Climate Lab: … It’s Complicated

Complex problems call for complex solutions. We’ve already determined that more robust perspectives lead to success, but that can be easier said than done when it comes to managing humans. Humans have a tendency to gravitate toward feeling comfortable and right, so it’s up to leaders to challenge everyone’s assumptions – including our own – when building solutions. (It’s also important for us to model imperfection.)

How Much is Enough?

Limiting or shifting our electricity use benefits our wallets, but it can also help support a more reliable electrical grid and limit the amount of fossil fuels we use to power our homes, which in turn limits climate change. If you don’t know where to start, you’re not alone: some utility companies offer programs to help you save money as you adjust your use.

Electrical Service Upgrade

It’s been a while since electronics lab in college, but upgrading our electric service served as a good refresher course for me. Unfortunately, many people who want to move away from fossil fuel use in their homes often don’t know where to start or even what to ask a potential contractor. I’m hoping that detailing our journey – starting with our electricity upgrade – will help.

Kōkua for Maui

Tourism is difficult when you love to experience the world but also recognize how damaging travel can be. Maui represents a particularly stressed part of the world from a climate standpoint, and the deadly wildfires there in the summer of 2023 impacted local communities but also the island’s biggest revenue driver: tourism. We did our best to visit responsibly, whatever that means to Maui.

Climate Lab: Hawai’i – Insights, Continued

With one third of my year-long program completed, our cohort has been doing a lot of reflecting on what we’ve seen, learned, and applied. At the end of a week together in Hawai’i, we focused on some very real leadership challenges we’ve faced in a fragmented, polarized world, as well as how to encourage and empower others to keep moving forward toward a common goal.

Climate Lab: Hawai’i – Insights

“Nothing ventured, nothing gained,” as they say, but venturing into the unknown is a daunting experience for anyone. The theme of exploration was strong during our Climate Lab week in Hawai’i, especially given Polynesian cultural ties to long sea voyages. Although solving the climate crisis can feel like sailing into the unknown without a map, we’re building navigational tools that will help us find a destination.

Climate Lab: Hawai’i – In the Field, Continued

Any good management class will tell you that stakeholder engagement is necessary for project success, but it can be easy to forget that guidance once you’re in project implementation mode. Seeing examples of good stakeholder engagement in person during my Climate Lab week on Oahu helped illustrate just how effective an inclusive process can be, or – even better – how community-led efforts can truly shine.

Climate Lab: Hawai’i – In the Field

I was impressed when I learned about Hawaii’s goal of 100% renewable energy by 2045, but I was shocked to learn about some unintended impacts of wind energy development on Oahu’s north shore. Hearing from impacted residents was a great reminder that wind energy, like any tool, is not inherently good or bad – it comes down to how it is developed and used.

Climate Lab: Hawai’i – In the Classroom

As part of my year-long climate adaptation leadership program, our cohort is participating in three intensive, in-person sessions at different locations throughout the Pacific. The first week was in Hawai’i, exploring impacts from climate change and adaptation strategies in place across the state. Before we did anything else, we spent some time in the classroom examining priority issues and best practices for engaging local communities.

Beneficial Electrification

I was skeptical of the term “beneficial electrification” when I first heard it, mostly because I knew that more than half of our electricity in Pennsylvania was generated using fossil fuels. But when electric appliances are used in concert with energy efficiency measures, cleaner energy sources, and smart grid technology, beneficial electrification represents a meaningful step in addressing the climate crisis.