Our earth is the playing field, the staging ground, the backdrop of all this human drama. In the words of the late Carl Sagan, “Every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every ‘superstar,’ every ‘supreme leader,’ every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived (here) – on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves.”
Two numbers stand between our busy life on this fragile blue planet, and Sagan’s “great enveloping cosmic dark;” 383 and 350.
Since the Industrial Age, human activity has generated carbon emissions that have raised the level of atmospheric carbon to today’s level of 383 parts per million. NASA scientist James Hansen, along with leading climatologists and environmentalists, say we need to reduce that number to 350 ppm to avoid a series of catastrophic climate tipping points. These tipping points include trees migrating towards the poles; the loss of glaciers and sea ice, which reflect sunlight, causing the oceans to warm quicker; defrosting permafrost that releases uncounted tons of Methane into the atmosphere; and rising oceans. Individually, these tipping points are like sprinkling Miracle Grow on climate change, but together they equal a death sentence.
Hansen told a panel of scientists at the American Geophysical Union conference, “There looms a huge gap between what is understood (by scientists) and what is known by the public.” He says, “We are closer to a level of dangerous, human-made interference with the climate than we realize.”
But have we passed the point of no return? “Not quite,” says author and activist Bill McKibben in a recent Washington Post column. “Not any more than your doctor telling you that your cholesterol is way too high means the game is over. Much like the way your body will thin its blood if you give up cheese fries, so the Earth naturally gets rid of some of its CO2 each year. We just need to stop putting more in and, over time, the number will fall, perhaps fast enough to avert the worst damage.”
Andy Revkin writes in the New York Times; “The stakes, for all life on the planet, surpass those of any previous crisis. The greatest danger is continued ignorance and denial, which could make tragic consequences unavoidable.”
Hansen warns that we need an immediate moratorium on coal-fired power plants that can’t capture their own carbon emissions. He suggests setting a carbon price to reduce fossil fuel use, and a “reward system for improved agricultural and forestry practices that sequester carbon could remove the current CO2 overshoot.” With government policymakers on board, it appears still feasible to avert catastrophic climate change.”
There is hope! This Earth Day, imagine what a sustainable society would look like: —Grocery shopping means weekly trips to local farms to meet the people face-to-face who feed us.
—Buildings are Energy Star rated and some even produce their own electricity through solar panels. Perhaps whole neighborhoods produce their own electricity and food, and share a “cul de sac community garden and wind turbine.”
—Cars are traded in for bicycles, as public transportation improves and downtowns become more vibrant and walkable.
—Farmers plant wind turbines in farm fields for a second harvest of renewable energy. —Communities began to process municipal solid waste into ethanol for cars and electricity. Some communities even find local sources for home heating like pelletized crop residues.
—Recycling becomes a way of life as public receptacles appear on street corners and in schools.
—No one would even consider purchasing something that wasn’t made from recycled or reused materials.
—Asthma becomes a disease of the past as air quality improves, and buildings are made from materials that don’t pollute.
—Local economies thrive as “green collar” jobs create opportunities for native sons and daughters to find lucrative careers and affordable homes in their own hometowns.
—All this is happening right now, in some small town, maybe even yours. It took our grandparents 3 1/2 years to transition to a wartime economy in World War II. It is time to tap that collective well of inner strength to meet the challenge of our changing climate. We are the only force in the universe capable of saving us from ourselves.
Shawn Dell Joyce is an award-winning columnist and founder of the Wallkill River School in Orange County, N.Y. You can contact her at Shawn@ShawnDellJoyce.com.
Saturday and Sunday, April 12 -13, 2014?El Paso Zoo – 4001 E Paisano Dr, El Paso, TX 79905?10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Come celebrate our amazing planet at the El Paso Zoo! We will have several opportunities for you to see how the El Paso Zoo party’s animal style, all while learning how you can help to protect all life on Earth. This is the 9th year the El Paso Zoo has been a part of the largest combined Earth Day event in North America.
For more events visit: http://www.elpasozoo.org/Event-Calendar.php
Earth Day Festival at the El Paso Downtown Artist and Farmers Market
FREE FAMILY EVENT! The El Paso Downtown Artist and Farmers Market has teamed up with the City of El Paso’s Office of Sustainability to hold a Earth Day Festival in the Union Plaza District on April 19, 2014 from 9am – 1pm!
This year’s event will feature arts, crafts and produce vendors, green activities for kids of all ages, cooking and gardening demonstrations, food, entertainment and educational booths promoting recycling, waste reduction and the preservation of the environment and natural resources. The event is FREE and open to the public.
FREE Activities and Entertainment Include:
o Live Music from Our Friend the Mountain and the Bowie High School Mariachi and Folklorico Group
o Live Micro-Farm Petting Zoo
o Gardening, Aquaponic, composting and solar energy demonstrations
o Hands-on art activities for kids from local artists and organizations including:
o Oscar Moya’s Desert Weeds Printmaking
o Latinitas
o Bike Blender Green Smoothies
o Seed paper demonstration
o Mini Bike Sculptures
o Native Tree Giveaway
o Bike Clinic from Velo Paso
o Cooking Demonstration from the Green Ingredient
o Free Yoga Class from Hot Box Yoga
o Coffee Brewing Demo from Hello Day Café
o Arts, Crafts and Produce Vendors
o Food Trucks
*Kids activities sponsored by: U.S. Green Building Council – Chihuahuan Desert Chapter (USGBC- CDC)
* Musical performances sponsored by: Eco El Paso
The Downtown Artist and Farmers Market is located in Union Plaza (Anthony St) close to Union Depot. Parking available on-street and in multiple parking garages close to Union Depot. Visitors are encouraged to ride their bikes, ride the Sun Metro Bus or carpool to the market!
© 2012. All Rights Reserved. Created by Zerge for themeforest.net