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‘We need to become the solution’: older New Zealanders join climate change fight
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Fighting Climate Change - Intermediate News Article
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- Level: Intermediate •PHOT OCOPIABLE• CAN BE DOWNLOADED FROM WEBSITE ‘We need to become the solution’: older New Zealanders join climate change fight
- How creating wildlife crossings can help reindeer, bears – and even crabs Level
- Eva Corlett in Waikanae Tue 6 Jul 2021
‘We need to become the solution’: older New Zealanders join climate change fight
Level: Intermediate •PHOT OCOPIABLE• CAN BE DOWNLOADED FROM WEBSITE Published by Macmillan Education Ltd. © Macmillan Education Limited, 2021. Home >> Adults >> General English >> NEWS LESSONS Level: Intermediate •PHOT OCOPIABLE• CAN BE DOWNLOADED FROM WEBSITE ‘We need to become the solution’: older New Zealanders join climate change fight b. Use some of the key words above to complete these sentences. 1. The residents want the disco to noise after 11 p. m. 2. There are no trains today because of the . 3. We are trying to increase students’ about the dangers of alcohol. 4. He stealing the car. 5. The detectives are that she was not where she said she was at the time of the crime. Published by Macmillan Education Ltd. © Macmillan Education Limited, 2021. Home >> Adults >> General English >> NEWS LESSONS How creating wildlife crossings can help reindeer, bears – and even crabs Level: Intermediate •PHOT OCOPIABLE• CAN BE DOWNLOADED FROM WEBSITE Younger people have been more aware of the risks compared with older groups, but over the past decade that has changed Eva Corlett in Waikanae Tue 6 Jul 2021 On his early morning bike rides to school, David Yockney would ride through icy puddles. It was a winter joy he loved, and one he took for granted. Now, 60 years later, there is hardly even ice on the bird bath at his home on the Kāpiti coast, north of Wellington. The 74-year-old climate activist has become worried by the changes to his environment caused by global heating, and he is not the only one. New research from the University of Waikato shows that both younger and older New Zealanders are worried about the climate emergency. The 10-year study asked 56,000 New Zealand citizens across different age groups two main questions: Is climate change real? Is it caused by humans? The data shows that at the start, younger people had more awareness of the risks of climate change compared with older groups. But in the past 10 years, that awareness is increasing in both young and old, and now more than ever, New Zealanders believe climate change is real and caused by humans. Understanding the risks of the climate emergency came slowly to Yockney. The former teacher and video producer remembers discussions about the climate in the 1990s. But it would be another 25 years before Yockney would become convinced climate change is real and caused by human activity. In his retirement, he began reading about the topic and started to think about the changes he needed to make personally, and the changes he wanted to see in society. “You have to make changes. I’m not perfect – I would like to fly around the world and do things that retired people do – but we do limit ourselves.” That includes riding his bicycle for short journeys, cutting back on meat and limiting his gas heater use, even in winter. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 But for Yockney, making personal changes was not enough. He joined Low Carbon Kāpiti, a group that helped convince the Kāpiti District Coast Council into becoming carbon neutral by 2050. Yockney wants to leave behind a healthy world for his grandchildren. Nearly 30% of the population on the Kāpiti coast is over 65, compared with roughly 15% for the whole of New Zealand. Former Kāpiti coast mayor and now chair of the Kāpiti Coast Climate Action Group, Jenny Rowan, said a growing number of older people in the region are starting to get involved. Rowan has noticed a big change in attitudes from the local community towards people speaking out publicly about climate change. “People don’t think we’re crazy anymore. I am a baby boomer. We are part of the problem. Now we need to become part of the solution and I’m seeing that happen here.” Dr Taciano Milfont, the lead author of the University of Waikato study, decided to look at intergenerational attitudes to climate change after witnessing the 2019 school strikes. Although all age groups have more awareness about climate change, there is still a divide between the number of people who believe it is real, and those who believe it is caused by human activity. Fewer people overall believe the second point. This is “..the theory of responsibility. If we believe we are not causing it, then we will keep doing what we are doing,” Milfont said. He thinks that the growing understanding of climate change is because of better science and climate communication. There has also been a positive cultural change, he said. These days “… no political in New Zealand party denies the reality of climate change.” 581 words © Guardian News and Media 2021 First published in The Guardian, 06/07/2021 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Download 318.64 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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