This informative article by Project Drawdown highlights the power of individual and household actions to fight climate change and reduce levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
According to their calculations, 25-30% of the emissions reductions needed to keep our climate from warming 1.5°C could be achieved through individual and household actions.
Teaching Tips
Positives
It provides concrete actions individuals and households can take and the corresponding emissions impacts of those actions.
Many other resources are linked with additional information.
Additional Prerequisites
To learn more about all of the solutions to climate change, you can explore this table of solutions from Project Drawdown that can be sorted by impact.
At the bottom of this article, Project Drawdown notes that "Not all possible solutions that exist in the world are presented here. We select climate solutions that have direct impact on the atmosphere; are scientifically validated, economically viable, and globally applicable; and have many additional co-benefits that solve for other things."
The infographic of high-impact solutions is categorized, but it is not a graph. Be sure students look at the values associated with the actions and maybe have students graph them out to see the actions with the biggest impacts.
Differentiation
Social studies, civics, government, and economics classes could use this resource when discussing the impacts of climate change and the importance of individual participation in society.
It also identifies many solutions that are aimed at individuals in developed countries that have contributed the most to the problem over time.
Science, math, architecture, and physics classes could use this resource to discuss environmentally friendly designs for new buildings; retrofitting existing buildings with more efficient heating and cooling systems; updating homes with better insulation, windows, and appliances; designing homes and neighborhoods to use passive solar or distributed solar energy; and planting native plants, gardens, and green spaces to make buildings more sustainable and energy efficient.
This resource highlights climate solutions and classifies high-impact solutions needed to reduce households' carbon footprint and accelerate climate action globally. The 90 solutions are real and were validated by scientists. Thus, this resource is recommended for teaching.
Standards
Science and Engineering
ESS3: Earth and Human Activity
MS-ESS3-4 Construct an argument supported by evidence for how increases in human population and per-capita consumption of natural resources impact Earth’s systems.