David Suzuki’s recent op-ed and interview got people talking. For many, he validates the rising frustration and anxiety people are feeling about the escalating climate impacts we are all experiencing. In some ways it’s a relief to hear someone with his stature say plainly: this isn’t working, our leaders and the system are set up to tackle such a complex problem.
But for others, the starkness of his message and the finality of his words risks pushing us deeper into hopelessness to the point of inaction or worse, apathy. If David Suzuki, one of the loudest voices in Canadian environmentalism says it’s too late, what’s left for the rest of us to do?
That’s where environmental organizations like Greenpeace, movement leaders, and community builders need to step in not to disagree with Suzuki’s diagnosis, but to offer the rest of the story.
If there’s one thing that’s certain, the man knows how to get the conversation going. To be frank, it’s a conversation that needs to be had—especially now. And you can join in by adding your thoughts in the comment section.
Validation is a first step, we must go further
Suzuki’s piece works because it names the gaslighting. For decades, the fossil fuel industry and, ever increasingly, in partnership with right-wing disinformation networks has manipulated public understanding of how we make change through coordinated denial, blame-shifting, and isolation. We’ve been led to believe change happens through individual choices. The climate crisis is a complex problem, it needs systemic change at a national level and global cooperation
Syed Hussan explains in a recent webinar that, with the recent tariff conversation, people are being asked to buy Canadian, we are being told to act as an individual. This only reinforces our tendency of individualism, when right now we need to act collectively.
So it’s helpful for Suzuki to say the unspoken thing out loud, that our system IS broken. But how do we fix it?
Yes, the system is broken. But what is the alternative?
Suzuki rightfully critiques the myth of endless economic growth. He calls out the fact that Earth’s resources aren’t infinite, we can’t keep cutting down old growth forests, overfishing the oceans, extracting every last drop of fossil fuel forever. But without clear alternatives, this critique can feel like a dead end. The answer to endless economic growth isn’t no growth, but instead an intentional model that centers people, regeneration and equity instead of profits for the private sector.
This isn’t hypothetical. Models of a just economy already exist, this could include social housing, universal public transit, community-owned renewable energy etc. All of these point to a reimagined system that centers values not dollar value.
Massive lifestyle change? Only if there’s a policy behind it.
Suzuki calls for “massive lifestyle changes,” but leaves out something crucial: most people are already at their breaking point: rent is unaffordable, food costs are crushing, there is a genocide happening. Telling people to overhaul their lives without policies or support doesn’t sound liberating, it sounds terrifying.
The truth is, no one can make massive lifestyle changes alone, building a better future needs to be:
- Policy-driven. We need meaningful change at scale that doesn’t just rely on individual choices. Transitioning away from fossil fuels doesn’t mean mass unemployment, it means investing in different, more sustainable industries like public investment in renewable energy, affordable housing, retrofitting buildings for energy efficiency etc.
- Equitably distributed. The policies mentioned above must avoid past injustices and centre equity, not just emissions or efficiency targets. This means subsidies and access for low-income communities, job training for fossil fuel employees, recognition of Indigenous leadership and a wealth tax on the super rich corporations and people to pay for these transitions.
- Community-rooted. The climate crisis is a social issue, we need to work together by shifting away from privatization and toward shared public spaces, services, and resources like public parks, libraries, clinics, transit, and local cultural hubs. Our future relies on trust and cooperation.
These networks are already being built in the form of climate justice organizations, local food movements, Indigenous-led resistance and tenant organizing. These are the seeds of a just transition that foster hope.
Hope, not doom or despair, drives action
Climate scientist, Dr. Katherine Hayhoe, says that overwhelming people with catastrophic predictions and data often leads to emotional shutdown, not action. When regular people are inundated with news headlines of “It’s too late,” or “We’re doomed,” it creates paralysis not urgency.
So what motivates people? When people donate to Greenpeace, they’re expressing belief in our mission. When they march, volunteer, or speak up, they’re choosing hope.
The role of climate organizations isn’t about toxic positivity, but to make clear that everyone’s voice matters, show real-world solutions that are already in place and talk about how working together we can make positive changes in the world around us.
So, what happens now?
Let’s be clear, the pathway to a better future isn’t a straight line. Suzuki’s honesty is needed and so are clear pathways to action. Climate change, war, the rise of the right can all feel overwhelming, frustrating and complex but it’s important to think about how we channel those feelings of anger into action to create a better future that includes everyone.
Join the conversation. We want to hear your thoughts in the comments!
