Every year on April 22, Earth Day marks the anniversary of the
birth of the modern environmental movement in 1970.
As we prepare to mark 50 years of Earth Day in 2020, let’s take a
look at the last half-century of mobilization for action:
ORIGINS OF EARTH DAY
Earth Day 1970 gave a voice to an emerging public consciousness
about the state of our planet —
In the decades leading up to the first Earth Day, Americans were
consuming vast amounts of leaded gas through massive and inefficient
automobiles. Industry belched out smoke and sludge with little fear of the
consequences from either the law or bad press. Air pollution was commonly
accepted as the smell of prosperity. Until this point, mainstream America
remained largely oblivious to environmental concerns and how a polluted
environment threatens human health.
However, the stage was set for change with the
publication of Rachel Carson’s New York Times bestseller Silent Spring in 1962.
The book represented a watershed moment, selling more than 500,000 copies in 24
countries as it raised public awareness and concern for living organisms, the
environment and the inextricable links between pollution and public health.
Earth Day 1970 would come to provide a voice
to this emerging environmental consciousness, and putting environmental
concerns on the front page.
THE IDEA FOR THE FIRST EARTH DAY
Senator Gaylord Nelson, a junior senator from Wisconsin, had long
been concerned about the deteriorating environment in the United States. Then in January 1969, he and many others
witnessed the ravages of a massive oil spill in Santa Barbara, California. Inspired by the student anti-war movement,
Senator Nelson wanted to infuse the energy of student anti-war protests with an
emerging public consciousness about air and water pollution. Senator Nelson
announced the idea for a teach-in on college campuses to the national media,
and persuaded Pete McCloskey, a conservation-minded Republican Congressman, to
serve as his co-chair. They recruited
Denis Hayes, a young activist, to organize the campus teach-ins and they choose
April 22, a weekday falling between Spring Break and Final Exams, to maximize
the greatest student participation.
Recognizing its potential to inspire all
Americans, Hayes built a national staff of 85 to promote events across the land
and the effort soon broadened to include a wide range of organizations, faith
groups, and others. They changed the
name to Earth Day, which immediately sparked national media attention, and
caught on across the country. Earth Day
inspired 20 million Americans — at the time, 10% of the total population of the
United States — to take to the streets, parks and auditoriums to demonstrate against
the impacts of 150 years of industrial development which had left a growing
legacy of serious human health impacts. Thousands of colleges and universities
organized protests against the deterioration of the environment and there were
massive coast-to-coast rallies in cities, towns, and communities.
Groups that had been fighting individually
against oil spills, polluting factories and power plants, raw sewage, toxic
dumps, pesticides, freeways, the loss of wilderness and the extinction of
wildlife united on Earth Day around these shared common values. Earth Day 1970
achieved a rare political alignment, enlisting support from Republicans and
Democrats, rich and poor, urban dwellers and farmers, business and labor
leaders. By the end of 1970, the first Earth Day led to the creation of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of other first of
their kind environmental laws, including the National Environmental Education
Act, the Occupational Safety and Health
Act, and the Clean Air Act. Two years
later Congress passed the Clean Water Act.
A year after that, Congress passed the Endangered Species Act and soon
after the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act. These laws have
protected millions of men, women and children from disease and death and have
protected hundreds of species from extinction.
1990: EARTH DAY GOES GLOBAL
As 1990 approached, a group of environmental
leaders approached Denis Hayes to once again organize another major campaign
for the planet. This time, Earth Day went global, mobilizing 200 million people
in 141 countries and lifting environmental issues onto the world stage. Earth
Day 1990 gave a huge boost to recycling efforts worldwide and helped pave the
way for the 1992 United Nations Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. It also
prompted President Bill Clinton to award Senator Nelson the Presidential Medal
of Freedom — the highest honor given to civilians in the United States — for
his role as Earth Day founder.
EARTH DAY FOR A NEW MILLENNIUM
As the millennium approached, Hayes agreed to
spearhead another campaign, this time focused on global warming and a push for
clean energy. With 5,000 environmental groups in a record 184 countries
reaching out to hundreds of millions of people, Earth Day 2000 built both
global and local conversations, leveraging the power of the Internet to
organize activists around the world, while also featuring a drum chain that
traveled from village to village in Gabon, Africa. Hundreds of thousands of
people also gathered on the National Mall in Washington, DC for a First
Amendment Rally.
30 years on, Earth Day 2000 sent world leaders
a loud and clear message: Citizens around the world wanted quick and decisive
action on global warming and clean energy.
EARTH DAY 2010
As in 1970, Earth Day 2010 came at a time of
great challenge for the environmental community to combat the cynicism of
climate change deniers, well-funded oil lobbyists, reticent politicians, a
disinterested public, and a divided environmental community with the collective
power of global environmental activism. In the face of these challenges, Earth
Day prevailed and Earth Day Network reestablished Earth Day as a major moment
for global action for the environment.
Over the decades, Earth Day Network has
brought hundreds of millions of people into the environmental movement,
creating opportunities for civic engagement and volunteerism in 193
countries. Earth Day engages more than 1
billion people every year and has become a major stepping stone along the
pathway of engagement around the protection of the planet.
EARTH DAY TODAY
Today, Earth Day is widely recognized as the
largest secular observance in the world, marked by more than a billion people
every year as a day of action to change human behavior and create global,
national and local policy changes.
Now, the fight for a clean environment
continues with increasing urgency, as the ravages of climate change become more
and more apparent every day.
As the awareness of our climate crisis grows,
so does civil society mobilization, which is reaching a fever pitch across the
globe today. Disillusioned by the low level of ambition following the adoption
of the Paris Agreement in 2015 and frustrated with international environmental
lethargy, citizens of the world are rising up to demand far greater action for
our planet and its people.
The social and cultural environments we saw in
1970 are rising up again today — a fresh and frustrated generation of young
people are refusing to settle for platitudes, instead taking to the streets by
the millions to demand a new way forward. Digital and social media are bringing
these conversations, protests, strikes and mobilizations to a global audience,
uniting a concerned citizenry as never before and catalyzing generations to join
together to take on the greatest challenge that humankind has faced.
By tapping into some of the learnings,
outcomes, and legacy of the first Earth Day, Earth Day Network is building a
cohesive, coordinated, diverse movement, one that goes to the very heart of
what EDN and Earth Day are all about — empowering individuals with the
information, the tools, the messaging and the communities needed to make an
impact and drive change.
2020 marks the 50th anniversary of Earth Day.
In honor of this milestone, Earth Day Network is launching an ambitious set of
goals to shape the future of 21st century environmentalism. Learn more here.
We invite you to be a part of Earth Day and
help write many more chapters—struggles and victories—into the Earth Day book.
https://www.earthday.org/history/
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