Author: Camellia Moors ’22
Welcome to another edition of Good News Friday! To get you in a good mood for Thanksgiving break, we’re covering some positive news about emissions in the travel industry, the halting of oil leases on Indigenous lands, and the “right to repair” Apple devices.

- Travel industry makes climate change commitments: In the wake of the COP26 negotiations, more than 300 global travel stakeholders signed the Glasgow Declaration on Climate Action in Tourism. This requires all signatories to submit a concrete plan to halve their emissions by 2030 and become net zero by 2050 within 12 months. According to one study, worldwide tourism accounted for 8% of global emissions between 2009 and 2013, meaning these commitments to cuts have the potential to make a large—and needed—dent in global emissions.

2. Biden administration halts oil drilling leases: Early this week, the Biden administration announced it intends to “block new federal oil and gas leasing within a 10-mile radius around Chaco Canyon in New Mexico, one of the nation’s oldest and most culturally significant Native American sites.” While the move was not universally popular—the Navajo Nation, for example, said it prefers a smaller, 5-mile radius—it does reflect an (admittedly halting) trend of limiting oil leases.

3. Apple to expand customers’ ability to self-repair iPhones: This week, Apple announced it will soon sell the parts, tools, and instructions for people to perform their own iPhone repairs. Proponents of the “right to repair” argue that limits on consumers’ abilities to fix their electronic devices force them to throw them out, contributing to the massive global “e-waste” problem. With Apple selling more than 217 million iPhones in 2018 and 100-120 million phones being discarded each year, the move by the tech company represents a potentially huge, untapped means of reducing global waste.
That’s all for this week! Tune in next time for more environmental news, and until then, we hope you have a relaxing Thanksgiving break and feel free to get in touch if you have environmental news to share!
