Discussion
I agree with your summary, "From frustration to action". It contains the correct approach and long term goals for an economy designed for everyone. However, the Liberal government that is planning nation building projects for Canada right now must be turned away from the fossil fuel extraction and shipping that imitates what was just completed in B.C. The money is already lined up through Blackstone (the world's largest private equity investment firm and one of Trump's biggest backers), Bechtel (a huge US construction company) will will build a pipeline from NE B.C. to the coast and Korean companies will bring over a prefab LNG plant and assemble it in a bay where it is designed to be a floating terminal. That's about as 'shovel ready' as it can get! There are huge flaws in this plan: 1) The market for LNG is on the verge of being flooded. By the time this gas gets to the Pacific Rim it will be worth less than half of today's price. 2) The world does not WANT climate change caused by burning fossil fuels. WHAT CAN WE DO? 3) The pipeline is very long and crosses the unceded lands of many First Nations. Several of these are directly east of the First Nation who are sponsoring the floating LNG terminal off their shore. The neighbouring Nations are very clear, "No pipeline here." 4) Federal and provincial law is also very clear: Supreme Court decisions state that the territories recognized as having been occupied since ancient times belong to the all the First Nation people as represented by their traditional governance structure. This specifically excludes the reservations created by the Indian Act and the Councils elected in those reservations. 5) Bill C-5 created by P.M. Carney appears to legislate all obstacles out of the way of development, BUT mere legislation cannot remove Supreme Court decisions. This is not the USA, at least we better not start acting like the USA as it is now administered. 6) EVERYONE who cares about the future of this planet needs to throw their support behind the First Nation's fight to enforce their rights to their ancestral lands. Give money, sign petitions, go up north if you can and stand with the Land Defenders where they are blocking dirt roads to keep heavy machines off their land. They will welcome you. GUARANTEED!
First. What did the left expect when they abandoned the NDP en masse? The Liberal Party of Canada is a centrist party that makes policy decisions based on pragmatic necessity. If Canada does not pivot away from the new fascist regime to the south of us and build an independent economy that can support the country on its own without dependence on the U.S., then the left can kiss all of their favourite causes goodbye. Second. There are over 350 environmental groups in Canada alone. It's the equivalent of a swarm of mosquitoes trying to change the direction of a herd of corporate elephants. Third. The basic problem is an international economic system that requires constant growth to function properly. Until and unless that can be changed, then humanity and, unfortunately, all of the other life forms being driven to extinction by human activity and expansion are doomed. We are the animal we evolved to be - technologically clever but intellectually stunted. The future does not look bright.
John, I think you are mistaken to dismiss Canada’s many environmental organizations as like a swarm of mosquitoes … , because organizations like ECOJUSTICE are doing great work to educate the public that climate change/ global warming is human caused, and are taking very effective legal action to force our courts and our provincial and federal government to recognize that Canadians have constitutional rights to the clean air and clean atmosphere that is essential to human and all life.
David Suzuki is a modern prophet, a man who speaks truth to power. The bible states, a prophet in his own land is without honour, and we have not honoured this outspoken and worried man, worried for the future of humanity and all life on this planet. But what makes us think we are any more protected from the workings of nature than those people of the past? We find whole civilizations, such as in South America, devastated by drought as their climate changed while populations cut down forests and took more of the land for food, causing even more drought. These civilizations are no longer here, the jungle has taken back its own. We know now that Nature can only react to the conditions around it, it doesn't care about us. Now we are on the same path as those in the past, only with fossil fuels and all the other pollutants we put into our planet the future for us is even more uncertain because it is global. We do know better, we know we could fix it by changing our ways, but do we want to? I think that is what David has been worried about all these years. He has tried to wake us up, but money and the getting of money has too much power. Still, we think tomorrow will be the same as today, but in a hundred years what will we be? So, if and when our reckoning comes, don't complain, we did it to ourselves.
the human race is a biological infestation on the crust of planet earth!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I largely agree with David Suzuki that it may well be too late to stop Climate Change/global warming from reaching the crucial tipping points and becoming unstoppable. Canada remains one of the highest greenhouse gas emitting nations in the world, and America is even worse, and with our governments building more and more pipelines so that still more people will burn the gas and oil that are increasing the pace of climate change every year, sometimes it just seems hopeless. On the other hand I also think that for the sake of our grandchildren and all future generations of human, animal, and plant life too, we must continue to do everything possible to educate the public and politicians about the causes and devastating effects of climate change/ global warming, and to pressure all levels of government to take strong climate action ASAP so that we have a chance of meeting the targets of the Paris Climate Agreement. For that reason I am an active member of a local climate activist organization called For Our Grandchildren, the members of which, like me never give up on the power of hope and taking ACTION.
