Plus: The mindfulness industry is cashing in on stress. [Quartz]( Sponsored by Good morning, Quartz readers! Itâs early days in the new US presidency, but Joe Biden could hardly have presented a [cleaner break from his predecessor]( on climate change. On his first day in office, Biden signed an executive order for the US to rejoin the Paris Agreement, followed by another that [revokes the permit for the Keystone XL oil pipeline]( and directs all federal agencies to âimmediately review and take appropriate action to addressâ at least 100 Donald Trump-era policies or regulations that are damaging to the environment or public health. Bidenâs administration followed that up by [announcing]( a whoâs-who of progressive thinkers joining the Department of Energy, including positions focused on environmental justice and niche but essential technologies like carbon capture. He also [re-established]( a panel tasked with calculating the âsocial cost of carbon,â a metric used to approximate climate damage that is essential for developing new regulations. And John Kerry, the new special climate envoy, [has already set goals]( for global renewable energy deployment and reforestation. Thereâs a lot more to come: Administration officials have said they will develop new rules for methane emissions and vehicle mileage standards, restore acreage that Trump cut from national monuments, and pile money into a forthcoming $2 trillion pandemic stimulus package to pay for grid updates, electric vehicle charging infrastructure, hydrogen fuel, and other clean energy priorities. Bidenâs [whole-of-government approach]( to climate change means that more of his agenda is likely to succeed, and faster, than Barack Obamaâs, which rested mostly on a few flagship initiatives. But with a more conservative Supreme Court, the inevitable legal challenges from fossil fuel industry groups, and a pandemic recovery that will be powered to some extent by oil and gas, Bidenâs battle is still uphill. Still, one thing is clear: Trumpâs [damaging climate legacy]( is already going up in smoke. And with the US reasserting its climate credibility on the global stage, big emitters like China and Brazil will find it harder to wriggle out of making stronger carbon commitments. âPretty much everything [Trump] did will ultimately be swept away,â says Dan Lashof, US director for the World Resources Institute. âThe biggest problem is that we lost four years, and thereâs a lot of catching up to do.â âTim McDonnell Sponsor content by Facebook Facebook supports updated internet regulations to set clear rules for addressing todayâs toughest challenges, including:
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- Reforming Section 230 [Learn More]( SHARE AND EARN REWARDS Time to get tote-ally excited. Share the Quartz Daily Brief with friends, family, and co-workers and youâll earn this stylish Quartz tote bag. Fill it with bottles of wine, a bushel of berries, or a bunch of lavender-scented hand sanitizer. [Start referring now]( and youâll win other premium Quartz swag too. Five things from Quartz we especially liked Thereâs gold in them thar heels. Whatâs more precious than gold? A new pair of 1460 Dr. Martens. Since 1960 when the humble boot was created as footwear for the working class, its price has appreciated twelvefold, more than double the rate of gold. John Detrixhe explores [Dr. Martensâ journey]( from the feet of factory workers to those of Instagram influencers as it prepares for its highly anticipated IPO on the London Stock Exchange. âMichael Coren, senior reporter Make Hong Kong great again. Throughout Hong Kongâs democracy movement, many activists cheered on Donald Trump, who they saw as being tough on China. That irony was laid bare on Jan. 6, when an attack on the US Capitolâprotesting the results of a democratic electionâstirred support in Hong Kong, where China last year took a fair election off the table. In this thoughtful look at the complexities of comparing domestic politics, [Mary Hui raises the question]( How does a movement resisting authoritarian rule justify advocating for a political figure with deeply authoritarian instincts? âKira Bindrim, executive editor The best of times, the worst of times. The Covid-19 pandemic is often called a âgreat equalizer.â But when the world looks back at how India fared in 2020, it will be hard to ignore how it was a year when economic inequality became starker than ever before. In this story, Manavi Kapur highlights how Indiaâs rich, most notably Mukesh Ambani, used the pandemic as [an opportunity to create more wealth]( while the poor struggled to fight hunger, with 10 million migrant workers making arduous journeys on foot. âItika Sharma Punit, Quartz India editor Hanging by a thread. Ethiopiaâs rising garment industry was supposed to help transform its agricultural economy into a prosperous manufacturing force. But it now faces an uncertain future as fighting fueled by ethnic conflict roils the countryâs Tigray region. Dorothée Baumann-Pauly, who studied Ethiopiaâs garment industry in 2019, examines how the violence [threatens to dash the countryâs hopes]( of turning into a global clothing producer and outlines how Ethiopia might keep it from being derailed. âMarc