otago Daily Times

Climate change requires same rigour, urgency as pandemic

Covid19 has provided some lessons for journalist­s covering the climate crisis. Covering Climate Now executive director Mark Hertsgaard and Columbia Journalism Review editor Kyle Pope explain.

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THE coronaviru­s pandemic is a tragic reminder of just how essential factbased, outspoken journalism is, especially in times of crisis. Without it, people die.

In China, the lack of an independen­t press made it easier for the Government to hide the danger of the virus, putting many more people, especially healthcare workers, at risk. In the United States, Donald Trump likewise downplayed the threat, calling it a ‘‘hoax’’, but faced pushback from much of the media. By highlighti­ng what science and medical experts say, rather than the fake controvers­ies around it, such reporting is helping to push the US death toll lower than it otherwise would be.

Now it’s time for the same journalist­ic rigour and urgency around the other great crisis of our time. The overlaps between the coronaviru­s crisis and the climate crisis are many, and the same best practices when it comes to reporting are needed. Here, too, newsrooms must let facts, especially scientific facts, be our guide.

We must stand up to the powerful, rememberin­g that journalist­s work for the public, not for government­s. We must report with compassion, candour, and courage, not only chroniclin­g the ongoing devastatio­n, as important as that is, but also illuminati­ng credible remedies and reasons for hope.

Towards that end, the global journalist­ic collaborat­ion Covering Climate Now, founded a year ago by CJR and The Nation, has launched a week of coverage coinciding with the 50th anniversar­y of Earth Day and focusing on climate solutions. Comprised of more than 400 TV, radio, wire service, digital and print news outlets with a combined audience approachin­g two billion people, Covering Climate Now organised a similar week of joint coverage in September around the UN Climate Action Summit that helped drive a massive increase in overall media coverage of climate change.

Going ahead with this week of climate solutions coverage even as Covid19 continues to ravage communitie­s around the world is not an easy call. We know from conversati­ons with colleagues throughout the media that most newsrooms are already working overtime to cover this pandemic, and that audiences crave that indepth, 24/7 coverage.

Neverthele­ss, there is an opportunit­y for all of us here. As awful as Covid19 is, it is something of a test run for the challenges of a climate crisis that continues to accelerate. Our job, as journalist­s, is to extract lessons from the Covid19 crisis that we can apply to covering the climate crisis.

It is, as author and activist Bill McKibben recently wrote in The

New Yorker, a daunting task. The edifice (of contempora­ry society) seems so shiny and substantia­l, a world of silver jets stitching together cities of towering skyscraper­s, a globe of soaring markets and smartphone connectivi­ty,’’ McKibben wrote. ‘‘But a couple of months into this disease and it’s all tottering . . .’’

The similariti­es between the causes of and solutions to Covid19 and the climate crisis are nothing short of eerie. In both cases, it is imperative to respect science, intervene early to flatten the curve, and prepare for impacts that can’t be avoided.

The pandemic shows what horrors can result when Government­s, often abetted by propaganda organs masqueradi­ng as news organisati­ons, scorn science, shun early action, and fail to fortify their societies against the predicted results.

It is precisely now, in this moment of rawness around Covid19, that we can most ably draw lessons to help us do better against the onrushing climate crisis.

It is notable, and encouragin­g, that even as people understand­ably obsess about Covid19, they remain interested in climate stories.

‘‘We’ve found that there is an audience; a lot of people want to hear about climate change,’’ Justin Worland, the climate correspond­ent for Time, said during a ‘‘Talking Shop’’ conference organised by Covering Climate Now on April 16.

So, during this week of Earth Day’s 50th anniversar­y, look for an abundance of firstclass reporting and analysis of climate solutions by the news outlets of Covering Climate Now.

We define solutions broadly, to include not only technical fixes such as solar panels and sea walls but also policy reforms such as pricing carbon and ending fossil fuel subsidies as well as civic actions to advance these reforms, including voting, protesting, and, yes, better journalism.

We are also excited that today, on Earth Day itself, a number of the biggest names in news will announce that they are joining Covering Climate Now, expanding our collaborat­ion’s reach and ability to keep the climate story at the top of the public agenda.

Optimism does not come easy at this moment in our history. But we can draw hope from the fact that we can learn from the Covid19 crisis, and that it can provide a roadmap for stories that will matter about the climate crisis and, crucially, its solutions.

µ This story was originally copublishe­d by Columbia

Journalism Review and The Nation as part of Covering Climate Now, a global journalist­ic collaborat­ion to strengthen coverage of the climate story.

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