
Peter Friederici
Peter Friederici is an award-winning freelance journalist who writes about science, nature, and the environment from his home in Arizona. His articles, essays, and books tell stories of people, places, and the links between them.
Why have we been slow to address climate change? It comes down to story–how we understand the world through story, and how when the world is telling us things we don’t want to know we desperately look for stories that will help us through our mental discomfort. That’s the subject of Beyond Climate Breakdown: Envisioning New Stories of Radical Hope, my new book from MIT Press.
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A dramatic change in presidential leadership means it’s time to rethink how the United States deals with climate change. What’s to be expected of the new Biden administration?
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A pocket-sized field guide to one of the deepest places on Earth! I contributed about twenty pages to this sweet and practical anthology of history, lore, and practical tips. It’s a true insider’s guide to a place that doesn’t really come alive until you are, well, inside it.
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Since 2015 I’ve been proud to be part of the stable of writers contributing to the Letters from Home column in the weekly Flagstaff Live. Collectively we explore experiences of life and home, in Flagstaff and elsewhere.
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The Flagstaff Arts Council commissioned eight Arizona artists to explore the landscape of water in the arid Southwest in Parched, an exhibit on display at the Coconino Center for the Arts from August 2020 through January 2021. It’s now on display at the Amerind Foundation in Dragoon, Arizona. I wrote a sequence of four essays […]
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In Paraguay, yerba mate is a beloved drink. And if it’s grown sustainably, it just might provide a means for struggling rural communities to provide for their future. A report from The Conversation.
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You know how you catch yourself looking at the same sorts of things time and again? What’s your list? Here’s mine.
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The quintessential landscape of climate change lies in on the Colorado Plateau: it’s Lake Powell, where no one can be sure what will be land, what water. Photographer Peter Goin and I collaborated on a beautiful book about a place where beauty itself is a question mark.
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The land has changed. But so have the ways we look at the land–whether we live there, or merely visit. An environmental history of the rangelands of east-central Arizona, based on an oral history with a long-time rancher. It’s a chapter in an anthology published by University of Nevada Press.
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A story commissioned by National Parks magazine, about the impact of the Navajo Power Plant on the local people living nearby.
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How do migrating birds find their way at night? An overview of recent research on the topic, from Audubon magazine.
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We’ve tried denial, and now grudging acceptance. Neither has worked so well. Maybe Germany provides a better model for how to talk about–and effectively deal with–climate change. A column from the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
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After a long haul, production for the new film from my friends at IDEALab is complete! I did the screenwriting: Watch for the documentary Taking Earth’s Temperature: Delving into Climate’s Past, and learn how scientists are able to monitor past climates with amazing accuracy. The film will screen on PBS beginning August 16.
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The sweltering heat island that envelops Phoenix every summer is Phoenicians’ own fault. But can clever design help lower the mercury? An assessment from a High Country News special issue.
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Why would beleaguered New Mexico farmers share scarce water supplies with a nondescript songbird? Read the full account of a new chapter in the West’s water wars in this Audubon feature, with photos by Mike Lundgren.
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Even as it continues through a huge build-out of renewable energy, Germany continues to rely on the world’s most polluting fuel for a big percentage of its electricity. A report for InsideClimate News.
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The Southwest’s overgrown ponderosa pine forests need help. A broad-based restoration initiative in Arizona aims for long-term ecological integrity, and for good jobs in the woods. Read the story, and see Chris Crisman’s splendid photos, at Nature Conservancy Magazine.
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Germany’s Energiewende or “energy transition” is far from a smooth path. One of the speed bumps on the way is a giant new coal-fired power plant under construction in Hamburg. A site report for InsideClimate News.
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It’s a national project at least as ambitious as America’s effort to reach the moon, and fraught with obstacles. Yet Germany is serious about switching to renewable energies while switching off nuclear and fossil-fuel electricity. A progress report for InsideClimate News.
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In a Swedish fjord, European researchers are conducting an ambitious experiment aimed at better understanding how ocean acidification will affect marine life. A field report for Yale Environment 360.
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