I was inspired to sign up and write a post on climate change for Blog Action Day 2009 after reading Alex Abboud‘s excellent post entitled “Embracing Post-Modernism.”
My first consideration of the risks of resource depletion, overpopulation and the need for long term thinking and sustainable practices was over a decade ago in grade 10 high school science class. The problem seemed almost as intuitive, even obvious, as it is today. But for a middle-class 16 year-old eager to begin driving a car, while living in a resource laden country, the problems never seemed as tangible as they are today.
Looking back, it was as clear then as it is now that exponential population growth in conjunction with an increasing, resource gobbling, standard living were leading us down a dangerous road. Advances in technology, medicine and even in social system systems - the ascendancy of globalized capitalism and its recent failure, for example – are leading us ever closer to a precipice where tough decisions are necessary.
Some are even likening the willful blindness towards living within our means, or more accurately the lack of action taken to rectify our recent collective awakening to accelerating climate degradation, to a massive global ponzi scheme.
I worry most about the cost of inaction, of maintaining the status quo, given the huge uncertainties and potentially destabilizing global security risks we’re all facing as a result of anthropogenic climate change, which is only one of the environmental threats to our continued security and prosperity.
Last night I heard the latest news in what seems to be a perpetual parade of disconcerting stories about the rapid changes in our climate. CBC is reporting that climate researchers now believe we will have ice free summers at the North Pole in only 10 years. This will have enormous consequences.
So what can we do?
For starters, myopic sloganeering about “local food” as the panacea for addressing climate change is not the magic cure all some make it out to be – though I wish it were.
I recognize that the growing chasm being awareness and action is the real issue here. Most people now accept that climate change is happening and that it is a major problem but few people seem to have changed their behaviour and lifestyles to minimize their impact. As a human being, I am not without fault here either, but I am trying.
So I agree that lifestyle changes are important. When aggregated they can really make an enormous difference. However, much of the massive change needed to address our climate bankruptcy can only come from new rules, laws and policies on a systemic level. To put it another way: this is a problem that governments at all levels, from around the world, must immediately work together to address.
A new age of cooperation is required. Right now. Will the COP15 United Nations climate change conference this December be the turning point?
For the sake future generations, let’s all hope so.
