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Only you can fight climate change

In this edition: Whoever is president, individual Americans can still do something about emissions; the big tasks facing global climate diplomats in Marrakech; the hottest five-year span on record.

November 17, 2016

What we're writing

Environmental activists hold a banner during a protest against President-elect Donald Trump at the Climate Conference, known as COP22, in Marrakech, Morocco, on Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016. The election of a US president who has called global warming a "hoax" alarmed environmentalists and climate scientists and raised questions about whether America, once again, would pull out of an international climate deal.
Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP

Only you can prevent climate change

OK, that headline is an exaggeration. But it hints at the feeling manyÌýclimate activists have as they ponder the seismic change wrought by the US election. American leadership on carbon emissions may vanish from the global stage, at least when it comes to the administration of President-elect Donald Trump. If climate action is going to happen, it's up to us, whether "us" means other nations of the world or ordinary people and local governments inside America. The good news: IndividualÌýbehavior can help. (See our story,Ìý'Denier' in White House? You can still take climate-change action.) And climate-policy negotiators meeting in Morocco, while daunted by the US election news, aren't giving up hope on global action (Our report from Marrakech:Ìý'Trump effect' will test global momentum on climate changeÌý )Ìý//ÌýZack Colman,ÌýHenry GassÌý

2011-2015 was hottest five-year span on record, UN says

Record heatÌýshows an "increasingly visible human footprint" on the climate, spurring stronger storms, droughts, and warming oceansÌýthat have affected people from all corners of the globe, according to the newÌýreport.Ìý//ÌýWeston Williams

At global climate talks, patience blends with urgency

Emission cuts that countries have pledged in Paris aren't expected to hit the goal of holding Earth's temperature rise to 2 degrees Celsius. This leaves a lot of work for a Morocco conference that startedÌýthis week.Ìý//ÌýZack Colman

Republican challenge: ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ has big costs, provides few new benefits

Coal and oil revival? Six ways Trump could shift policy

Possible changes include slashing EPA regulations and opening more federal lands to fossil fuel extraction. The Clean Power Plan, seen as a key lever for bringing US emissions down under the Paris climate agreement, is also in doubt.Ìý//ÌýZack Colman

With Trump, climate change just got smaller. And bigger.

When a president-elect shuns climate change, it's the opposite of making the issue go away. This wrap-up story on aÌýbig week also has updates onÌýother topics Inhabit has covered in recent weeks. Washington State voters rejected a carbon tax, Florida voters deniedÌýa utility-backed vote "for the sun," which could have slowed the growth of solar power. And the Interior Department has issued aÌýnew rule on federal-lands leasing, which has environmental groups and the wind industry in opposing camps.ÌýÌý //ÌýMark Trumbull

What we're reading

Critics see a lack ofÌýwholistic reveiw for pipelines by the Army Corps of Engineers.Ìý// Los Angeles Times

How fast will climate changeÌýoccur? It's a matter of significantÌýdebate. ThisÌýnew research reachesÌýa "warmer faster" forecast, in whichÌýhumans have little chance to stop warming at 2 degrees Celsius.Ìý// The Independent

Sarah Palin at Interior? Climate-change skeptic Myron Ebell at the EPA? Speculation about Trump's appointments is in full swing.Ìý// Politico

As ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ opens, detention centers quietly expand across the US

It's a water management challenge, since the consequences of letting a big lake go dry are more than just cosmetic.ÌýÌý// Vox

What's trending

"What the new study shows is that from 2002 to 2014, plants appear to have gone into overdrive, and started pulling more carbon dioxide out of the air than they had before." // Chris Mooney in The Washington Post

"If Trump withdraws from the Paris Agreement there would be a political cost. If he pulls out of the [whole UN climate] Convention the cost would be greater."Ìý// Legal scholar Daniel Bodansky, quoted by Reuters

"It's like when you insulate your roof – your house warms but your attic will get a bit cooler." //ÌýSteven Sherwood, climate scientist, quoted byÌýThe Sydney Morning Herald