Shaping Our Future: Climate Policy and Economic Impact ...Middle East

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Panelists included “district representatives and people who work with labor and in academia and will help build a better future,” observed Robert Musil, president and CEO of the Rachel Carson Council, an event sponsor, during his opening remarks. And what better place to hold a discussion about advancements to “shape the world,” he noted, than the cutting-edge city of New York?

Speakers highlighted the severity of this crisis during the first portion of the panel, which set up later discussions about meeting the moment.

Climate risk, Nurse emphasized, is a matter of “life and death” in her district, creating a “constant economic toll to our businesses” and “to our public housing residents, who are constantly dealing with mold and mildew and then, of course, just the high cost of utilities.”

Baptista worked on the New York City Panel on Climate Change’s fourth report, or NPCC4, which she said painted a “dire picture,” as climate impacts such as increasing hot days and pluvial flooding are projected to disproportionately harm vulnerable communities, magnifying existing inequalities.

But as Venkataraman observed at the start of the event, climate change is not only a “defining issue of our time” but also “an opportunity to build a just, equitable, and more resilient world”—and the latter half of the discussion proceeded in that spirit.

Councilwoman Nurse similarly expressed her hope for a forward-looking mayor who prioritizes climate concerns. While the New York City Council has put forward myriad promising environmental proposals, she said, the current administration—that of Eric Adams—has at times impeded them, which underscores how “it really matters who is the executive of the city and what their priorities are.”

Venkatamaran described how state-level measures can offer a viable way to make progress on the environment, regardless of what’s happening at the federal level. “States do have rights, and they can actually have environmental regulations that are more stringent than the federal,” she noted—as they did during the first Trump administration and ought to do again now.

One can also draw inspiration from organizers across the country who are currently achieving climate wins “even in very difficult political terrain,” Hassan observed. She mentioned the successes of organizers pushing for green public schools—despite school privatization and voucherization—in Columbus, Ohio, as evidence that difficult circumstances don’t necessarily preclude moving “beyond the defensive and into the offensive in our shared fight for a green future that works for working people.”

But to be sure, there is plenty of exemplary work being done by local community groups in New York City: “Sometimes, the best models are in your backyard,” Baptista said. “You just have to find creative ways to finance them and fund them.”

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