On Tuesday听I woke up to an email in my inbox: 鈥淲e鈥檙e thrilled to hear you鈥檝e signed up for Sunrise School鈥檚 Green New Deal & Coronavirus crash course!鈥
While stress-scrolling through the internet the day before, looking for signs of hope amid the pandemic news, I鈥檇 registered for听Sunrise Movement鈥檚 webinar series about the overlap between climate organizing and the novel coronavirus. The youth-led group is known for organizing climate actions in the U.S. in solidarity with Greta Thunberg鈥檚 international strikes; but when the pandemic struck, it pivoted to address the burgeoning global health crisis.
鈥淩ight now, health is the top priority for all people, with no exceptions,鈥 says Sunrise spokesperson Naina Agrawal-Hardin. Climate strikes and events have moved online, due to the risk of gathering in large crowds. In late February, the group鈥檚听organizers began to realize how disruptive the virus could be and shifted to a broader vision of public health: both the current viral disaster and the long-term threat of climate change.
In the midst of a pandemic with an immediate and visible toll on human life and the economy, other ongoing crises have fallen lower on the public鈥檚 radar. But environmentalists are finding ways to keep climate change relevant by advocating loudly for an agenda that protects people as well as the planet. The Sunrise School webinar that I joined is just one small example of ongoing activism. Global climate strikes and rallies are now being held online. Last week, as Congress debated a historic economic-stimulus package, Sunrise, along with 500 other organizations, like Greenpeace and the Indigenous Environmental Network, put forth the听, an economic plan for addressing the fallout from COVID-19. Another听coalition of prominent environmental leaders signed a proposal, designed to tackle climate change and economic disruptions from the novel coronavirus in tandem. Now that a $2 trillion rescue bill has become law, activists are fighting to ensure sustainability is included in additional aid packages that the country is likely to require as the economy adjusts to the ongoing pandemic.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want to come out last week and be like, 鈥楥limate is an issue!鈥 when people are terrified about their jobs and parents,鈥 says Samantha Killgore, a spokesperson for the environmental-advocacy group Protect Our Winters. Before the pandemic took hold, POW听was centering advocacy on the 2020 election. It has since dialed back campaign messaging and canceled in-person events听but is听still fighting hard for the planet. 鈥淥ur community overwhelmingly said, 鈥榃e want you to keep doing it. We need the goal, we need something to be focused on,鈥欌 Killgore adds.
A consensus seems to be emerging from environmental groups听that climate change and coronavirus are both massive global problems that may require similar strategies to solve. Each requires a combination of individual action and sweeping, potentially unpopular political policies. Both bleed across political and social boundaries听but affect the听most vulnerable populations听(even if the vulnerable are usually not the ones spewing carbon into the atmosphere听or partying close together in听Miami Beach). Both will progress too far to effectively contain if we wait until we can see the impact of the crisis, but it鈥檚 hard to convince people to change if they can鈥檛 see the results. Both are growing exponentially, overwhelming the systems we rely on to sustain our daily lives. In the case of each crisis, we knew in advance that things could become apocalyptically bad.
Coronavirus has made it sharply clear that ignoring science can be deadly, and that placing responsibility for widespread crises on individual choice instead of government negligence听can stall any realistic solutions. Those are lessons that environmental groups have tried to hammer home for years. For activists and journalists in the climate-change space, the pandemic听exposes or exacerbates existing problems. 鈥淐oronavirus is raising questions about everything from global carbon emissions to ecosystem restoration to corporate bailouts to how we treat each other鈥 is how climate journalist Emily Atkin put it in a recent issue of her newsletter, Heated. The question is how to move forward.
