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Niko Batallones's avatar

You remind me of Ted Failon's realization after Yolanda struck Tacloban: that describing the possibility of a "storm surge" most likely flew over the heads of the residents, who ended up being complacent until the sea swallowed up the city, as storm surges do.

I realize that a lot of how we connect extreme weather to climate change, and climate change to decisions made across the supply chain, tends to either be too technical to be understood, or too much about putting the blame on the corporations (leading to feelings of hopelessness) or on consumers and how they purchase things (leading to resentment). Change is incremental, but in a country where extreme weather affects us disproportionately, well...

I wouldn't call myself an advocate, more so an activist, although I have done a fair bit of writing (targeted to businesses) about more sustainable production. If there's one thing I learned, it's that consumers really do have to be empowered to move the needle—and that means providing them with both the information they need to make informed decisions, and the infrastructure they need to turn decisions into actions. I remember Coca-Cola (sorry, haha) and their bottle recycling program—and how my awareness of that, and most importantly the presence of a recycling point near my flat, empowered me to do my part. And then that recycling point disappeared, and my habits shifted, too.

If consumers, say, are able to really understand the benefits of, say, shifting away from the sachet economy and pursuing more sustainable ways of buying their favorite shampoo or dishwashing liquid, and are empowered to do so in a sustained manner, then the corporations will listen. But I feel this requires a similarly sustained effort to communicate it to them—and not just from environmental activists who, for better or worse, sound like they're speaking from on high, judging everyone below them as *the* problem, rather than the solution.

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