Episode

The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
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57:47
Published: Sun Nov 20 2022
Description

Across the world, developed nations have locked themselves into unsustainable, energy-intensive lifestyles. As environmental collapse threatens, the journalist Noah Gallagher Shannon explores the lessons in sustainability that can be learned from looking “at smaller, perhaps even less prosperous nations” such as Uruguay.“The task of shrinking our societal footprint is the most urgent problem of our era — and perhaps the most intractable,” writes Shannon, who explains that the problem of reducing our footprints further “isn’t that we don’t have models of sustainable living; it’s that few exist without poverty.”Tracing Uruguay’s sustainability, Shannon shows how a relatively small population size and concentration (about half of the country’s 3.5 million people live in Montevideo, the capital) had long provided the country with a collective sense of purpose. He also shows how in such a tight-knit country, the inequalities reach a rapid boil, quoting a slogan of a Marxist-Leninist group called the Tupamaros: “Everybody dances or nobody dances.”Looking for answers to both a structural and existential problem, Shannon questions what it would take to achieve energy independence.This story was written by Noah Gallagher Shannon and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android. 

Chapters
As climate change continues to be a global crisis, it is crucial to explore ways to meet global emissions goals.
00:00 - 05:23 (05:23)
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Climate Change
Summary

As climate change continues to be a global crisis, it is crucial to explore ways to meet global emissions goals. A green shift in behavior can help in reducing carbon emissions and avert climate change.

Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
Podcast
The Daily
The carbon footprint of a household can be estimated through various factors such as transportation, housing, food, services, and goods.
05:23 - 15:59 (10:36)
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Carbon Footprint
Summary

The carbon footprint of a household can be estimated through various factors such as transportation, housing, food, services, and goods. A household with two people earning seventy thousand dollars a year has a total carbon footprint of fifty tons or twenty-five tons per person.

Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
Podcast
The Daily
Uruguay's gamble to decarbonize the grid by 2020 and create a domestic green energy sector from scratch has paid off, enticing more than $8 billion in investment, decreasing the country's energy consumption by 20%, and unshackling its energy sector from commodities.
15:59 - 29:50 (13:51)
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Green Energy
Summary

Uruguay's gamble to decarbonize the grid by 2020 and create a domestic green energy sector from scratch has paid off, enticing more than $8 billion in investment, decreasing the country's energy consumption by 20%, and unshackling its energy sector from commodities.

Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
Podcast
The Daily
With wind and solar power being the main sources of renewable energy, and Uruguay mostly dependent upon hydro power, storage remains a challenge when energy is needed at other times.
29:50 - 36:54 (07:03)
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Renewable Energy
Summary

With wind and solar power being the main sources of renewable energy, and Uruguay mostly dependent upon hydro power, storage remains a challenge when energy is needed at other times.

Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
Podcast
The Daily
Uruguay's cattle industry contributes close to half of the country's total greenhouse gas emissions, with livestock as a whole responsible for 14% of global emissions.
36:54 - 43:43 (06:49)
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Uruguay, cattle industry, greenhouse gas emissions, sustainability
Summary

Uruguay's cattle industry contributes close to half of the country's total greenhouse gas emissions, with livestock as a whole responsible for 14% of global emissions. However, Uruguay's grass-fed cattle industry is more sustainable than others because they rely on native grasses and do not use antibiotics or hormones.

Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
Podcast
The Daily
The article discusses the Inflation Reduction Act, which was signed by President Biden in August 2021 and how carbon footprints are part of a deflection campaign, inspired by the gun and tobacco lobbies.
43:43 - 55:50 (12:07)
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Climate Crisis
Summary

The article discusses the Inflation Reduction Act, which was signed by President Biden in August 2021 and how carbon footprints are part of a deflection campaign, inspired by the gun and tobacco lobbies. The author also argues that the level of paralysis around the climate crisis suggests a deeper problem.

Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
Podcast
The Daily
After taking a 75% pay cut, a former bank analyst at Bear Sterns chooses to leave the finance world and pursue a career with a local energy firm.
55:50 - 57:31 (01:41)
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Career Change
Summary

After taking a 75% pay cut, a former bank analyst at Bear Sterns chooses to leave the finance world and pursue a career with a local energy firm.

Episode
The Sunday Read: ‘What Does Sustainable Living Look Like? Maybe Like Uruguay’
Podcast
The Daily