My Sustainability and Climate Research Lineup for Q2 2022

I’m riding the high of having just finished up my first-ever sustainability reading project. So, this lineup for my next one might be insanely ambitious and a bad idea.

But am I going to do it anyway? Of course!

This time, I’ve picked some books and websites as well as the usual UN/government report-tomes.

  1. The SEC’s proposed climate disclosure rule (March 2022)
  2. New IPCC report AR6, from three working groups – 1, 2, and 3 (2021-2022). Especially prioritizing Working Group 3, which focuses on Mitigation.
  3. October 2021 report from the International Energy Agency (IEA) about Curtailing Methane Emissions from Fossil Fuel Operations.
  4. UNEP Six Sector Solution
  5. FTC 2012 Green Guide
  6. Inconspicuous Consumption by Tatiana Schlossberg
  7. Speed and Scale by John Doerr
  8. Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
  9. Web Survey (of useful websites for climate and sustainability data)

The first two texts above are recent news and developments in the climate space that I want to keep up with.

The next two are continuations of themes that came out of the last reading project, namely, methane mitigation, and what each sector should do about climate change.

Number 5 above has to do with the rules against greenwashing (that is, making false environmental claims when marketing) – a topic I’ve been curious about, and meaning to write about, for a while.

The next three are books that I’m hoping will help me form a big picture understanding of climate strategy. The reviews I’ve read of them piqued my interest.

Lastly, there are a few websites that keep coming up as sources in articles about climate change, and I want to do a quick survey of what they are and when they might be useful in my own writing.

Recapping My (First) Sustainability Reading Project! (Jan – Mar 2022)

My reading project is finally done! Or at least, the ‘reading’ part of the reading project. The associated blog posts will continue to come out as I finish them.

So how did I do? Well, I managed to read all the materials I’d set for myself, except the two I wanted to reread. When I was running short on time, I decided it was better to forge ahead than retread old ground.

Shockingly, I also finished up my project approximately on time. Unheard of.

I ended up cramming a lot of them toward the end, and that was fun in its own way. I’ve got a bit of a process going –

  • first I skim everything,
  • then I load the reports onto my tablet.
  • I read a report and mark it with a stylus while dictating a voice memo with my real-time reactions,
  • transcribe the reactions using a transcription program,
  • paste a bunch of quotes from the report into my notes,
  • and then write the post about it.

Which sounds complicated, now that I’ve written it down. But it isn’t, really, it just lets me do a lot of different modes of learning – visual, auditory, etc., at once.


Now for, the recap. Here is how the project started:

Sustainability Research: Where to Start?

My Sustainability Research Lineup For Q1

Researching to Find My Place in the Climate Movement


Here are my real-time updates:

Research Day 1: Skimming the Longest Tomes

Sustainability Research Project Days 2-3: More Skimming

Sustainability Research – Days 4, 5, 6 – Bigger Bites


Here are the blog posts I wrote about each report. (I will continue to update this as I add blog posts.)

#TitlePosts
12021 UN Emissions Gap Reportskim, intro chapters, methane chapter, more coming soon
2Taking Stock 2021 by Rhodiumskim, more coming soon
3HBR article – What Supply Chain Transparency really meansskim, post.
4Initiatives that came out of COP26skim, more coming soon
5US 2021 Aviation Climate Action Plan.skim, more coming soon
62015 Paris Agreement (reread)Skipped
7 Green New Deal (reread)Skipped

I also made a To-Be-Read (TBR) list, including references in the reports that I want to follow up on later.


So, what’s next?

This was a project I really enjoyed since I was able to quickly learn subjects I’d been meaning to for a while.

I want to do another one! I’m going to have to give the Sustainability Reading projects names to keep them from being mixed up.

I’m working on coming up with a Research Lineup for April-June 2022.

Research Dispatch

All the sustainability research posts.

Blue Carbon [Ocean Ecosystems that are Promising Carbon Sinks]

The Internet Needs to Go Green, Just Like Everything Else. [Digital Sustainability]

The UN Climate Meeting, COP26, was a Huge Step Up from Previous Years [just what it says]

Researching to Find My Place in the Climate Movement [Setting up my Sustainability Research Project]

How Can We Know We’re Buying Sustainable Products? [Supply Chain Transparency]

How Much Farther Do We Have to Go to Solve Climate Change? [Emissions Gap Report, Introductory Chapters]

Managing Methane Can Buy Us Time [Emissions Gap Report, Methane Chapter]

Sustainability Research – Days 4, 5, 6 – Bigger Bites

Here is an update on my sustainability reading project! I’ve shuffled things around a bit, since things did not go according to plan. More on that later.

Here’s where I left off. In the last update, I’d skimmed all the documents I planned to read as a part of this project (or at least the ones I hadn’t read before). My plan from there was to start off with the two shorter posts on the list: the Supply Chain Transparency article and the post about COP26 initiatives.

Small Bites

So, I started off with the supply chain transparency article.

About halfway through, I got antsy. Reading a two-page article didn’t feel like doing anything.

I’m used to the research process feeling a bit more substantive. So I moseyed over to Google Scholar and found a more recent (and long) survey article on supply chain transparency for ‘background research’, and read the two articles together. I wrote one of my Research Dispatch posts about it here.

