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Good afternoon, and welcome to Globe Climate, a newsletter about climate change, environment and resources in Canada.

Millets are having a moment this year. The United Nations declared 2023 to be the International Year of Millets, aiming to raise awareness of their suitability to grow under adverse and changing climate and conditions.

They are sustainable, hardy, drought-resistant crops that are ready to harvest about 45 days after planting, faster than wheat, rice, oats and quinoa. Julie Van Rosendaal has more on how and why to eat this climate-friendly grain.

Now, let’s catch you up on other news.

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Julie Van Rosendaal/The Globe and Mail


Noteworthy reporting this week:

  1. NWT wildfires: Essential workers returning to Yellowknife ahead of residents to reopen critical services
  2. B.C. wildfires: B.C. to expand programs that train volunteers to help firefighters battle wildfires. Meanwhile, students to return to school in fire-ravaged communities and the fires in Shuswap fanned political flames
  3. G20 in India: Can a developing nation lift people out of poverty, and achieve its dreams of superpower status, before deadly heat makes life impossible? The world is anxious to find out as it gathers in New Delhi for G20 summit
  4. Forests: As Canada’s boreal forests burn again and again, they won’t grow back the same way
  5. EVs: Another use for your electric vehicle? Powering your home during a blackout
  6. Oil and gas: Former Trans Mountain CEO plays up role for Indigenous ownership in pipeline expansion
  7. Clean energy: Newfoundland and Labrador picks four wind farm projects to power hydrogen plants
  8. Policy: Conservatives dig in on message against carbon pricing while Liberals point to wildfires
  9. On the ground with The Narwhal: In this Rocky Mountain wildlife corridor, a luxury development forges ahead despite fierce opposition

A deeper dive

Climate litigation is heating up

Kate Helmore is a summer reporter for Report on Business. For this week’s deeper dive, she talks about climate litigation.

Youth are caught between a rock and a hard place. On one hand, they have their government, one that consistently fails to deliver radical action on climate crisis. Meanwhile they see their future: forest fires, floods, disease and biodiversity loss. A future under way and guaranteed to continue because the rock moved barely an inch.

Yet young climate activists have found a crack in the stone: the court system.

Previously courts had considered the issue of climate change to be too political to touch. But perhaps inspired by the burning calamity that surrounds us, judges and legal experts are changing their tune. Last month, Montana youth successfully sued their state for violating their rights to a safe and healthy environment. A violation that occurred every time the state enabled the fossil fuel industry. A UN panel of experts also found climate change to be form of “structural violence” and that a child had the right to seek legal recourse. A case in Ontario, suing the Ford government for rolling back the cap-and-trade agreement, is under appeal. And August was only one part of the wave: According to a UN report published in July, climate-litigation cases have more than doubled in the past five years.

But justice moves at a measured pace. While climate litigation is indeed a opening for opportunity, is it a foothold? Each case will be appealed and stretch for years, perhaps decades. Lawyers will argue minutia while the world burns. After all, climate change is unencumbered and knows no such restraint.

Read the full story today.

- Kate

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Plaintiffs Mica, 14; Badge 15, Lander 18, and Taleah, 19, listen to arguments during a status hearing on May 12, 2023, in Helena, Mont., for a case that they and other Montana youth filed against the state arguing Montana officials are not meeting their constitutional obligations to protect residents from climate change.THOM BRIDGE, Independent Record/The Associated Press


What else you missed


Opinion and analysis

Courtney Howard, Nicole Redvers, Sarah Cook: The awful fires in the Northwest Territories can light the way to a better, healthier future

David Beatty: Canada’s election laws have sidelined Green voters for far too long

Kelly Cryderman: The Prairies should prepare for more summers like this one

John Vaillant: As our forests burn, oil companies are doubling down on their old business models

Editorial board: Climate change, and a watershed moment for water use in British Columbia


Green Investing

OMERS Ventures head Damien Steel to lead cleantech startup Deep Sky founded by Hopper CEO

Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System’s head of venture capital, Damien Steel, is departing to lead an ambitious climate technology startup founded by one of Canada’s most successful tech entrepreneurs. The managing partner of the pension giant’s $2-billion ventures group, will become chief executive officer of Deep Sky Corp., which is chaired by its co-founder, Fred Lalonde, CEO of online travel company Hopper Inc.


Making waves

Each week The Globe profiles a Canadian making a difference, but we are taking a little break for the rest of summer. We’ll be back to showing off everyone’s great work in a few weeks.

Do you know an engaged individual? Someone who represents the real engines pursuing change in the country? Email us at GlobeClimate@globeandmail.com to tell us about them.


Photo of the week

Open this photo in gallery:

Cars drive across the July 15 Martyrs Bridge as the rare Super Blue Moon sets behind on August 31, 2023 in Istanbul, Turkey. The rare supermoon is an occurrence which won't happen again until 2037. The term "Blue Moon" does not refer to the color of the moon, but is the term used to signify the second full moon in a month.Chris McGrath/Getty Images


Guides and Explainers


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