In addition to adding a number of new partners in 2020, including NBC News, Telemundo, and MSNBC, Covering Climate Now also launched a joint coverage week from September 21-28 under hashtags including “#ClimatePolitics2020” and “#YouthTakeoverDay” to elevate the voices of the young people whose lives will be most shaped by the climate crisis. It also hosted a series of six webinars titled “Talking Shop” that were tailored to journalists reporting on climate during the COVID-19 pandemic. The topics included how to cover extreme weather as a climate story, the intersection of climate issues with racial and environmental justice, and advice on covering climate change during the coronavirus pandemic.
Covering Climate Now has been one of the most successful climate projects in recent years, boosting the reach of quality climate and environmental justice stories. As the partnership continues to grow and innovate, it will be one to watch in the months and years to come.
The Guardian became the second newspaper to ban fossil fuel ads
The fossil fuel industry has waged a billion-dollar campaign to erode the public consensus on climate science -- despite knowing for decades that its products were driving climate change and would lead to catastrophic consequences. Now that increasingly frequent and devastating extreme weather events have spiked public concern about climate change, as well as a desire for the government to curb emissions, the fossil fuel industry is in the midst of an attempted rebrand as climate champions. In addition to running greenwashing campaigns on social media to sway public opinion, these efforts included exploiting the legacy news media’s hunger for revenue to peddle branded content -- a type of advertisement designed to look like the outlet's own stories -- that is rife with misleading claims about natural gas.
That’s what makes The Guardian’s decision so important: Following on the heels of the Swedish newspaper Dagens ETC, the U.K. paper announced in January that it had banned ads from any business involved in extracting fossil fuels. The Guardian’s acting chief executive, Anna Bateson, and its chief revenue officer, Hamish Nicklin, said in a joint statement, “Our decision is based on the decades-long efforts by many in that industry to prevent meaningful climate action by governments around the world.”
Considering the effectively limitless money the fossil fuel industry has at its disposal and a demonstrated willingness to do whatever it takes to protect its bottom line, planet be damned, we can only hope other news organizations follow The Guardian’s courageous example by refusing to provide the fossil fuel industry with advertising platforms it has used to mislead the public and duck accountability.
The rise of independent climate journalism
The news media is in a precarious state. According to a 2018 study by the University of North Carolina, almost 2,000 newspapers closed between 2004 and 2018. In the digital media landscape, the Columbia Journalism Review found that 3,385 journalists lost their jobs in 2019. In April 2020, The New York Times reported that 37,000 news media employees had “been laid off, furloughed or had their pay reduced since the arrival of the coronavirus.”
Increasingly, writers and journalists have found new avenues such as email newsletters to ply their craft and reach their audiences directly. This includes using new platforms such as Patch, a local digital news company, and Substack, an online publishing platform for subscription newsletters.
At the local level, one of the early pioneers in this sphere was Jiquanda Johnson, who is the founder, publisher, and executive editor of Flint Beat, a digital news site serving Flint, Michigan. Although Johnson had written extensively about the Flint water crisis, the veteran reporter left MLive in 2017 to start a news site that would “fill news gaps in an underserved community after Flint, Mich. residents said they needed more from their news coverage.” Her news outlet provides coverage on a diverse array of issues and serves a community “tired of seeing news filled with only crime, sports, and Flint’s ongoing water crisis.”
But 2020 was the year that independent newsletters and online publishing focused on climate change and environmental justice took center stage.
One of the first climate journalists to start their own climate newsletter via Substack is former New Republic journalist Emily Atkin, who left the outlet in July 2019 and began publishing Heated that September. Now, Heated is one of the platform’s most popular publications. Other notable climate and environment publications include Mary Annaïse Heglar’s and Amy Westervelt’s Hot Take, David Roberts’ Volts, and Eric Holthaus’ The Phoenix.
Mainstream outlets have also leveraged their large readerships to produce climate-focused newsletters. This includes The New York Times’ “Climate Forward,” The Atlantic’s “The Weekly Planet,” and The New Yorker’s “The Climate Crisis,” written by climate activist Bill McKibben.
While it’s undeniably good that legacy media is serving up climate-focused products for their audiences, a special kudos goes out to the current and future climate journalists who are working to produce substantive and informative climate and environmental journalism with little to no institutional infrastructure or backing.