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Articles from December 2010

Urban Homestead - Path to Freedom Project

This is a pretty amazing story of a family that's taken enormous strides towards self-sufficiency.  They call their project Path to Freedom.  We've come across other success stories out there, but these people do an amazing job of documenting each improvement they've made-- from growing 6000 lbs of produce on their 1/10 acre of land, to installing solar panels, and numerous other projects.  Incredibly inspiring to see what can be done with a bit of quiet persistence and elbow grease. 

posted @ Tuesday, 28 December 2010 3:34 p.m. by Chris Tobias

Happiness comes at a price... interesting study/infographics

Not sure I entirely agree with the following article/study, but it poses interesting food for thought.  The "Happy Planet Index" reveals the ecological efficiency that delivers human happiness [research report found here].  A nice and tidy breakdown of the research can be found here.  The basic premise: the amorpheous concept of "happiness" has been mapped worldwide.  Based on the research/mapping technique, colour codes are assigned to countries that rate their happiness-- appears as green.  High correlation here between material "stuff" prosperity and being "happy" -- note many Western countries fitting this profile.  

Right, so then the research goes on to explore life expectancy which correlates somewhat similarly to GDP.  Similar picture emerges.

 

Then we move on to ecological destruction-- the process by which the local environment is destroyed to create material prosperity, and calculate each nation's footprint accordingly.  Red is bad.

 

 Western countries coming in with big big footprints.  No surprise here.  Then demographers smush all these three data sets (happiness + life expectancy/GDP + environmental footprint) to reveal how each country is really doing.  In this case, green is good, red is bad:

The whole picture looks pretty bleak once you combine these factors.  Can't say that outcome is particularly surprising. 

What's worth further questioning is their underlying definition of happiness having such a strong correlation with materialism.  People can be happy without stuff, and many would comment that travels in developing countries reveals people who are, perhaps sometimes surprisingly, very happy-- even if they have a minimum of material wealth.  What they do have is community, family, cultural identity, traditions, etc.-- intangible things that we often forget can make us quite happy.

So, first off the bat, why define happiness for this study's sake in such close terms with material wealth?

Second, why is it that Western countries that have astounding rates of depression, anxiety, use of medications/substances to tackle those problems, suicides, etc. are seen as "more happy"?

Whether you're talking UK, US, Japan, or NZ-- each of these developed nations (and plenty of others) is gripped with many ills that are characteristic of a severely unhappy population.

While this study is interesting in what it proposes, a redefinition of happiness from step one might be in order to get a more accurate sense of what it actually means to be happy from a non-materialistic approach.  It would also be interesting to weigh those socially negative pressures in Western countries in a more realistic and accurate way. 

Still, ambitious project, interesting findings, and we'd like to see this tweaked and updated in the future.

posted @ Friday, 17 December 2010 5:45 p.m. by Chris Tobias

Forward's Chris Tobias to deliver guest lectures at LKY School, NUS School of Geography, SG Polytech

... busy Q1 ahead with guest lectures planned.... stay tuned for more info.

posted @ Friday, 17 December 2010 6:07 p.m. by Chris Tobias

Cancun COP 16, Peak Fertiliser, and the BioChar Debate Continues: Resource Roundup

Climate Change: a quick recap on Cancun Climate Talks:

 

 

Check out the debrief on SustainableBusiness.com.  A few minor points were agreed on, including a target of stopping climate change at (an admittedly severe and totally inadequate) 2 degrees Celsius (bad news as runaway climate change could easily cut much higher and action on greenhouse gas emissions is slow to come).  Also, a Green Climate Fund of US$100bn is to be established to help poor nations save forests and develop cleantech.  Where's the bling coming from?  Good question... to be decided.  At least they got that far.  No replacement for/extension to Kyoto seems to be in the cards as big polluting countries are still in deadlock.

Forest Stewardship: At least not all the news out of Mexico was bad-- local forest management programmes handled at a community level are turning some very positive results on economic, environmental, and social fronts.  Model worth repeating elsewhere perhaps? 

Peak Fertiliser: As with other commodities in deminishing supply, fertiliser is likely going up which will have knock-on effects for conventional food production.  Natural gas is getting in tighter supply, and it is a major ingredient in making ammonia in fertilisers.  Phosophorous is also getting harder to come by.  Perhaps it's time for some organic alternatives...

BioChar: ... which segues nicely to BioChar (check out this article on the pros and cons of the stuff) as a potential alternative for enriching soil quality and locking up carbon at the same time.  Does take energy to produce, as well as organic matter which could come from numerous sources-- not all of them necessarily good.  Worth exploring though.

