Friday, March 30, 2007

Moving target

With the dawning realization that global climate change is real and happening, and is attributable largely to the human activity of burning fossil fuels for energy, the immediate reaction of many folks is to ask "How can we reduce the amount of CO2 produced to meet our energy needs?" The goal, in shorthand, is "sustainable energy production and use.". The vision is a world not much different from the one we know, managed sustainably.

But this awakening to the need for energy sustainability coincides with several other, intimately connected changes of equal or greater consequence.

One of these, the end of cheap oil, is helping to persuade many to invest in sustainable energy technologies just for the financial benefits. But as the supply of cheap oil declines, the once abundant and convenient fuel that drove the massive suburbanization of America and life styles filled with stuff, will become too expensive to support this level of consumption. We will personally experience dramatic economic dislocation due the expiration of cheap oil.

Not surprisingly, cheap oil has abetted a massive increase in human populations, along side of rising expectations, commensurate with that they see in our television shows. Remove cheap oil and …?

Meanwhile, the heat retaining effect of CO2 is not felt instantaneously. Even if all emissions were to end today, the Earth would continue to warm under the CO2 blanket we now have. With or without additional CO2, the oceans will rise just from their warming and expanding, dislocating the masses of humanity that live in or close to that first foot above sea level. But also, weather will be less predictable and climates will change, causing more dislocation of peoples due to hostile weather, and unreliable water supplies and food production. And a warmer Earth means that ice is melting, removing reservoirs of water that have sustained humans for tens of thousands of years, and further filling oceans. And most of that ice, far from human populations, is above sea level. Already scientists are reporting that water percolating down to the bottom of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets is lubricating their motions, and portions of these sheets could slide into the ocean, further raising sea levels by meters, up to eight. New reports predict that new climates will be created in this new world, while old climates will simply vanish. Were these things to happen, a truly global flood would hit the reset button on human evolution.

In this context, what does "sustainable" mean? Fill in the blank in "Sustainable _____ use": Water, soils, fuel, forest, metals, food, air, space. Fill in the blank in "Sustainable ______" with any human activity or value: communities, economic development, families, political systems, social systems. Once we have admitted that our world is changing, that we face not gradually increasing pressures of population, food supply, fresh water, disease, competition for natural resources, with each other, and competition for habitat, with the natural world, but actually sudden and dramatic crises and conflicts, the question "What is sustainable?" has a new meaning. Energy production and use that does not produce CO2 emissions is only the first hurdle, and just preparation for the struggles to come. Still, we must adapt to conditions of a changing food supply, changing sea levels, insecure energy supplies, polluted water, epidemic disease in a time of massive population upheavals, governments willing to secure their borders and resource conduits with guns and blood, and the existential burden that each of us will need to bear, of a humanity bent on self-annihilation. To render the environment of the Earth hospitable to human life, or just to life, the task facing humanity is far larger than just limiting CO2 production. We must make humanity sustainable.

Many people will have no difficulty grasping this argument. The further argument may be less obvious.

"Sustainability" is a moving target. Sustainability, in so far as it can be achieved, won't manifest as a static structure. Given the hyper-kinetic energies of humanity, the ever pressing, pushing, inventing, building, destroying, rearranging, ambitions of human beings, even that system that might prove sustainable, if perpetuated, will be cast aside before being proved, before it has had a chance to work out its flaws, before it has repeated its productive cycles enough times to demonstrate that it might actually be sustainable. No, our search for sustainability will not be productive if we search for a particular formulation of, a closed ecology of, technology, political structures, or social arrangements. Our search for sustainability cannot succeed, if in our restlessness we search for control over that system that might have been sustainable.

