• Home
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy & Policy
Monday, March 1, 2021
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
Tampa Bay Journal
  • Home
  • Business
  • Tampa Bay Local News
  • Personal Finance
  • Home
  • Business
  • Tampa Bay Local News
  • Personal Finance
No Result
View All Result
Tampa Bay Journal
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

How to help prevent a climate change disaster

by Business News
February 18, 2021
in Business
0
How to help prevent a climate change disaster
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


If humanity can successfully mitigate climate change, “[i]t’ll be the most amazing thing mankind has ever done,” according to Bill Gates.

It will take an “all-out effort, you know, like a world war, but it’s us against greenhouse gases,” Gates told Anderson Cooper on Sunday’s “60 Minutes” episode.

Gates is relentlessly optimistic. “There are days when it looks very hard. If people think it’s easy, they’re wrong. If people think it’s impossible they’re wrong,” he said.

“It can seem overwhelming.”

If combating climate change is overwhelming to billionaire philanthropist Gates, it certainly is so to the average person. But according to Gates, it’s important to remember that every person can help.

“It’s easy to feel powerless in the face of a problem as big as climate change,” Gates writes in his new book, “How to Avoid a Climate Disaster.” “But you’re not powerless. And you don’t have to be a politician or a philanthropist to make a difference. You have influence as a citizen, a consumer and an employee or employer.”

Here’s what you can do to combat climate change, according to Gates.

Get political

Averting what Gates calls a climate “disaster” will require new systems of energy production and delivery, which takes “concerted political action,” Gates writes.

“That’s why engaging in the political process is the most important single step that people from every walk of life can take,” he says.

Show your representatives that their consituents care about climate change by making calls, writing letters and speaking up in town halls. 

“It may sound old-fashioned, but letters and phone calls to your elected officials can have a real impact,” Gates writes.

Be informed and specific in your interactions with politicians, too. For example, demand funding for clean energy innovation research or a carbon tax and let politicians know that your vote depends on their action, he says.

Grassroots activism is important becaus electricity in particular is often regulated and governed by statewide public utility commissions. Communicating with those officials can be an important lever for average citizens to press. 

Or if you are so inspired, run for local office, Gates writes.

Use your spending power

Buy and use sustainable products, like a smart thermostat, for example, which will help regulate your energy consumption and use of greenhouse gas-emitting fuel sources. You can also vote with your wallet by doing things like signing up to buy your energy from a clean energy source and upgrading your old-fashioned light bulbs.

“When you pay more for an electric car, a heat pump, or a plant-based burger, you’re saying, ‘There’s a market for this stuff. We’ll buy it,'” Gates writes. And businesses do respond to that information “quite quickly, in my experience,” he says. 

Demand more from your workplace

“As an employee or shareholder, you can push your company to do its part,” Gates writes. 

While larger companies are going to make a larger impact in the collective reduction of greenhouse gases than smaller companies can, smaller companies can gather together in local organizations or chambers of commerce to make more measurable impact, Gates says. And larger companies can cooperate to put pressure on even larger suppliers.

Something like a program to plant trees is an easy first step. And some companies have internal carbon taxes, Gates writes.

Talk to your family and friends



Source link

This article originally appeared on www.cnbc.com

Business News

Business News

Next Post
Biden Covid advisor says Christmas is a ‘reasonable’ timeline for getting back to normal

Biden Covid advisor says Christmas is a 'reasonable' timeline for getting back to normal

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Bill Gates says more than 50% of business travel will disappear long-term

Bill Gates says more than 50% of business travel will disappear long-term

3 months ago
Jim Cramer responds to revenue from Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Alphabet

Cramer responds to revenue from Amazon, Alphabet, Apple, and Facebook

4 months ago

Popular News

    Connect with us

    Newsletter

    Category

    • Business
    • Personal Finance
    • Tampa Bay Local News

    Site Links

    • Home
    • Privacy & Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Log Out

    About Us

    One of the most trusted news sources of the greater Tampa Bay and Gulf Coast areas.

    All business, all the time.

    • Home
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy & Policy

    © 2020 Tampa Bay Journal -

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • Business
    • Tampa Bay Local News
    • Personal Finance

    © 2020 Tampa Bay Journal -

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password?

    Create New Account!

    Fill the forms bellow to register

    All fields are required. Log In

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In