A new coronavirus variant, Omicron, leads travel restrictions

A new coronavirus variant, Omicron, leads travel restrictions

In a press statement released on Nov. 26, the CDC announced that the World Health Organization has officially recognized a new coronavirus variant called Omicron. According to the press release, the variant was first identified in South Africa and has since spread to regions across the globe.

Climate Activist Spotlight: Lilly Platt

Climate Activist Spotlight: Lilly Platt

Lilly Platt is a 13-year-old England-born, Netherlands-based climate activist who centers her work around reducing plastic pollution through her initiative called Lilly’s Plastic Pickup. According to Global Citizen, in 2015, after Platt and her family moved to the Netherlands, she went on a walk with her grandfather and, in an attempt to improve her language skills, decided to count pieces of plastic. “We counted 91 pieces of plastic in only 10 to 15 minutes,” Platt told Global Citizen. Her grandfather explained to her that the plastic garbage then makes its way into the ocean to become “plastic soup,” according to an interview with Earth.org. This led to Platt starting Lilly’s Plastic Pickup, through which Platt goes on regular trash pickups, sorts the trash and “take[s] pictures of them and post[s] them on social media,” according to an interview with Global Citizen.

COP26 results in global agreement on climate change, but lacks concrete action

COP26 results in global agreement on climate change, but lacks concrete action

The 26th Conference of the Parties, also referred to as the COP26, was held from Oct. 31 to Nov. 12 after being delayed for a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The COP was created by the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, a treaty signed in 1992, according to New Scientist. This year’s conference took place in Glasgow, Scotland, in partnership with Italy, where pre-COP events were held, according to the COP website. The COP26 is part of multiple larger U.N. treaties, including the COP, the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement, which was created during the COP21, according to the COP26 final briefing. The Washington Post reported that nearly 200 countries were involved in the COP26. It brought nations together to focus on mitigating climate change and preventing warming over 1.5 degrees Celsius. However, from Al-Jazeera to CNBC, many major news publications have expressed that the COP26 failed to develop concrete plans to reach that goal.

COVID-19 booster shots become widely available in the United States


In mid-October, both the Centers for Disease Control and the Food and Drug Administration released statements on their websites that endorsed a booster shot for COVID-19 in certain populations. The CDC stated that people who are 65 years and older, as well as those who are over 18 years old and live in a long-term care setting, work or live in high-risk settings and/or have underlying medical conditions, are eligible to get the shot. Some states, such as Colorado, Kentucky and Michigan, are allowing anyone 18 or older to receive the booster shot. The CDC and FDA statements recommend waiting six months before getting the boosters for Moderna and Pfizer and two months before receiving the booster for Johnson & Johnson. The Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson or Janssen boosters are currently under an emergency use authorization, according to Yale Medicine.

Climate Activist Spotlight: Elizabeth Wathuti

Elizabeth Wathuti is a 26-year-old climate activist from Kenya. She is the founder of the Green Generation Initiative, which aims to plant fruit trees and focuses on “implementing environmental projects and activities with young people for a sustainable future,” as stated on their website. The site claims they have grown over 30,000 trees. This success has been completed in collaboration with Kenyan middle and high schools, and the website attributes the trees’ 98 percent survival rate to the students’ involvement in keeping them alive.

Opinion: Chevron has decimated the environment, and is now decimating the judiciary

Opinion: Chevron has decimated the environment, and is now decimating the judiciary

“Contempt of court” took on a whole new meaning for a human rights lawyer who led a three-decade-long fight against the gas giant Chevron. Former attorney Steven Donziger shed light on the company’s control of the American courts, but ended up being disbarred, being subjected to more than 800 days of pretrial house arrest and serving a sentence of six months of federal prison time, which began on Oct. 27.

Donziger was the lead attorney representing 30,000 plaintiffs in a legal battle against Chevron (then called Texaco) for dumping excessive amounts of oil onto Indigenous land and water in Ecuador from the 1970s to the 1990s. According to the Yale MacMillan Center, the spill led to an epidemic of cancer and other related health problems to the extent that it was dubbed the “Amazon Chernobyl.”

COVID-19 booster shots become widely available in the United States

COVID-19 booster shots become widely available in the United States

In mid-October, both the Centers for Disease Control and the Food and Drug Administration released statements on their websites that endorsed a booster shot for COVID-19 in certain populations. The CDC stated that people who are 65 years and older, as well as those who are over 18 years old and live in a long-term care setting, work or live in high-risk settings and/or have underlying medical conditions, are eligible to get the shot. Some states, such as Colorado, Kentucky and Michigan, are allowing anyone 18 or older to receive the booster shot.

Climate Activist Spotlight: Nadia Nazar

Climate Activist Spotlight: Nadia Nazar

Nadia Nazar is a 19-year-old artist and climate justice organizer from Baltimore County, Maryland. She is the co-founder of climate justice and activist organization Zero Hour. According to The Baltimore Sun, Nazar was in a middle school environmental science class when she learned about climate change. Part of what inspired her to pursue climate activism was her mother’s work as a marine biologist, according to an interview with the YouTube channel, In the Know Through her mother’s work, she was able to learn about how climate change was impacting animals and the greater world.