Can unions save the environment?

How empowered employees can hold their companies environmentally accountable

Protest and pollution.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Yevhenii Dubinko/iStock, luplupme/iStock)

Increasingly, Americans are scared of climate change. Most of us now acknowledge that it's happening, and almost 40 percent call it a "crisis," compared with less than 25 percent of us five years ago. But it's hard to look the issue in the face. Start picturing Miami and Bangladesh underwater, mass extinctions, refugees fleeing the rising tides and encroaching deserts, and you'll probably want to close this tab and find something more pleasant to read.

One reason this stuff is hard to think about is that we just don't know what we, as individuals, can do about the terrifying reality. Eating less meat and turning down the thermostat seem like pathetically inadequate measures — because they are. Our personal actions pale before the enormous carbon footprint of systems outside our control: the coal-burning power plants, forest-destroying industrial agriculture, and smoke-spewing trucks, in the U.S. and around the world.

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Livia Gershon

Livia Gershon writes about work, money, gender, and history for the Guardian, the Boston Globe, Longreads, and JSTOR Daily, among other places. She lives in Nashua, New Hampshire.