That, right there, was a bit of foreshadowing of what was ahead. I was supposedly starting with the easy part, but I had to make it difficult so it would ‘feel right’.

Next up was supposed to be the COP26 post. It was even shorter. I read about half before I started fidgeting and fussing again.

Something didn’t feel right or satisfying about it. Breaking a tiny post into even smaller bites to do every day didn’t make sense, and yet I was procrastinating too much to finish it in one session. Soooo… I went in the other direction.

The New Plan

I thought my next step was going to be to chip away at the detailed reading of the longer articles, bit by bit – maybe a few sections per day. It sounds like a sensible way of working. But it turns out I don’t enjoy that at all.

I find it more satisfying to make a bunch of progress at once. Sort of analogous to how I eat chocolate. Or strawberries. I’d rather fill my face with goodies and suffuse my tastebuds all at once than enjoy small flavorful nibbles. Anyway.

Starting easy didn’t work? Fine.

I grabbed the two longest and densest reports instead, the Emissions Gap Report (EGR) and the Aviation Action Plan (AAP).

Small sessions weren’t fun? Cool. Instead, I spent a bunch of hours reading both of them on the same day.

I finished reading and taking notes on the AAP, and I’m a little less than halfway through the EGR.

And honestly, I’m excited. Cramming a lot of information gets my brain cells firing and making connections.

And I can see a path to getting all my reading done. I just need a chunk of hours and a few pots of coffee. I don’t need to worry about getting into the right mindset every day.

Coming Up

As of now, I’m on track to finishing the ‘reading’ part of the reading project a week late. At least I’ve learned something about my research style. Always helps to know how you work, especially if it’s a bit eccentric.

The next bottleneck is sharing the results. I’m working on writing up my notes on my Research Dispatch blog over on Medium.

I’m noticing I get stuck here too because I feel pressure to ‘finish’ with the subject – say everything I have to say and share everything I learned from a given report so that I don’t ever have to revisit it. But that’s not possible, and worse, it makes for massively dense and unreadable blog posts. If people wanted that, they could just read the report too.

Instead, I’m organizing my notes and making them easy to revisit. It’s inevitable that I’ll come back to them because there’s always more to say.

Currently, I’m working on the Research Dispatch post on the AAP. I’m also splitting the EGR post into chapters and writing about each one separately. So, keep an eye out for those in the upcoming weeks.

Meanwhile, Out in the Real World

Some more interesting reports came out in the last few weeks, which I’m looking forward to digging into after I’m through with this batch.

  • SEC climate disclosure: The SEC is proposing a rule where publicly traded companies need to disclose what risks they experience due to climate change, and what their greenhouse gas emissions are. I’m more excited about the latter part, because it should do a lot to combat greenwashing (companies making themselves sound greener than they are).
  • A new report came out from the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – a part of the UN), titled Climate Change 2022: ImpactsAdaptation and Vulnerability.
    • Here’s what the introduction says: “This report recognizes the interdependence of climate, ecosystems and biodiversity […], and human societies […] and integrates knowledge more strongly across the natural, ecological, social and economic sciences than earlier IPCC assessments.”

Sustainability Research Project Days 2-3: More Skimming

I’m continuing on in the skimming phase of my sustainability research project! Here are my notes from days 2 and 3.

Research Day 2: Skimming the COP26 Accomplishments UNEP Post

What it is: A story on the UNEP website

When it’s from: Nov 15, 2021

Type of language: Layman’s

Number of readable pages: About 2 pages if printed. Hard to tell because it’s a webpage.

The six initiatives it lists are:

  • climate-friendly cooling,
  • reducing methane emissions,
  • calling for more ambition,
  • boosting nature-based solutions,
  • universities pledging net-zero,
  • ending deforestation, and
  • protecting peatlands ecosystems.

Questions I have: How big a scale-up is this from what we had in place previously? What investments might it lead to? What is the US’s role? What job or volunteer opportunities might it lead to?

Resources to add to my ‘to be read’ (TBR):

  • UNEP Adaptation Gap Report 2021: The Gathering Storm
  • ‘Six Sector Solution’ seems to be a roadmap report that UNEP created, and looks like the sector-wide solution I’m looking for.

Research Day 3: Skimming the HBR article about Supply Chain Transparency

What it is: An article explaining the concept of ‘supply chain transparency’ and advice for businesses who want to be more transparent about their supply chains

When it’s from: August 2019

Type of language: Layman-friendly, business-y

Number of readable pages: Looks like it would be about 3 pages. Can’t be sure since it’s a webpage.

Questions I have: 

  • How can this knowledge help us urge more companies to be transparent?
  • Can we apply this at our own jobs?
  • What is the best way to ask companies we frequent to to be more transparent?
  • Are there any policy levers that could be pulled to require transparency?
    • Is any current organization or movement already working to pull those policy levers?

Quotes from the article that reference more sources I want to check out:

  • “A well-known Innovator is the apparel company Patagonia. Its Footprint Chronicles map a subset of raw materials, mills, and factories that make Patagonia products and drills down into details about vendors’ operations and staff.”
  • “Based on our learnings over the last decade, we have applied part of the innovation diffusion theory, a concept originally posed by Everett Rogers that outlines how an innovation spreads and is adopted, to map the progress of firms moving towards supply chain transparency.”