Our search for sustainability will be productive when what we seek is meaning. Sustainability dwells in the inventors themselves, in the commitment to taking less and giving more, to making life and relationships the source of meaning, not the possession of things. Sustainability dwells in the spirit of the design, in the integration of systems of supply, consumption and recycling. Sustainability dwells in the designers, the inventors, the livers, who ask, will this system self-strengthen, or self-destroy? Sustainability resides enduringly in the people, in their freedom and chaos, seeking for that something that feels right and durable and meaningful. Embedded in the human soul is the knowledge that what is sustainable, what self-reinforces, has meaning. Profound meaning.

That is how we know what is sustainable: It has meaning.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Sustainability Awakening

Before the oceans have actually started to rise noticably, a wave has hit the consciousness of Americans and it is being felt in all quarters of society, economy, and polity. The words "sustainable" and "green" are being attached to corporate names, products, advertizing campaigns, movements and government programs, and no longer refer to fringe thinkers or fringe activists. "Sustainability", in name, is becoming a mainstream goal.

But what is "sustainable"? What does the world look like when it reaches "sustainability"? All of the habitat requirements of humanity, energy, food, housing, transportation, and of all creatures, air, water, soils, forests, and unforgettably the global climate and Earth's integrated ecology, are all in grave danger, and in the conscience of many of us cry out for dramatically new sustainable practices. The end of peak oil at the very moment of global climate change at the very moment that human populations over-reach the carrying capacity of the Earth, proposes some very traumatic scenarios for us. Does the global agenda of reducing carbon emissions reach far enough into the realm of necessity to avoid catastrophic disasters or global war?

This question is important because there are so many ways to think about sustainability. Anyone who is asking the question "What solutions are actually sustainable?" will be confounded by the depth and extent of the problem. In the worst case scenario, the ability of Earth to support life could collapse. Although unlikely, many of the not-so-bad scenarios are still horrific to contemplate, and predictable. In one very likely scenario, the Antartic and Greenland ice sheets will unload such huge masses of ice into the world's oceans that sea level could rise by 25 feet. How much of the world's population would be displaced, I do not know, but given the pattern of living close to oceans through out the world, but no one will argue that the effect would be minor. Disasters worse than all of the disasters in human history combined could befall us simultaneously, subjecting humanity to a selection event, a moment in human history when the nature of humanity would be altered by natural selection. Although this is a description of a worst case scenario, many others that fall short of this severity will still profoundly change our world. In the guaranteed minimum scenario, resource allocation, the ability of governments to manage, the ability of people to cooperate and minimze the damage, will be severely tested.

The goal of sustainability, then, is not just an issue of energy conservation and limiting green house gasses. The ethic of Sustainability, of a pattern of human behavior that, while evolving, does not exhaust the capacity of the Earth to support life, must be infused throughout all human societies. Questions of how resources are distributed, how habitats, soils and waters are cared for, how energy is tapped and distributed, how people share access to these things, and how people solve their conflicts, must all be addressed. Sustainability is found in the technology we choose, in the economies by which we live, in the cultural values we practice, and in the social structures we create.

At SolarFest 2007, one of the workshop tracks has been named "Sustainability Awakening", after the seemingly sudden (to this observer) awakening across American society (late in the wake of other nations) that the global climate and human activity are intimately connected, and that our energy use must be made "sustainable". Solarfest has spearheaded this consciousness raising since 1995, keeping the spirit of caring for the Earth alive whether in fashion or out. Now, as more and more Americans, and indeed citizens and leaders from all over the world, begin to change their habits and expectations, showing a new deference to the greater needs of the entire planet, We at Solarfest are uniquely positioned to ask the next big question: What does "sustainable" mean? What does a sustainable world look like?

In the "Sustainability Awakening" Workshop track, our goal is to educate ourselves and to seek, in very rough terms, answers to the question "What does a sustainable world look like?". To do this, we will listen to experts in many fields and from disparate points of view, and with expanded horizons, our workshops participants will share their ideas about a sustainable world, and how individuals will fit into these visions and can influence a favorable outcome. Hopefully we can instigate conversations about the meaning of "Sustainable" that will drive us further toward meaningful survival.

