Showing posts with label interconnectedness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interconnectedness. Show all posts

Our Place in the Natural World

This event will take place on Thursday Nov 28, 2013, at Southminster United Church, 15 Aylmer Avenue (at Bank Street), Ottawa, Ontario at 7 PM.
 
What IS the natural world trying to tell us ? Are we listening? What can be learned from trees? Are we ready ? Is it time to start rewilding the planet?

The speakers will be J.B. Mackinnon and Diana Beresford-Kroeger - Ottawa International Writers Festival.

These are two of Canada's most exciting writers and ecological thinkers. They will explore our relationship with nature and the ways we can meaningully re-connect with the world around us.

Our Place in the Natural World

• J.B. Mackinnon Author of The 100-Mile Diet and The Once & Future World)
• Diana Beresford-Kroeger Author of The Global Forest and The Sweetness Of A Simple Life

Hosted by OIWF Founding Director Neil Wilson

Click here for more information.

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Relationship Between Warming Over Land and in the Sea

As we continue to pour billions of tons of greenhouse gas (GHG) pollution into our atmosphere each year the evidence continues to show that this is warming our climate both on land and at sea. The abundance of evidence for global warming comes from temperature records, atmospheric pollution readings, in ice cores and statistical analysis. A couple of recent studies reiterate this warming trend and help to explain the relationship between warming on land and at sea.

Since the 1980s each successive decade has been hotter than the one before.  Not a single month’s temperatures have fallen below the 20th-century average since February 1985. Half the world’s population is now too young to have lived through the last colder-than-average month. In worldwide temperature records going back to 1880, the 19 hottest years have all occurred since 1985. Eight of the nine hottest years on record were in the last decade.

Warming Over Land

According to a new study directed by Gilbert Compo a scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration there is strong evidence for global warming over land. Compo is a researcher at NOAA's Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado.

Compo and his colleagues reviewed the period from 1871 through 2010 using something called 20CR analysis which relies largely on barometers. According to their research, since 1952, the Earth has shown a rise of 0.78 degrees Celsius, which Compo termed "statistically indistinguishable" from 1.18 degrees Celsius. The study also showed an increase from 1901 to 2010 of 0.99 degrees Celsius,

What makes this study unique is that in addition to using barometric pressure rather than temperatures, it refutes the contention that this warming trend is caused by urban infrastructure which generates and retains heat.

Compo expressed the hope "that the general public and decision makers, no matter what their political affiliation, would recognize that the warming of the land areas is real. Even the barometers can tell that the planet is warming."

Warming of the Oceans

Our oceans may explain why steadily rising atmospheric temperatures appears to have plateaued in the last few years. This appears to be due to the fact that the ocean is absorbing more heat. This finding was reported in a study published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, a publication of the American Geophysical Union.

Here is how the USA Today reported the study's findings:

“[H]eat absorbed by the world's oceans has increased significantly...prompting the study co-authors to say that the warming has been diverted and is heating the oceans instead of the atmosphere.”

Conclusion

The warming of the oceans will increase the severity of extreme weather events, it is also killing sea life.  If we continue to do nothing (or too little) the world will get much hotter. As Fredd Krupp said, "We have reached the moment for action. There’s a new national conversation under way about how best to bolster our defenses against the extreme weather events." He goes on to suggest that a carbon cap and a carbon fee would go a long way to help us reduce GHGs and generate revenue.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Opportunity Green Business Conference Networking Event and Awards

The 4th Annual Opportunity Green Business Conference is one of the premiere green events, it provides valuable social networking opportunities for entrepreneurs. The conference linked Fortune 500 companies, exhibitors and entrepreneurs to green industry professionals with the goal of cultivating better, more sustainable business practices.

Opportunity Green (OG) helps hundreds of sustainable companies to present their innovations and programs to the wider business community. OG is a company where design, technology and sustainable business converge.

The Opportunity Green Business Conference is described as a conference to "connect, collaborate and capitalize on the new sustainable economy." The event took place on September 22nd-24th at Los Angeles Center Studios, and featured keynote lectures, innovative exhibitions, as well as competitions to award the most innovative green product and startup business of 2010.

This year's award winners were Life Box and Zimride, both of which were selected by the conference attendees via text and twitter votes.

Life Box is a company that is focused on more sustainable packaging materials, it was the Innovative Product Design award winner.

Zimride, a sustainable rideshare service, won the Innovative Eco Startup Award, it also received more than $26,000 in marketing and business services from BBMG and Office Depot.

Other event highlights included: Gensler Architects’ design experience featuring iOS Lighting; Art Center School of Design Sustainability product exhibit featuring a central Geodesic dome; LACCD’s NEXTREND Transportation Pavilion with prototypes from the X-Prize winners; The three automotive X-Prize winners presented how it is possible for cars to get 100 MPG/MPG-equivalent; Real time crowd sourcing and feedback for 7th Generations scalability dilemma regarding distributing with large scale retailers.

For more information, go to OpportunityGreen.com.


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World Animal Day 2010

World Animal Day is celebrated each year on October 4. It started in Florence, Italy in 1931 at a convention of ecologists as a way of highlighting the plight of endangered species. On this day, animal life in all its forms is celebrated, and special events are planned on locations all over the globe.

October 4 was originally chosen for World Animal Day because it is the feast day of Francis of Assisi, a nature lover and patron saint of animals and the environment. Numerous churches throughout the world observe the Sunday closest to 4 October with a Blessing for the Animals.

