
The following is an excerpt of a blog post from Mark Spalding, a marine scientist with The Nature Conservancy. It involves time travel, World War I and World War II. It is fascinating and you can read the whole thing here.
I think you might say: “You’re right Mark, but you know it wasn’t all that bad. There were good things too.” That’s what most of us honestly believe. There was also medicine, and technology, and conservation, and wealth, and leisure, and improved equality…
This is how we need to think when we get too depressed about climate change. The prognosis is TERRIBLE:
- The sea will rise sufficient to destroy entire countries, and even the wealthy won’t escape as large parts of London, New York, the Netherlands become uninhabitable and some of our greatest culture icons and our best loved landscapes fall prey to the sea.
- The heat will be horrible, and agriculture will change almost everywhere.
- The last patches of nature will dry out or give way to floods, leaving us with an entirely human-built landscape in many areas.
- Extinction, which for the last 100 years has been something of a sporadic and newsworthy thing, will rage across the planet, just as new diseases and invasive species rise up and throttle the old world we once loved.
We can make a much better attempt at fortune-telling now thanks to modern science, and while we can’t yet predict wars, more of these seem likely, too. Perhaps through disputes of diminishing water resources. Perhaps from the wealthy countries who can no longer access the resources they want, but can afford armies and weapons. Perhaps from the growing numbers of fanatics who use doctrines of faith or of atheism to justify survival and dominance (come on, Richard Dawkins, the “survival of the fittest” is a pretty clear injunction to fight — you don’t need religion for that).
So here’s my point. The future does look bleak in some regards. But we humans are a very resourceful and resilient species. We will adapt. The threats of climate change will sometimes be cataclysmic — a famine here, an exodus there. But more typically, they will be creeping.
Venice may be kept “afloat” for 50, even 100 years through clever engineering, and by then we might even decide to move it, as we did the fantastic World Heritage mortuary of Abu Simbel in Egypt almost 50 years ago. We may conduct a “managed realignment” of our coastline. Britain will get smaller, but Cambridge-on-Sea could be quite a beautiful place. Our crops will change, but British wine, olive oil and the like will be okay, while date palms and sago fill the landscapes of Tuscany.
And with a bit of luck, the underfunded, under-appreciated armies of conservationists will support the change, helping nature to move with the changing climate, replanting, restoring and allowing change while minimising loss.
Climate change is upon us. There’s a risk that the populace will jump from disbelief to despondency, with no space for the critical emotion of outrage and the determination to do what we can to prevent runaway climate change and to start planning for how we will adapt to the slower changes.
The headlines are not the whole story. Let’s not give up before we start.
Biomimcry Innovator Jane Benyus on Learning from Nature
Jane Benyus is a renowned natural sciences writer, biologist, consultant and co-founder of the Biomimicry Guild. She is also credited with popularizing the term biomimicry, which the guild’s website explains is:
An innovation method that seeks sustainable solutions by emulating nature’s time-tested patterns and strategies, e.g., a solar cell inspired by a leaf. The goal is to create products, processes, and policies — new ways of living — that are well-adapted to life on earth over the long haul.
In the funny and inspiring video above Benyus talks about the amazing ways nature supports itself and us and what lessons it can teach us about the design of sustainable and resilient human systems (e.g. cities, economies, societies).
Her talk took place at the Cascadia Green Building Council’s 2009 Living Future conference. For those interested, the 2011 edition is coming up in April.
This is a great piece on biomimicry. Biomimicry and ecosystem services are two sides of the same coin that — along with climate change adaptation — will form the center of real environmental thinking in the next decade.
—davidconnell
Some good accounts here. I’m especially intrigued by Climate Adaptation, a subject that doesn’t receive nearly enough coverage in the environmental space.
Check out these accounts. Some interesting stuff going on in the green Tumblr world. BTW> Next year, we will be on this list.
—davidconnell