French drains, barrels for rain, and a wind-energy bullet train
Progress roundup: New Orleans聽citizens build聽green infrastructure,聽plus wind-fueled trains in Morocco and a win for coal-mine cleanup in India.
Progress roundup: New Orleans聽citizens build聽green infrastructure,聽plus wind-fueled trains in Morocco and a win for coal-mine cleanup in India.
Along with environmental strategies from the Americas to North Africa, we highlight legal advances in India and the United Kingdom that help correct errors of the past.
1. United States
New Orleans residents are banding together to build green infrastructure, preventing flooding before storms hit. Chronic flooding has long been a problem across the Gulf South, and climate change is making matters worse. Experts say New Orleans鈥 public infrastructure, including its levee system, isn鈥檛 enough to keep flooding at bay. That鈥檚 why the nonprofit Water Wise Gulf South is helping communities in marginalized areas design and build alternatives to traditional 鈥済ray鈥 infrastructure, using a water management approach that protects, restores, or mimics the water cycle in nature.
So far, over 500 residents have taken part in workshops to learn how to implement do-it-yourself projects at home, and many of them have participated in 鈥淰isioning Workshops鈥 to plan community infrastructure. In the 7th Ward, residents have installed 25 rain barrels, eight French drains, seven rain gardens, and two permeable parking pads, and planted more than 500 trees. Last fall, they began work on their first bioswale, a vegetated stormwater runoff system that captures and filters water. 鈥淕overnment is slow and we can鈥檛 wait for government to catch up to us,鈥 says 7th Ward resident Angela Chalk, who helped install the bioswale. 鈥淎ll of us in these communities realize we have to get this right and that climate change is not waiting. We can鈥檛 wait.鈥
Next City
2. Mexico
The tequila splitfin 鈥 once declared extinct 鈥 has been reintroduced in the wild. The orange-tailed fish, which fits in the palm of a hand, was nicknamed 鈥渓ittle rooster鈥 before it disappeared from the Teuchitl谩n River in central-western Mexico in the 1990s, likely due to pollution, poaching, and the construction of a dam.
In 1998, Chester Zoo in England offered Michoacana University of Mexico five pairs of the splitfins from collectors鈥 aquariums, whose offspring scientists cared for over the next 15 years. Following a promising test in large artificial ponds, scientists released 1,500 of the fish into the river 鈥 first in floating cages, then in the open. Now, the population continues to expand.
Researchers employed a local education campaign including puppetry, games, and facts such as the fish鈥檚 efficiency in keeping dengue-carrying mosquitoes under control. Residents, many of them children, are calling themselves 鈥渞iver guardians鈥 and helping keep the river clean. 鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 have done this without the local people 鈥 they鈥檙e the ones doing the long-term conservation,鈥 said Professor Omar Dominguez from Michoacana University. The project is a 2018 International Union for Conservation of Nature case study in successful reintroductions.
BBC, The Associated Press
3. United Kingdom
Britain expanded legal pardons for gay men criminalized under historical statutes. The new law builds on Turing鈥檚 Law, named for the code breaker and World War II hero who was convicted of 鈥済ross indecency鈥 and died in 1954. The 2017 statute pardoned men convicted of nine since-abolished offenses; this year鈥檚 law covers all convictions linked to consensual same-sex activity. 聽
The move is one piece of the U.K.鈥檚 commitment to 鈥渞ighting the wrongs of the past,鈥 as Home Secretary Priti Patel said. New pardons can鈥檛 change the past: Men criminalized for their sexual orientation often faced discrimination throughout their lives.
Rights advocates point out that individuals must still apply to have their convictions removed, but legal pardoning represents a step forward.
鈥淚t recognizes the extraordinary scale of injustice done to so many people over a long period of time, and offers, as far as possible, restitution,鈥 said Paul Johnson, a professor of social sciences at the University of Leeds. 鈥淚t draws a line under five centuries of state-sanctioned persecution of gay people and says: 鈥榥ever again.鈥欌
Thomson Reuters Foundation, NBC News, The New York Times
4. Morocco
A high-speed rail service between Casablanca and Tangier is switching to renewable energy. The Al Boraq line, inaugurated in 2018 as Africa鈥檚 first bullet train, stretches 200 miles across Morocco with trains that travel at 186 mph 鈥 comparable to traveling between New York and Washington, D.C., in 90 minutes. Now, Al Boraq trains will use 100% wind energy as part of the National Railways Office鈥檚 plan to increase renewable energy usage to 50% in 2023, before transitioning entirely. The office says it can avoid the production of 120,000 metric tons of CO2 emissions each year through these efforts and other partnerships.
Morocco started to become a regional leader in clean energy in the mid-2000s, committing to renewables to boost economic competitiveness and reduce dependence on foreign fossil fuels. Despite missing a 2009 goal of 42% renewable energy by 2020, the government hasn鈥檛 let up on its ambitious targets. Morocco plans to produce 52% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030, with 20% solar, 20% wind, and 12% hydropower. If successful, the North African country would be at the global forefront of clean energy.
Morocco World News, BBC
5. India
An Indian court held two mining companies legally accountable for polluting the local environment 鈥 and now they must help clean up. For 10 years, farmer Manbodh Biswal fought for compensation for the damage the Talabira-I coal mine inflicted on his land in the eastern state of Odisha. 鈥淲e used to harvest two crops a year but now just manage to grow some vegetables,鈥 said Mr. Biswal, who like many in India lives in a region rich in minerals but poor in other resources. 鈥淥ur access to the farms has been restricted by hills of excavated earth from the mines. Irrigation water is polluted, coal dust is everywhere.鈥
Now, three years after the mine closed, the National Green Tribunal has ordered Hindalco Industries and Raipur Energen to pay 100 million Indian rupees ($1.32 million) to rehabilitate the 鈥渃ritically polluted鈥 area, helping restore the farmland of Mr. Biswal and other villagers. Since 2008, some 123 coal mines have shut down across India, but pollution continues to burden communities. For environmentalists and social justice advocates, the court win 鈥 a feat deemed 鈥渜uite rare鈥 by Mr. Biswal鈥檚 lawyer 鈥 is a sign that land and community restoration are being taken seriously. 聽
Thomson Reuters Foundation