Bain, fashion reporter Vaccination dissuasion. At the beginning of the pandemic, China generated soft power for itself by sending out masks and personal protective equipment across the globe. Now the tables have turned: In an effort to bolster its own Covid-19 vaccines, Chinaâs state-run media has been casting doubt on [the safety of shots]( from the USâs Pfizer and Germanyâs BioNTech, Mary Hui reports. As poorer countries seek to bring in vaccines from any source they can get, China dissuading them from certain vaccines may be the most dangerous pandemic misinformation yet. âKatherine Ellen Foley, science and health reporter One membership thing that made us ð§ââï¸ Feeling stressed out about the world? Thereâs an app for thatâactually itâs more like thousands of appsâcatering to needs like starting a meditation practice, moving your body, focusing better, or hearing a celebrity read you a bedtime story. Business is booming as stressed-out people seek mindfulness from their phones, in their cars, or at work. [Read our guide on the business of mindfulness](. ⦠Need more ways to achieve inner peace? [Try a Quartz membership free for seven days](. Weâre obsessed with dry ice [A gif of dry ice] Giphy Our newest pandemic hero. Dry ice is a bit of a misnomerâalthough it is indeed not wet, itâs also not ice. Rather, itâs the solid form of carbon dioxide, and it has the ability to keep things like vaccines, say, at very, very cold temperatures. From a commodity standpoint, itâs never been hotter, and though thereâs no word of a shortage yet, the fear of running out of the spooky stuff lurks in the minds of manufacturers and public health officials. [The Quartz Weekly Obsession has a very cool read for you](. Get the Weekly Obsession email sent to your inbox, for free! [â¡ Sign me up!]( Subscribe with one click. Four things from elsewhere that made us smarter The GOPâs post-Trump rebrand. How will the party of Lincoln account and atone for its complicity in enabling a dangerous and corrupt president for four years? [Pretend it never did]( writes McKay Coppins for the Atlantic. With a few exceptions among the conscientious objectors or the MAGA diehards, âfor the majority of GOP officials, apparatchiks, and commentators who sacrificed their dignity at the altar of Trump, a collective case of amnesia seems destined to set in the moment he leaves office.â âAnnabelle Timsit, geopolitics reporter Life beyond Earth. For many months the news on our planet has been exhausting. Reading about âOumuamua, improbably but not impossibly a solar-powered, city-block-wide, fabric-thin sail of an alien spacecraft, accelerating toward us four years ago, I felt my mind open up. In the New Yorker, Elizabeth Kolbertâs [account of the controversy]( the UFO sparked in the field of astrophysics is a good reminder that truth and progress sometimes require us to risk being wildly wrong. âKatherine Bell, editor in chief Hanging Qs. As US president Joe Biden was sworn into office on Jan. 20, one group was particularly outraged by the routine civility of the inauguration: followers of QAnon, a right-wing conspiracy theory propagator. Without Trumpâs tweets to guide them and major mainstream conservatives easing off the vitriol, the community [has started to implode]( write Tina Nguyen and Mark Scott for Politico. As more right-wing leaders call for respect for the current president, regardless of his views, itâs not clear which direction conspiracists will take from here. âKatherine Ellen Foley, science and health reporter Keeping mum. If Iâm being honest, my personal pandemic experience has often been nothing short of glorious. An overscheduled person in my pre-Covid life, I have relished the luxurious stretches of time with my little family. Writing for the New York Times, [Merissa Nathan Gerson tells the story]( of a lockdown that braided together herself, her mother, and her community into something beautiful and lasting. (Still, itâd be lovely to have plans once in a while.) âSusan Howson, email editor One thing that kept us entertained Itâs international heist season. [Netflixâs new French-language series Lupin]( is the perfect escapist binge this weekend to remind you adventure still exists in the world. Omar Sy plays a gentleman thiefâimagine Dana Carvey in The Master of Disguise, except with the charm of James Bondâout for revenge against the powerful French family responsible for his fatherâs death. The manageable five episodes fly by, as our thiefâs schemes get progressively more treacherous the closer he gets to the truth about his fatherâs demise. âAdam Epstein, entertainment reporter Our best wishes for a relaxing but thought-filled weekend. Please send any news, comments, heist ideas, and the truth thatâs out there to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by [downloading our app]( and [becoming a member](. Todayâs Weekend Brief was brought to you by Tim McDonnell and Susan Howson. [facebook]( [twitter]( [external-link]( Enjoying Quartz Daily Brief? Forward it to a friend! They can [click here]( to sign up. If youâre looking to unsubscribe, [click here](. Quartz | 675 Avenue of the Americas, 4th Fl | New York, NY 10010 | United States Copyright © 2021 Quartz, All rights reserved.