(1/16) For over 1000 years, people from all over Europe have walked through Spain to Santiago de Compostela. This summer, I followed in the footsteps of millions but with an extra challenge:
Spain has been facing the driest conditions for at least 1200 years.
(3/16) I needed a break from my usual focus on the climate and water crises, so I took five weeks to hike more than 800 kilometers (500 miles) from the French Pyrenees to the northwest of Spain.
I wanted to focus on my health, the beauty of nature, and people I would meet.
(4/16) But unfortunately, we no longer have the luxury of only thinking about the climate and water crises when we feel like it. In fact, for most of my hike, extreme weather impacted my experience in ways unheard of in the more than 1000-year-old pilgrimage tradition.
(5/16) The Camino Francés, the “French Way” and the most famous of the routes to Santiago, starts on day one with the most challenging phase: crossing the Pyrenees via the legendary Napoleon Route. Unfortunately, it was also day one of a heatwave. Imagine: it was only mid-June.
(6/16) I’ll never forget how exhausted I was when I arrived after two days on the other side of the Pyrenees in the lovely small town of Zuberi (see photo). I must have looked so worn out by the extreme heat that the hostel owner spontaneously carried my backpack upstairs for me.
(7/16) The next day I walked to Pamplona, the city I had wanted to visit since I read Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises” in my student days. And what a feast it was.
But again: the reality of a hot world caught up with me: I couldn’t continue because of the forest fires.
(8/16) Extreme heat and drought had caused forest fires along the route, and all pilgrims were stopped by the police.
The next day, I skipped 95 kilometers to the first village from where we were allowed to walk again.
(Photo taken from the car window in a burned area)
(9/16) I spoke to eye-witnesses who had been only a day ahead of me. They had run for their lives to escape the fire. Having been surrounded by three sides, they had run to a nearby town and escaped unharmed but shaken by the experience.
(10/16) Weeks later, I entered Galicia after crossing the Meseta, already known as a flat, hot, and dry area in average years. I had been warned of the steep climb that awaited me, but nobody had warned me that the second steepest climate coincided with a second heatwave.
(11/16) And the second heatwave was soon followed by more forest fires. Imagine waking up at night with smoke in the bedroom; it was so bad that I slept with the N95 mask I carried for that other crisis, the pandemic.
(12/16) During five weeks in Spain, before the height of the summer season, I have been an eye-witness to climate change. I have seen dry rivers, the drought affecting agriculture, and heat affecting all aspects of life.
(13/16) But I have also seen the human ingenuity to deal with these effects, like in updated versions of generations-old knowledge about preserving and distributing precious water sources.
(14/16) We have to work on preventing the climate crisis from getting worse than it already is, but we can’t ignore that we have to adapt to the new realities. It is a task for all of us.
You can be a role model for water and climate action.
(15/16) But increasingly, companies take up their responsibility too. For example, I work with @SuntoryGlobal because I believe they are exemplary. After all, they return only clean water to nature and protect forests that nurture groundwater.
(16/16) So @SuntoryGlobal is a company that contributes to healthy water circulation in nature. In other words, they recognize that water sustainability is the most critical issue in their business activity.
I hope you take a moment to watch this video:
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(1/9)
This week, Donald Trump promised to begin mass deportations with Haitians living in Springfield, Ohio.
He added this would be "the largest deportation in the history of our country."
A thread 🧵 with a historical perspective:
#news #history #opinion #politics
(2/9)
His followers wouldn't understand such an announcement without Trump having carefully prepared the ground for supporting such a policy.
Just days earlier, he had said to tens of millions of Americans watching the presidential debate that Haitian immigrants in Springfield were abducting and eating pets. This inflammatory rhetoric didn't emerge in a vacuum; it was the culmination of a campaign of misinformation and fear-mongering that had started last month when neo-Nazis created the tensions Trump has been exploiting and advancing.
One of the leaders of the "Blood Tribe" organization said Jews should be blamed for the influx of migrants in Springfield that had been taken over by "degenerate third worlders". As Heather Cox Richardson reported, the "Patriot Front" then protested against "the mass influx of unassimilable Haitian migrants" on September 1. Meanwhile, Trump's running mate, JD Vance, reposted a post from a private Facebook group about Haitian immigrants butchering a neighbor's cat for food.
(3/9)
Within a month, the activities of some obscure neo-Nazis in Ohio and a debunked racist claim on a private Facebook group made it to a presidential debate and then to a campaign promise to start mass deportations of Haitians in Springfield.
Trump is to blame for fanning the flames of racism. The result so far is schools, businesses, City Hall, and hospitals in Springfield closed or in lockdown due to bomb threats. The ultimate price is regaining Senate control for the MAGA Republicans and a second presidency for Trump.
Authoritarian regimes have consistently used a similar sinister strategy like Trump is using today to consolidate power: exploiting cultural differences to create divisions in societies. History has shown that even established democracies are not immune to such divisive rhetoric.
Lessons of history
As a European, I grew up in a society that warned at school against falling for baseless conspiracy theories and the kind of propaganda used by authoritarian regimes to dehumanize targeted groups; we were taught to learn from the lessons of history. So, when Katie Sibley, a history professor at St. Joseph's University, pointed out in a recent interview that the language used against Haitians in Springfield echoes antisemitic blood libel myths dating back to the Middle Ages, this was a familiar historical parallel for me. These myths, which accused Jewish people of ritualistic sacrifice of Christian children, were later weaponized by Nazi propagandists to devastating effect.
(1/5) The aims of #COP27 this year are especially important as the world faces enormous challenges like climate change, energy, water, and biodiversity loss. @SuntoryGlobal is committed to contributing to a better, cleaner, and more sustainable planet. #SuntoryPartner
(2/3) By the end of 2022, @SuntoryGlobal is aiming to switch to 100% purchased renewable electricity in all of their directly-owned manufacturing sites and R&D facilities in Japan, the Americas and Europe. Learn more: bit.ly/3UEj8DQ#COP27#environment#SuntoryPartner
(1) I love forests for their beauty, the peace and calm I feel when I walk on forest trails, and their role in preserving biodiversity and the climate.
Today, I was reminded twice how diverse other people's attitudes toward natural forests may be.
Start of a thread 🧵
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(2) First, according to a BBC Panorama investigation, I learned that a firm that has received six billion pounds in green energy subsidies from UK taxpayers is cutting down forests that are essential to the Canadian ecology.
(3) Reporters concluded that millions of tons of imported wood pellets, classified as renewable energy, are burned at Drax's largest power plant in Britain. However, part of the wood came from Canada's old-growth forests, which took thousands of years to develop.
(1) Today's story was the destruction caused by Hurricane Ian in Florida. It is one of the strongest hurricanes ever to strike Florida, and in the coming days, we will learn more about the damage and victims.
(2) Expect lots of shocking photos and heartbreaking videos on social media that will remind us of the power of nature, specifically when boosted by the additional energy we have trapped in the system.
(3) Man-made climate change has raised sea levels and warmed the oceans, which fueled Ian to a hurricane that, at a certain point, was just two mph shy of a Category 5.