In a talk on global water access, quality and solutions on Tuesday, Maggie White, a senior manager at the Stockholm International Water Institute, described drought as “torture in slow motion.” Compared to flooding, she explained, drought receives significantly less media attention and public concern, despite having an equal capacity for devastation. The catastrophic impacts of a drought are less sudden than those of other natural disasters, and don’t demand your attention with the same howling intensity of, say, a hurricane. But these impacts build, first gradually and then not, until they become impossible to ignore.
The idea of this “torture in slow motion” slipping through the cracks of public concern got me thinking about both time and attention as they relate to the climate crisis in general. My takeaways from my first few days at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan could be summarized in one word: urgency. People from all over the world have disrupted their lives to come to this conference and tell others how the climate crisis has disrupted theirs. From natural disasters to unavailability of food to climate migration, the impacts of this crisis are inescapable. To even begin to sufficiently address them, action would have to be immediate. But I sat in the back of several plenary rooms as negotiations crawled on, struck by the lack of urgency in each of them. Their pacing starkly contrasts with the reality that the people on the front lines of the climate crisis already know, and that we will all soon have to reckon with: that our time to act is limited.
COP itself is hectic and confusing. It’s a maze of disjointed rooms and displays. In the Blue Zone, delegates use convoluted language to say very little. In the Green Zone, organizations and companies vie for visitors’ attention. It’s easy to get lost among the pavilions offering pamphlets, coffee and candies. Members of the press constantly snap photos and the crowds are sticky and entangling. Chanting, music, banging gavels—the noise here can be overwhelming. In this way, it closely resembles our world. It’s so easy for the voices that we desperately need to hear—those of people who see the impacts of climate change firsthand and are working with their communities, whether local, national or global, to implement meaningful change—to get lost. I’m coming to the realization that as an observer at something as big and complicated as COP, the best that I can do is try to navigate the noise and find meaning and connection wherever I can. At this conference and amid our global climate crisis, hope and grief abound. I’m not quite sure what to make of it, but I know that we need to see action now. And it needs to be taken at full speed.
Amanda McCard is majoring in Journalism and Environmental Studies in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences.