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Showing posts with the label Species Decline

It's a Trap, Don't Do It

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My last article focused on mindsets and how they can lead us into traps. One of the most pervasive of these traps is the energy trap . People are constantly searching for new types of energy, new energy generation, and/or ways to improve energy efficiency, ALL of which unfortunately are ultimately dead ends. The search for this energy is often with the idea to reduce emissions in an effort to reduce the effects of climate change. The trouble is in the fact that this ignores the root predicament of ecological overshoot and that producing more energy requires destruction of our planet resulting in MORE ecological overshoot, not less. Ultimately, the only way to reduce emissions is to consume less globally, period. I pointed this out in my article, What Would it Take for Humanity to Experience Radical Transformation?  and added that continuing civilization is a non-starter. Yet, practically every single idea we see to "solve" climate change consists of ideas to ramp up energy p

So, What Should We Do? Part Two

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  "Civilization is the child of the Neolithic Revolution, of the widespread adoption of agriculture as a mode of production, and agriculture necessarily causes leaching and loss of topsoil, as well as many other environmental consequences, including climate change. Nor does any city live by bread alone. It needs water, so it must build dams and aqueducts. It needs wood for fuel and timber, so it must chop down forests. It needs metal for coins, swords, and ploughshares, so it must dig mines. It needs stone to erect palaces, courts, temples, and walls, so it must quarry away mountains. And it must build roads and ports needed to transport all the necessities of urban life. In short, a city lives by both consuming and damaging a wide array of ecological resources."  ~ William Ophuls - Immoderate Greatness: Why Civilizations Fail See more here. "The illusion of control or agency and the attachment to it creates much suffering."                  ~ Chery Young   While I

So, What Should We Do?

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  Pictures of wildfire damage at Glacier National Park in Montana 2016 What type of activities will help in reducing the effects of ecological overshoot? I'm often asked this question when I point out that solar panels, wind turbines, nuclear energy, hydroelectric dams, EVs, and all other technological devices will not help climate change, pollution loading, or any other predicament under the parent predicament of ecological overshoot: "Well, what are your solutions?" Sadly, this question assumes that I am pointing out a PROBLEM, not a predicament. Predicaments don't have solutions. So, I don't have a solution (and nobody else does either, despite claims to the contrary - more on that in a couple of paragraphs). But I can tell them what WON'T help. Buying more stuff, REGARDLESS of what it is, WILL NOT HELP. Because ecological overshoot is a predicament with an outcome and not a problem with a solution , people need to adjust their expectations accordingly.

Species and Biodiversity Loss

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  Species and Biodiversity  Loss  India saw record 126 tiger deaths in 2021 Unprecedented die-offs, melting ice: Climate change is wreaking havoc in the Arctic and beyond Remote areas are not safe havens for biodiversity Loggers threaten Papua New Guinea's unique forest creatures Years later, restored wetlands remain a shadow of their old selves Ultra-rare, bizarre fish that washed ashore near San Diego is California's third this year Almost 17 million vertebrates killed in the 2020 wildfires in Brazil: study Map of transparent butterflies highlights biodiversity hotspot in the Andes Mountains Although most support avian conservation, few recognize current plight of birds Early bloomers: Using citizen-science data to investigate unseasonal flowering in Joshua trees Adored and endangered: the complex world of the Japanese eel 70 million years on earth, 40 years of decline: the endangered eel Our iconic giant clams face new threats from warmer waters and acidic oceans Antarctic s