However, World Animal Day is not an exclusively Christian event, the day is observed by animal-lovers of all beliefs, nationalities and backgrounds. World Animal Day is not linked to any one individual, organization, or campaign, but belongs to everyone.

The number of World Animal Day events taking place throughout the world has increased year upon year and with your help we can ensure the trend continues. World Animal Day is reporting that in 2010, hundreds of events are taking place in more than 73 countries around the globe.

For more information go to World Animal Day.


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G20 Must Cooperate for a Sustainable Recovery

The cooperation of G20 member states is the key to a sustainable recovery. Although the global financial crisis revealed the interconnectedness of the modern economy, it also underscored the importance of cooperation.

The Toronto G20 meeting was billed as a final checkup to ensure agreements reached in Pittsburgh would be finalized at a November gathering in Korea, where leaders would then plan for a post-crisis world.

"Our highest priority in Toronto must be to safeguard and strengthen the recovery," President Barack Obama wrote in a letter to his G20 colleagues. "We worked exceptionally hard to restore growth; we cannot let it falter or lose strength now."

"This crisis proved, and events continue to affirm, that our national economies are inextricably linked," Obama said. "And just as economic turmoil in one place can quickly spread to another, safeguards in each of our nations can help protect all nations."

In 2009, despite disagreements between wealthier and developing nations, the financial and climate change crises spurred unprecedented levels of global cooperation.

In 2010, although we are in recovery, a slowdown has been signaled by the Economic Cycle Research Institute's weekly leading index.

Issues that threaten the recovery include Europe's debt difficulites, slow US job growth, and an unstable US housing market. With interest rates near zero, the most powerful policy tool remaining is resuming asset purchases, but printing money will cause inflation.

Economic uncertainty is highlighting disagreements between the United States, Europe and China.

Jose Vinals, director of the IMF's monetary and capital markets department, said G20 unity was one of the biggest positive economic developments in recent years, but disunity would damage the recovery. "It's fundamental that you keep your house in order, but it's also fundamental that when the going gets rough, you cooperate," he said at a conference in Washington.
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The Religious Psychology of Green

Green is no longer the exclusive domain of liberal intellectuals or the politically correct. Where other brands need to create an experience, the essence of a Green brand is already widely engrained in the popular imagination.

Green’s mass appeal has caused more than a few observers to make religious comparisons. This comparison is not without merit. Green’s popularity is at least partially attributable to the fact that it is seamlessly compatible with the teachings of most religions. In the east, religious traditions like Taoism emphasize harmony and balance. Veneration of the natural world is at the heart of Shinto. Traditional Aboriginal cultures are emphatic about the importance of their relationship to the earth and its creatures. As one Australian Aboriginal writer explained, “Our spirituality is a oneness and an interconnectedness with all that lives and breathes, even with all that does not live or breathe.”

Buddhism offers an inherently Green philosophy. “Caring for the environment is a natural part of the Buddhist path. The Buddha encouraged us to understand more deeply the underlying unity and interconnectedness of life. Values such as simplicity of lifestyle, sharing with others, taking responsibility for one’s actions, and compassion for all living things have always been at the heart of the tradition.”

As explained in the Big Green Jewish Web Site, "[The] moral imperative sublimely reflected in Isaiah, the Psalms, the Ten Commandments, impels us to be engaged on a perpetual process of repair of the world (Tikkun Olam)."

In the Islamic tradition, Green is more than a sacred color. In Malaysia environmentalism has spread throughout the intellectual and activist communities. And in the UK a group of Muslims have declared June 3rd "Green Islam Day." A conference scheduled for the same day will review Muslim environmental efforts in the UK and around the World.

Even the Christian right, traditionally Green reticent, is showing signs of change. As reported by Bill Moyers of PBS, a group of 86 respected evangelical Christian leaders from across America initiated a campaign for environmental reform. And as reported on MSNBC, Southern Baptists are now fully committed to Green.

In the western world, the similarities between the dominant religion and Green run deep. Like historical Christianity, the new Green religion grants dispensation, sells indulgences, and mitigates guilt. Buying into the Green movement is psychologically similar to receiving the rites of communion or confession. Through the symbolic medium of a host or penance, we are cleansed of our sins. Similarly, when we make a Green purchase, we are paying to assuage our guilt. Carbon credits are like the selling of indulgences by the pre-Lutheran Catholic Church. And our efforts to restore order can be traced to the rites of sacrifice which lead back into the primeval mists of man's beginning.

Many of the mythological motifs of Christianity have parallels with Green. The Garden of Eden is like the earth before the rise of man. Heaven is envisioned as a place where we live in harmony. And our environmental footprints bear similarities to original sin. The language of redemption and salvation can be transposed with words like sustainability and responsibility. And the apocalyptic end times can be construed as a toxic environment within a hostile climate.

Despite widespread acceptance, some religious conservatives seem to perceive Green as a threat. It is as though they fear that Green may replace God, and they may be right. Perhaps it is more accurate to say that religious notions of a compassionate, interdependent universe espouse an inherent ecological sensitivity.

Green responds to some of the same deeply embedded psychological needs as religion. In our secular world, it is easy to see why Green captivates widespread attention. Green’s appeal transcends cultures and demographics. The Green movement is now a universal belief system. This explains why companies are clamoring to be identified with Green. For marketers and business owners Green psychology is like the Rosetta Stone. If understood correctly, it can help decipher buying behaviors and even provide keys to one of the largest markets the world has ever known.