Will Steger: Climate change now visible in Minnesota
Go Deeper.
Create an account or log in to save stories.
Like this?
Thanks for liking this story! We have added it to a list of your favorite stories.
Minnesota Will Steger is best known for his expeditions to places like the North Pole and Antarctica. He's the founder of the Will Steger Foundation, and has been a prominent voice on climate change for more than a decade.
While his original work brought stories of climate change from the Arctic, the movement is growing because people can now witness the change in their backyards.
"I see a big change in public opinion in the last two or three years because it's no longer an eyewitness in the Arctic, it's an eyewitness in Minnesota," Steger told Tom Weber on The Daily Circuit.
Steger led a historic trip to the North Pole in 1986, the first recorded dog sled journey there without resupply:
Turn Up Your Support
MPR News helps you turn down the noise and build shared understanding. Turn up your support for this public resource and keep trusted journalism accessible to all.
Today, that trip wouldn't be possible, he said.
"You couldn't do it because of the open ocean," he said. "In order to the reach the pole right now you'd need some sort of floatation. It's totally changed."
Steger now spends some of his time near Ely, Minn.
"What we're seeing up there are these incredibly powerful winds that carry heavy rain and what they do is knock down the virgin pines, so there's no seed trees," he said. "Then the deciduous trees take over. I've seen a drastic change in the leaf trees taking over the coniferous."
Steger turned 70 last year and said he hopes to see measurable change in his lifetime.
"I hope before I'm over the horizon here we'll be off of coal for sure and what you'll see is most of our energy economy will be within the state," he said. "It's going to be a much cleaner, prosperous environment, but it will be a changed world."