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Utubing Solarfest

I don't know how to do this, but here's the pitch:

Through and with other advertizing for Solarfest, we ask people to bring their video-cams. Through our volunteer network, we recruit a few people to set up an internet connection, with a Utube account. In real time, we post video to the internet of the doings at Solarfest. This becomes an enduring record of the experience for people who were there, and huge exposure for us over the year.

We are driving the awakening!

Easter Island

In a dramatic rendering of the problem of resource depletion, the people who built the iconic sculptures of heads of Easter Island also destroyed the forests of the island, thus destroying the foundation of their way of life. It is a warning that civilizations do die if they neglect sustainability. Many other similar stories can be told, and the persistance of the Nile valley civilization - for multiple thousands of years - is exemplary also.

One of the key notions of the "Sustainability Awakening" workshop series is that humanity can, we have the ability to, destroy the ability of Earth to support life. To communicate this idea emotionally, I am looking for a telling of the Story of Easter Island. The media is not essential, only that someone creative picks it up.

I cannot offer payment for this, but I would do everything I can to increase the value of the final product, including that the artist retains copyright.

These links provide details of the story of Easter Island.

Jared Diamond ~ www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/24/042.html
....(Discover Magazine 1995)
Sacred Sites Newsletter ~ www.sacredsites.com/americas/chile/easter_island.html
Wikipedia Citation ~ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_Island
Mysterious Places ~ mysteriousplaces.com/Easter_Island/index.html

April 14 Step it Up/Bill McKibben

----- Original Message -----
From: Melissa and Robin Chesnut-Tangerman
To: fcsolarfest@yahoogroups.com ; solarfest@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, March 09, 2007 11:18 AM
Subject: [fcsolarfest] April 14 Step it Up/Bill McKibben

Dear SolarFest trustees and Festival Committee members,

(If I wrote this on the forum, those of you on both lists wouldn't
get two emails, but as not everyone has signed up yet, I send this
way for the best communication.)

Below is a link, just one of many that I'm sure can be found, about
Bill McKibben (who has agreed to be Keynote Speaker for us again!)
and the Step it Up events happening around the country on April 14.

I've been talking with the organizer of the event at Middlebury, a
friend of SolarFest friend Stephen Kiernan, and SolarFest is invited
to participate. I floated the idea of us taking on a piece of
education/action: CFLs. We would also table/publicize our event.

Are there people on this list who would like to be involved? Please
reply just to me and I will collate (to reduce email traffic for all).

Spring cometh....

Melissa

www.alternet.org/envirohealth/48885/

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Introduction to Using this Blog

This blog space is an experiment in creating a shared workspace. You received and followed the link I sent, and then opened to this page.

Normally only one person has access to "post" to a blog, and this post is viewed by any interested person, who can then "comment". Blogger or blogspot, however, allows multiple post contributors, any of whom may write a new post, or comment a previous post. Contributors are added by the originator of the blog by invitation.

Under a different set of options, this blog is set to "anyone can view", but is not listed for search purposes, so it cannot be found unless the address is known to the seeker.

I would like to use new posts for new topics, and comments to continue a topic. However, any contributor can start a new topic for any reason, such as merging or splitting topics, or just because the comment train has gotten unweildy.

Viewing blogs and comments turns out to be as easy as following an internet link. Anyone who wishes to comment or post will need a Google identity, and to sign in. Then commenting or posting is as easy as following a few links, writing, and sending. The learning curve is not steep for comments or posts, and only slightly steeper if you want to start your own blog. Depending on your comfort with these things, allow 5 to 15 minutes to create a Google identity, 5 to 10 minutes to familiarize with commenting, a day (to request and have me send an invitation) to become a contributor, and 5 to 10 minutes to become familiar with posting.

If there are any needs or wants respecting the format, I can make adjustments. I can also put graphics on the page.