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2022 Notebook: Climate catastrophe, and a bit of hope too

THE BACKGROUND: For those worried about climate change 鈥 and, by extension, the planet's future 鈥 2022 was a mixed bag.

THE BACKGROUND: For those worried about climate change 鈥 and, by extension, the planet's future 鈥 2022 was a mixed bag. Hurricanes and floods plagues many places, and the in Egypt didn't end with as much progress as many activists hoped.

Yet discussions about began, which represented a step forward for many, and the voice of the Global South increased in many corners of the debate.

The Associated Press assembled its expanded global climate team in 2022 and stepped up its coverage of climate change across the world. Here, AP's new global news director of climate and environment, , and the team's video output producer, Teresa DeMiguel, look back on the year, how they frame coverage and what might lie ahead.

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TERESA DE MIGUEL, video producer, climate and environment:

We鈥檝e seen these massive floods in Pakistan. We鈥檝e seen massive droughts in Europe. We鈥檝e seen this hurricane hitting Florida and Cuba and so on. So I think it鈥檚 been a year where people have been realizing how destructive and how catastrophic climate change can be. There were a lot of expectations for COP27. We didn鈥檛 get the best or the most ambitious kind of agreement that many climate experts said the world needed.

We really wanted to focus on the human side, on the human stories. To show how these very theoretical, very abstract ideas of climate change translate into the impact on human beings. So we did this series in , , Philippines, India and many other countries, and we鈥檝e been seeing this pattern of destruction and an impact to local communities and in particular families. I think that鈥檚 very important, from the visual point of view, that you can really translate the bigger issue to a particular family and kind of show it in a very human way, so people really understand the real consequences of climate change.

From the visual point of view, beyond the specific story of the human impact, I also think we really need to zoom out. So you really need those drone shots, or even satellite images to show the larger image of what鈥檚 going on 鈥 like drone shots of these rivers absolutely dry. People really pay attention to those very powerful images. It鈥檚 very important to kind of zoom out at some point to show the broad perspective of the impact, and sometimes you have to zoom in and show the particular stories of specific people.

It鈥檚 a challenge, because climate change is an issue that also relates to whatever you do in your daily life, right? It affects whatever you do, and the decisions you make from driving your car, or the kind of food you eat 鈥 they make a difference to climate change. And it鈥檚 difficult to tell people that their daily activities might be contributing to climate change.

I also think we want to be giving a lot of voice to climate activists, who are really engaged in the fight against climate change. That was really encouraging at COP27, because it was very difficult for activists to actually travel to Egypt, because the summit was happening in a very expensive tourist seaside resort town. So when you saw large crowds of activists from across the world, protesting there, it was chilling, because you could see how all these young people have assumed it as their own generational fight.

PETER PRENGAMAN, global news director, climate and environment

I ask myself three things pretty much every day: Who鈥檚 not paying attention to climate news? Why are they not paying attention to climate news? And in climate news? These are really hard questions. I think climate news is hard for a lot of people. It can feel abstract and, at least historically, it has been very scientific. So it鈥檚 wonky. How do we how do we get around that? There鈥檚 no one way. But I think one really important way is to make sure stories are focused on people. As humans, we鈥檙e innately curious about what other humans are doing. And so the more that you can focus on people, the more it draws in general readers.

Not every story about climate change even needs to say 鈥渃limate change." Those two words turn people off. And so let's say you鈥檙e writing a story about a green energy or some kind of solution, something innovative that a school district is doing 鈥 I don鈥檛 know, switching their fleet of buses to electric or encouraging people to carpool. You can talk about drops of emission, and bettering pollution, without even saying climate change. You can try and tell stories that don鈥檛 hide the climate piece of it but don鈥檛 necessarily make it front and center.

The world鈥檚 gotten better at dealing with climate disasters. So you have fewer people dying, and that鈥檚 a good thing. But I no longer think that climate change is just something that people in remote places have to think about or deal with. It鈥檚 changing how we live. You can be the richest person in the world and your life is impacted. This really matters, and we need everybody to engage and think about solutions. It鈥檚 not our job as journalists to say, 鈥淭his is the solution鈥 or 鈥淒o this鈥 or 鈥淒o that.鈥 Our job is to share as much as we can let you know, and then readers have to engage.

Out of COP27, a very significant decision was made to create a fund for reparations. Now, the term reparations can kind of be hot-button. But the general idea is that developed nations that have contributed the most to climate change will help developing nations hardest hit by climate change in ways that they haven鈥檛 before. This isn鈥檛 just loans or disaster relief, but some kind of compensation. It鈥檚 an issue called 鈥 鈥 that鈥檚 been talked about on the margins of climate talks for the last 30 years. It was finally put on the official agenda for the first time this year. And I don鈥檛 think really any of us going in thought that there would be some kind of an agreement. It鈥檚 just too controversial. But they did agree to create the fund, so I think it's something that鈥檚 going to be watched in the next couple of years, because now they have to figure out the details.

And then, of course, there's the . Terrible name for a climate bill, but there it is. There鈥檚 just so much money in so many tax break incentives, that that I think you鈥檙e going to see a significant shift in electrification and several other things in the next couple of years.

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2022 Notebooks: https://apnews.com/hub/reporters-notebook

The Associated Press

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