Jason Wexler and his son Ezra van Schaardenburg, 5, cook potatoes for brunch together on an induction cooktop at their home in San Francisco on Sunday, May 31, 2026. Wexler and his wife Karina van Schaardenburg cut down the usage of fossil fuels in their home and use electic appliances in substitution.

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Writer Laura Fraser was interested in climate change but felt a sense of powerlessness.

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“In the face of this enormous existential problem, what does recycling and riding a bicycle amount to?” Fraser said, sitting in her San Francisco apartment. “It just felt like nothing, just a drop in the ocean.”

Then, a few years ago, she was hired to edit a book called Electrify, by Saul Griffith. Working through it, she changed her perspective.

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