Jamie Morton (News, March 4) talks about hesitant and denialist attitudes to climate change, in the context of a multitude of evidence of widespread disruptions.
There is plenty of evidence in many previous Bay of Plenty Times articles as well, yet where is the resolute action and calls for community commitment from our leaders?
At a time where the IPCC is calling for "unprecedented changes", the World Economic Forum is talking about "sleepwalking into environmental catastrophe" and the New York Times headlines "It is time to panic", what are we doing? We are discussing apathy.
While the councils are starting to come to terms with adapting to the impact of climate change, they are a long way from any effective targets addressing the causes. It is easy to point to New Zealand's size, and ask what the countries like India and China are doing. Yet Germanwatch places us near the bottom of its performance scale (44 of 59), with China 33 and India 11. How should we respond?
We now have school students organising to strike for their climate, and organisations such an Extinction Rebellion campaigning for the declaration of climate emergency. Do we listen to them or dismiss them.