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Covering Climate Now Award

July 10, 2024 By meerasub Leave a Comment

Super honored to join so many other amazing journalists honored with Covering Climate Now Awards yesterdayy! Solutions! Thanks to the great editors at The New Yorker, photographer Supranav Dash & local journalist Elizabeth Mani, the team behind the story—India’s Quest to Build the largest Solar Farms—about the world’s third largest solar farm, located in Karnataka, India.

Here’s what the judges said:

Through deep interviews with peanut farmers, school teachers, government officials, and vulnerable Dalit women — who’ve lost access to farmland they cultivated for generations — Subramanian creates a textured examination of the tradeoffs and power imbalances that the green transition might portend. “Fascinating,” judges said, Subramanian’s work quickly hooks audiences, and her “lovely writing” keeps them reading.

Thanks also to the judges for their time and Covering Climate Now for amplifying these stories that span our warming planet. Check out all the wonderful winning work HERE.

#journalism #climatechange #climatecrisis #awards #amplify

Filed Under: awards, climate change, journalism Tagged With: awards, Covering Climate Now, india, Karnataka, renewable energy, solar

India’s Quest to Build the World’s Largest Solar Farms

April 28, 2023 By meerasub Leave a Comment

endless expanse of photovoltaic panels reaching to horizon

by Meera Subramanian

“Electrify everything” is a mantra of the global transition away from fossil fuels. But what does this look like, as the entire planet attempts to transition to a clean energy system? I went to the world’s third largest solar park to find out, and the story is just out in The New Yorker  as part of their special climate issue on #bottlenecks.

Pavagada Ultra Mega Solar Park covers thirteen thousand acres, or about twenty square miles—only slightly smaller than the area of Manhattan. And the way that the public-private partnership secured all that land was through a leasing model that’s being replicated elsewhere. Is it working? I met with peanut farmers and security guards, school teachers and solar farm officials, Dalit women who’ve lost access to the lands they once worked on, now covered with solar.

Teenager standing by her family's small shop.

by Meera Subramanian

Man leads his bullock cart laden with hay along road with large power pylons and solar beside it.

by Meera Subramanian

The massive project was up and running in under four years, but now—four years since then—village roads and schools and other promised development projects are still limping along.

Village man with turban walks on road that is being built, a frontloader with gravel and a cow in the background

by Meera Subramanian

And yet, as I stood in a substation, I marveled at how clean this energy is. Is it possible to make these massive installations work for the locals who find them on their homegounds?

Engineer in Pavagada Solar Park substation, sitting by his computer adorned with a flower.

by Meera Subramanian

Thanks to the incredible editor at the New Yorker Daniel A. Gross, and the photographer @SupranavDash, whose photographs are featured in the piece. Huge appreciation to journalist Elizabeth Mani in Bengaluru for her translation and reporting assistance.

#India #solar #renewable #energy #climatechange #climatecrisis #climateemergency #renewableenergy #globalwarming #solarpanels #green #nature #solarpower #environment #cleanenergy  #climate #solarenergy#greenenergy #sustainability #design #earth #sun #environmentaljustice #justtransition #livelihood

Read the story here.

Filed Under: climate change, elemental india, journalism Tagged With: india, just transition, renewable energy, solar, The New Yorker

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