The Pragmatic Climate Reset Part II
A provocation
The election of Donald Trump to a second term as President marked a turning point in the politics of climate action – not just in the US, but around the world.
The airwaves are suddenly awash with commentators, claiming that the transition has failed, that it was always a fool’s errand, and that we must resign ourselves to a fossil-based future forever.
The narratives of failure all revel in pointing out that we have not seen dramatic cuts in fossil fuel use globally, consistent with keeping the temperature increase to 1.5C, and are not on track to achieve global net zero by 2050.
The climate and clean energy community is facing a choice. It can remain reactive, doubling down on old narratives, pressing on with existing policies, preaching to the converted and watching the pace of change slow for the next few years.
Or it can undertake what Michael Liebreich is calling a Pragmatic Climate Reset: Wind back historical over-reach, accept harsh realities, address legitimate concerns, refresh its offer and find new ways of communicating with a confused public.
The Pragmatic Climate Reset was originally written as an article for BloombergNEF, read the full article here, watch it on YouTube here, or find the episode on your favourite podcast platform.