I largely agree with David Suzuki that it may well be too late to stop Climate Change/global warming from reaching the crucial tipping points and becoming unstoppable. Canada remains one of the highest greenhouse gas emitting nations in the world, and America is even worse, and with our governments building more and more pipelines so that still more people will burn the gas and oil that are increasing the pace of climate change every year, sometimes it just seems hopeless. On the other hand I also think that for the sake of our grandchildren and all future generations of human, animal, and plant life too, we must continue to do everything possible to educate the public and politicians about the causes and devastating effects of climate change/ global warming, and to pressure all levels of government to take strong climate action ASAP so that we have a chance of meeting the targets of the Paris Climate Agreement. For that reason I am an active member of a local climate activist organization called For Our Grandchildren, the members of which, like me never give up on the power of hope and taking ACTION. And if I have said this before, I’ll just keep on saying it again until I run out of breath and life as an 80 year old senior with metastatic cancer.
We do not live in a democracy; we live in a dictatorship, and the dictator is big business. They are only interested in big money. The world runs on a bribe. That is why politicians and governments aren't going to do much about climate change. Anything that will be effective enough will have to be people-powered. The only thing that I can think of with the opportunity, strength and scope to accomplish this is the global boycotting of all animal products, causing factory farming to implode. By boycotting the #2 greenhouse gas emitter, we will thwart the worst of what Mother Nature could throw at us and still survive. Otherwise we will not. This will also prevent most pandemics.
The "robert barons" of our present moment in time are the all-powerful international corporations and their shareholders. Money and or profit is the modern god of this moment in history - holding the power to destroy what is truly valuable. The reasons for the overarching extractive and exploitative practices we are now enduring is that the robber barons and corporate investors are in thrall to this deity. The ethos of "what the market will bear" will drive us and the planet into ever escalating and biosphere destroying climate chaos. We need a new narrative ... a mental reset of what is really important for humans and for the planet we share with our fellow creatures. The new story must be built on the value of life - not only human life - but all life. We need to hear and act on this narrative now - before we reach the tipping point of no return. This narrative is already present in many indigenous cultures.
What is needed now is an emphasis on getting people who want climate action/justice, to act towards climate action/justice. We should try to focus on activating people. "We're doomed" is opposite to this. For me, the key to taking action (Starting FFF-MB) was to stop thinking in terms of achievement, and instead focus on whether my actions act towards what I want. But, I don't think this is a viable way to bring people into activism. I think we need a certain amount of hope to activate people.
I am as frustrated as David Suzuki. I preach about the perils of climate change whenever I can to friends, family, teammates, neighbors , etc, …some agree and are just as annoyed as I am, while others dismiss the argument as unproven and react to me like l’m nuts… We as voters have the power to invoke change..but far too many people are so busy with life..(earning decent wage, getting housing, bringing up kids, saving for retirement, etc, )that they find this climate change rant to be inconvenient to their lives. (Does “The Inconvenient truth” ring a bell?) It’s much easier to ignore it and just hope that next summer will be cooler, or the floods were just one in 500 year event, or there will be less hurricanes next year. My biggest frustration is the apathy of the greater general public. If more people truly believed in science, we would have turned this thing around long ago and until we find a way to get massively more people engaged, I’m afraid we will continue down this path to oblivion.
Help the environment!!!! Stop climate change!!!!!!!
Although things are bleak, we must not give up. The future needs us all, to keep working towards a solution that will save ourselves, future generations & our planet. It's not past the time to make changes that will turn the doom clock back. We have no alternative, so keep your sleeves rolled up, write, text & phone your politicians and insist they listen. Keep the faith.
Sadly I believe we have missed our opportunity to properly keep our global climate from spiking over 2/deg/C in the near future, our governments should have been tackling these issues over 10/years ago !!! Craig Vogan, RSE David Suzuki Foundation
If I was Mark Carney I would be doing the same thing. So I feel free to comment on at least why I would be doing what he is. First he has to sve this country from the absurd western separatist movement. It is real and must have the wind taken from its sails. What Carney has done could very well do that and I think it a masterful stroke to be backing pipelines. Why? Simply because theyb are the most losing proposition in the world because oil is on the way out only in the Canadian West and in the U.S. do they not know that. As long as tax payers are not on the hook let the foolish invest in pipelines. The upside of the poipelines is if they can be repurpsed to move water around the continent to keep crops growing in a drought plagued future. Carney iis an environmentally conscious individual so am I and I would be quietly appeasing the foolish while advancing my environmental agenda as Carney may well be. The other thing is his huge job in dealing with the economic attack on Canada from the Trump white house. This is huge and dealibng with it will require a level of cooperation within Canada which we have not seen since wartimes. This level of cooperation cannot be achived by coming out as a full fledged champion of the environment he has to be cunning in his approach to make all these things happen. I think he is cunning.
I think he's right. But it's the right answer to what question. If you think he meant the fight to oppose our direction, you're wrong. I think he meant it's too late to get into the fight on the ground floor. But it's not too late to increase the pressure on our governments to get serious about slowing or changing our direction. So keep fighting, harder than ever.