Earth Day 2021

After A Critical Year For COVID-19 And Climate, Earth Day is Today

Doyle Rice – USA TODAY  Published Apr. 19, 2021 | Updated Apr. 22, 2021

Our planet’s very own holiday is coming this week.

And in a year in which a deadly pandemic has had the globe in its grip and climate change helped spark a cascade of calamities from raging wildfires to a ferocious hurricane season, the focus of this year’s Earth Day couldn’t be more timely. 

“At the heart of Earth Day’s 2021 theme, Restore Our Earth, is optimism, a critically needed sentiment in a world ravaged by both climate change and the pandemic,” said Kathleen Rogers, president of EarthDay.org.

The theme of “Restore Our Earth” focuses on restoring the world’s ecosystems through natural processes, emerging green technologies and innovative thinking.

“This year, we are also supporting local communities and areas that are disproportionately affected by environmental issues,” according to EarthDay.org.

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Earth Day, which takes place each year on April 22, is the most widely observed secular holiday across the globe. It’s an event “celebrated around the world when people take time to appreciate humankind’s connection to the Earth and to raise awareness of our environmental challenges,” according to the Earth Day Initiative, a New York City-based non-profit group.

John Oppermann, executive director of the Earth Day Initiative, said that “with each passing day, the urgency for climate action grows, and we are running out of time. This is a pivotal year for our global community to acknowledge and respect the science of climate and COVID.”

Like last year, most Earth Day events this year will be online because of the pandemic.

“Most of our Earth Day events will be virtual with the exception of individual and small group cleanups through our ‘Great Global Cleanup’ program,” said Olivia Altman of EarthDay.org, formerly the Earth Day Network.

Despite the pandemic, “there’s lots of excitement around this Earth Day,” Rogers told USA TODAY. Overall, more than 1 billion people in 192 countries participate in each Earth Day “to build environmental democracy and advocate for sustainability,” according to EarthDay.org.

“Last year, we were able to reach millions through our digital Earth Day Live event,” Altman said. “This year, with our second-annual Earth Day Live virtual event, we believe we can grow even further.”

The global show begins at noon EDT on Thursday and will run parallel to the Biden administration’s global climate summit, also set for Earth Day.

“Our four-hour event will be action-packed,” she promised. “Our panels, workshops, films and performances, will include world climate leaders, activists, educators, musicians, influencers and more.” 

 

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This May 18, 1969, photo shows Earth as photographed from Apollo 10 spacecraft during its journey toward the moon. Earth Day is Thursday April 22, 2021 AP

Earth Day turns 51 this year. On the first Earth Day, April 22, 1970, 20 million people came out onto the streets across the U.S., an event that to this day remains the largest civic event in human history, according to Rogers.

The decade that followed saw some of America’s most popular and powerful environmental legislation, EarthDay.org says, including updates to the Clear Air Act and creation of the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act and the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency.

Now, climate change has become one of the central issues of the environmental movement, and climate and environmental literacy is key to that, Rogers said. 

“Combined with civic education, climate and environmental literacy will create jobs, build a green consumer market and allow citizens to engage with their governments in a meaningful way to solve climate change,” Rogers said. “EarthDay.org believes every school in the world must have compulsory, assessed climate and environmental education with a strong civic engagement component.”

Construction crews work on a section of California Highway 1, known as the Pacific Coast Highway, which collapsed into the Pacific Ocean near Big Sur, Calif. on Jan. 31, 2021. Heavy rains caused debris flows of trees, boulders and mud that washed out a 150-foot section of the road. JOSH EDELSON, AFP via Getty Images
Workers assess the scene where a section of the Pacific Coast Highway collapsed into the Pacific Ocean near Big Sur, Calif. on Jan. 31, 2021. JOSH EDELSON, AFP via Getty Images
Telecommunications crews work on a disconnected phone line as it stretches across a section of the Pacific Coast Highway that collapsed into the Pacific Ocean near Big Sur, Calif. on Jan. 31, 2021. JOSH EDELSON, AFP via Getty Images
A worker casts a shadow while looking over a section of the Pacific Coast Highway that collapsed into the Pacific Ocean near Big Sur, Calif. on Jan/ 31, 2021. JOSH EDELSON, AFP via Getty Images
Telecommunication crews survey the scene where a section of the Pacific Coast Highway collapsed into the Pacific Ocean near Big Sur, Calif. on Jan. 31, 2021. JOSH EDELSON, AFP via Getty Images
A section of the Pacific Coast Highway is seen from above after it collapsed into the Pacific Ocean near Big Sur, Calif. on January 31, 2021. JOSH EDELSON, AFP via Getty Images
Trucks haul away debris from Highway 1 where it washed out at Rat Creek about 30 miles north of the Monterey - San Luis Obispo county line, in central California, Feb. 19, 2021. Up the canyon scars from the Dolan Fire can still be seen. A heavy atmospheric river event washed down mud, trees and boulders plugging the culverts and washing away the road. Workers are about 2/3 through with debris removal, the next step will be designing the replacement. David Middlecamp, The Tribune (of San Luis Obispo) via AP
A fire-damaged Pacific Coast sign remains standing along the Pacific Coast Highway amid the blackened and charred hills from the Woolsey Fire in Malibu, California on Nov. 15, 2018. FREDERIC J. BROWN, AFP via Getty Images
A power line catches fire as the Woolsey fire burns on both sides of Pacific Coast Highway (Highway 1) in Malibu, Calif., as night falls on Nov/ 9, 2018. ROBYN BECK, AFP via Getty Images
The Woolsey Fire reaches the ocean along the Pacific Coast Highway near Malibu, Calif/, Nov. 9, 2018. ROBYN BECK, AFP via Getty Images
Waves crash on the shore on May 24, 2017, after a massive landslide that went into the Pacific Ocean over the weekend in Big Sur, Calif. The slide buried a portion of the Pacific Coast Highway under a 40-foot layer of rock and dirt and changed the coastline below to include what now looks like a rounded skirt hem, according to Susana Cruz, a spokeswoman with the California Department of Transportation. Joe Johnston, The Tribune (of San Luis Obispo) via AP
Crews use a wrecking ball attached to a crane on the demolition of the storm-damaged Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge in Big Sur, Calif on March 16, 2017. The crumbling bridge along the California coast stranded residents in the popular Big Sur area and closed part of the iconic Pacific Coast Highway. Vern Fisher, The Monterey County Herald via AP
An electroniuc sign warns motorists on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, Calif., a route that had been closed periodically by mud and rock slides overnight and in the morning, Feb. 28, 2014. Even with rainfall totals exceeding six inches in some places Friday, the powerful Pacific storm did not put a major dent in a drought that is among the worst in recent California history. Reed Saxon, AP
Workers shovel mud out onto the Pacific Coast Highway from the entrance to the Laguna Cinemas in Laguna Beach, Calif. Dec. 22, 2010. Downtown Laguna Beach was closed by up to 4 feet of storm runoff, which receded but left streets awash in mud. Denis Poroy, ASSOCIATED PRESS
A television news cameraman records the scene of a rock slide which closed Pacific Coast Highway near Ventura County, Dec. 20, 2010. Nick Ut, AP
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Doyle Rice/USA TODAY Published Apr. 9,2021| Updated Apr. 22, 2021

 

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