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Climate Politics

Six Climate Breakthroughs That Made 2022 a Step Toward Net Zero

Yes, the energy crisis has been a boon for fossil fuels, but this year also saw the low-carbon transition get policy support like never before.

A rainbow above the Washington Monument on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

A rainbow above the Washington Monument on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

Photographer: Samuel Corum/Bloomberg

The damage caused by climate change over this past year was at times so immense it was hard to comprehend. In Pakistan alone, extreme summer flooding killed thousands, displaced millions and caused over $40 billion in losses. Fall floods in Nigeria killed hundreds and displaced over 1 million people. Droughts in Europe, China and the US dried out once-unstoppable rivers and slowed the flows of commerce on major arteries like the Mississippi and the Rhine.

In the face of these extremes, the human response was uneven at best. Consumption of coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, rebounded in 2022. Countries like the UK and China seemed to back away from major climate pledges. But all of this gloom came with more than a silver lining. In fact, it’s all too easy to overlook the steps toward a lower-carbon world that came about in between more attention-getting catastrophes.