As Elizabeth Sawin, codirector of the think tank , told听, tackling our biggest problems together may be more effective than trying to take them on one by one. There is not yet a clear map for dealing with either crisis, but it鈥檚 obvious that sustaining our energy and activism for the long haul will require a multipronged approach, especially now that we鈥檙e having to reconfigure to socially distant life听 The U.S. Youth Climate Strike Coalition canceled in-person Earth Day protests but is听encouraging advocates to rally online that day听to show solidarity and keep pressure on politicians. When I logged on to my Sunrise webinar last week, the first two topics of our lessons were 鈥渕ilitant optimism鈥 and 鈥渉ow to answer tough questions,鈥 evidence that any kind of long-term activism takes social resilience, and grassroots messaging, along with political action.
But right now, government leadership is paramount. To push policy in an ecologically and environmentally positive direction, as the federal government works through a series of stimulus packages, activists have outlined green stimulus plans that align our health care systems and the economy with environmental goals.听Those plans combine the government鈥檚 main priorities鈥攏amely, saving lives and keeping the economy from collapsing鈥攚ith goals that climate and social-justice advocates are gunning for. The , signed by leaders like Bill McKibben and Gina McCarthy, proposes clean-energy investments,听tax credits for sustainable businesses,听and shoring up housing, public-land, and resource access. It鈥檚 not the only policy suggestion around;听in addition to the People鈥檚 Bailout, the sent recommendations to Congress on March 20.
鈥淲e鈥檙e already seeing bailouts that prioritize fossil-fuel CEOs when we need to be bailing out small businesses and [communities],鈥 says Sunrise Movement鈥檚 Agrawal-Hardin. 鈥淲e have to be prioritizing people over profit or polluters.鈥 She says the bailouts in the $2 trillion听rescue bill,听which the president signed into law on听Friday, are听skewed toward large corporations and faltering, carbon-intensive industries鈥$25 billion for the airline industry, for example, without any emission-reduction听caveats.听Neither party was particularly happy with the parts of the bill that dealt with the environment:听the final version听did not include $3 billion for the strategic petroleum reserve听the president had asked for, for instance, but it also didn鈥檛 include tax credits for renewables, which Democratic lawmakers wanted.听But environmental groups see this stimulus package听as a starting point鈥攁nd they plan to advocate for听increased short-term relief for struggling individuals, as well as long-term investment in systems like healthy agriculture, clean public transit, and carbon-neutral energy infrastructure in future bills.
And听for the most part, many Americans want to see equitable climate-change goals become policy. The group Data for Progress that voters support a Green New Deal, even in the midst of the outbreak. Lots of things that outdoorspeople love, including national parks, historic trails, and public beaches, were first protected by Franklin Delano Roosevelt鈥檚 New Deal. Maybe the pandemic we鈥檙e living through is another historic opportunity for Americans to go back to work in a way that prioritizes the public good鈥攁nd, by extension, the outdoors.
There will be more government stimulus in the coming months. But environmentalists have to be loud and advocate for what we value forcefully鈥攂ecause big businesses, like airlines and the oil industry, haven鈥檛 been shy about asking for money. As Rhode Island鈥檚 Democratic junior senator Sheldon Whitehouse to the writer and activist Bill McKibben: 鈥淚 fear that enviros don鈥檛 know how to ask, because, so far in this scrum, we haven鈥檛 heard much from them.鈥
That鈥檚 why I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 tone-deaf, insensitive, or irrational to keep talking about climate change as we continue to confront the novel coronavirus. As a society, we need to learn to invest in long-term solutions before the consequences of our lack of foresight are right on our doorstep. As we do, we may find ourselves fighting against collective fear, instability, and the desire to revert back to a pre-pandemic status quo. But by not silencing ourselves in this moment, we might just bring about lasting, positive change.
鈥淥ne of the things we always run up against is the belief that things can鈥檛 change that quickly,鈥 says Protect Our Winters鈥 Killgore. 鈥淚n the past, policy makers have said, 鈥業f we need to move away from the fossil-fuel economy in ten听years, that鈥檚 not possible.鈥 But look at what we鈥檝e done in the last three weeks.鈥