In a few days, the U.N. climate change conference, COP26 , is set to begin in Glasgow. One key agenda item is limiting methane emissions  — and the problem starts very close to home:
The Washington Post: Russia allows methane leaks at planet’s peril  Bloomberg: Turkmenistan’s Dirty Secret  Financial Times: Methane leak near COP26 venue underscores emissions challenge  We've now had 30 years of international climate conferences . These charts looked back at what's been achieved and what still needs to be done: 
The New York Times: Yes, There Has Been Progress on Climate. No, It’s Not Nearly Enough  Bloomberg: How to Stop 30 Years of Failing to Cut Emissions  Quartz: The only country pulling its weight on climate change is The Gambia  Quarks: Ist das noch Wetter oder schon Klimawandel?  And even as the world tries to limit carbon emissions, some industries are still digging themselves in deeper:
Bloomberg: The Chinese Companies Polluting the World More Than Entire Nations  Bloomberg: The World Is Nowhere Near to Kicking Its Dirtiest Habit , October 20 CNN: West Virginia's reliance on coal is getting more expensive, and Joe Manchin's constituents are footing the bill  Speaking of West Virginia... The U.S. Senate is still struggling to pass its budget bill . Major programs are almost certain to be cut and reduced:
The New York Times: The Democrats Have a Lot of Cutting to Do  The New York Times: The World ‘Has Found a Way to Do This’: The U.S. Lags on Paid Leave  And there were charts on the White House  and the Supreme Court  as well:
FiveThirtyEight: Biden Has Lost Support Across All Groups Of Americans — But Especially Independents And Hispanics  Los Angeles Times: What’s on Kamala Harris’ calendar?  FiveThirtyEight: The Supreme Court’s Conservative Revolution Is Already Happening  In elections , we saw Republicans losing trust in democracy, final results of the California recall, a demographic breakdown of voting behavior in Berlin — and a historical look at the alternative:
The Economist: Republicans’ trust in democracy has plunged since 2016  The San Francisco Chronicle: The final Newsom recall results are in at last. They show California is getting even more polarized  Tagesspiegel: Berlins politische Landschaften: So unterschiedlich wählen arme, alte und religiöse Kieze  The Economist: As Sudan’s government wobbles, coups are making a comeback  There are three topics you can always count on in a Data Vis Dispatch; we've covered climate and politics, which means it's time for COVID . Everyone is trying predict how the second pandemic winter will compare to the first :
Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.  The New York Times: What Previous Covid-19 Waves Tell Us About the Virus Now  Financial Times: From Baltic to Balkans, Covid crisis engulfs central and eastern Europe  Financial Times: Covid calculus shifts as NHS faces ‘extremely challenging’ winter  There's no end in sight for the pandemic's social and economic disruptions :
NBC News: School enrollment plummeted in 2020, data shows  The Economist: What’s plaguing the American economy? According to the Fed, it’s shortages  But the good news, as always, remains — vaccines work, more people are getting them every day, and good policy choices can make it happen faster: 
New Statesman: How Covid-19 vaccines have dramatically reduced deaths  Duc-Quang Nguyen: "L'estimation du temps nécessaire pour atteindre les objectifs vaccinaux du CF (et espérer une levée des mesures sanitaires)," October 20 (Tweet  The Economist: The impact of vaccine mandates is modest, but potentially crucial  This week brought data on race and segregation: 
Bloomberg: Is Your Company Diverse? See How Top Employers Stack Up  The Washington Post: To stop a scrapyard, some protesters in a Latino community risked everything  The Tributary: Explore Florida’s diversity — and segregation — with The Tributary’s newest tool  As well as charts of everything from television genres  to border arrests  to endangered bumblebees :
Jon Ollington: "In 2009-10 the median goal kick length in #laliga was 58 metres. Pep's team were 20 metres shorter than 2nd place Real Madrid and almost half the league average. Today, the median goal kick length across Europe is around 40 metres. Playing out from the back is a new phenomenon," October 19 (Tweet  FlowingData: Television Genres Over Time  The Economist: America is the big winner of China’s crypto crackdown , October 22 The Washington Post: Border arrests have soared to all-time high, new CBP data shows  The San Francisco Chronicle: Bay Area Transportation Project Road Map , October 20 The Wall Street Journal: The Bumblebee’s Plight: Why It Is Disappearing in the U.S.  An unexpected theme of the week was ships and the sea — past and present: 
El País: Los vikingos ya estaban en América hace ahora justo 1.000 años , October 20 Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.  CNN: Visualizing California's stunning shipping gridlock  Le Monde: Au large de la Libye, les pêcheurs italiens pris dans les filets de la lutte contre les migrants  And actually, we covered the other elements — fire, air, and earth  — as well:
The New York Times: See How the Dixie Fire Created Its Own Weather  Reuters: The skies over the South China Sea  John Saeki/Agence France-Presse: "China hounds Taiwan with "greyzone" war plane incursions," October 22 (Tweet  NBC News: Where America's pumpkins come from