-In other more light-hearted news-

 

 

 

posted @ Friday, 17 December 2010 6:04 p.m. by Chris Tobias

Great Idea: the unprintable document format .WWF

Put out by the WWF, a new document format renders electronic information unprintable to save trees.  Brilliant idea.  Currently only for Mac, but Windows version coming soon. 

posted @ Monday, 13 December 2010 4:18 p.m. by Chris Tobias

Newsweek: Scientists Nail the Climate Culprits

(This article appears courtesy of Newsweek.  Thanks to our colleagues at ABC Carbon for highlighting these amazing findings)

Lucky Last Word: Science nails the blame game.

Finally, climate scientists see a way to stop being so wishy-washy and start assigning blame, through a technique called “fractional risk attribution.” This technique uses mathematical models of how the atmosphere would work if we had not goosed carbon dioxide to 389 ppm (from 278 before the Industrial Revolution), plus data about ancient (“paleo”) climates and historical (more recent) weather. The idea is to calculate how many times an extreme event should have occurred absent human interference. Sharon Begley sets out the basis on this climate whodunit for Newsweek.

By Sharon Begley in Newsweek (6 December 2010):

To those who are convinced that the science of global warming is sound, as well as to those on the fence, the refusal of climate scientists to attribute any single episode of extreme weather to greenhouse-induced climate change has been either exasperating … or suspicious.

You mean you guys can’t definitely say human-caused climate change is why 135 daily rainfall records were broken along the East Coast during September’s deluges (Wilmington, N.C.: 19.7 inches over three days)? You can’t say climate change is why 2010 is eclipsing 1998 as the hottest year on record, or why in August an ice island four times the size of Manhattan broke off from a Greenland glacier? How about why 2000–09 was the warmest decade on record, that 153 of the 1,218 U.S. weather stations recorded their hottest summer since 1895, why Moscow suffered a once-in-centuries heat wave this summer, or why one fifth of Pakistan flooded?

In short, no. No matter how bizarre the weather, the mantra of climatologists has been that one cannot attribute any single event to changing climate. All science can do is conclude that extreme events are getting more likely as humankind pumps more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

Finally, climate scientists see a way to stop being so wishy-washy and start assigning blame, through a technique called “fractional risk attribution.” This technique uses mathematical models of how the atmosphere would work if we had not goosed carbon dioxide to 389 ppm (from 278 before the Industrial Revolution), plus data about ancient (“paleo”) climates and historical (more recent) weather. The idea is to calculate how many times an extreme event should have occurred absent human interference, explains climate scientist Ben Santer of Lawrence Livermore National Lab, and the probability of the same extreme event in today’s greenhouse-forced atmosphere. Result: putting numbers on extreme weather.

In their biggest success, climate scientists led by Peter Stott of the British Met Office analyzed the 2003 European heat wave, when the mercury rose higher than at any time since the introduction of weather instruments (1851), and probably since at least 1500. After plugging in historical and paleo data, and working out climate patterns in a hypothetical world without a human-caused greenhouse effect, they conclude that our meddling was 75 percent to blame for the heat wave. Put another way, we more than doubled the chance that it would happen, and it’s twice as likely to be human-caused than natural. That’s one beat shy of “Yes, we did it,” but better than “There’s no way to tell.”

Scientists are now applying the technique to other extreme weather, especially deluges and droughts. They have reason to be optimistic. One of the signal successes of climate science has been identifying the “fingerprints” of the culprits behind rising temperatures, fierce storms, and other signs that a 10,000-year-old climate regime has been knocked for a loop. Fingerprinting has shown that the rise in global temps follows the pattern you’d expect from the greenhouse effect and not an increase in the sun’s output, for instance. A hotter sun would heat the upper atmosphere more than the lower, but in fact the upper layers have cooled while the lower have warmed, Santer explains. Fingerprinting has also nailed the greenhouse effect for warming the oceans. Natural forces such as El Niño warm some seas and cool others, but every major ocean is hotter than in the 1950s. Similar analyses have been done for today’s extreme rainfall patterns (drought followed by deluge, not precipitation spread out evenly) and the retreat of arctic sea ice. “Natural causes alone can’t explain any of these,” Santer says. “You need a large human contribution.”

The word “interesting” covers a lot of sins, which is why it’s the perfect word for the world’s current response to climate change. That response is no response, as shown by the low expectations for the international climate meeting this week in Cancún, by China’s voracious appetite for coal, and by the Senate’s failure to pass a climate bill. It’s interesting that people refuse to make changes today to stave off disasters years hence. It’s interesting that memories—of killer storms and heat waves—are so short, with people apparently viewing them as one-offs rather than harbingers of what we’ll suffer regularly in a greenhouse world. It’s interesting that we saw Muscovites and Pakistanis dying, and blithely thought, too bad, but hey, it isn’t me. All of which means that the climate we are creating will be … interesting.

Sharon Begley isNEWSWEEK’s science editor and author of  Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain: How a New Science Reveals Our Extraordinary Potential to Transform Ourselves.

Source: www.newsweek.com

 

posted @ Tuesday, 7 December 2010 3:51 p.m. by Chris Tobias