Showing posts with label regional impact of climate change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label regional impact of climate change. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Thoughts From My Vacation

Traditional and Modern - View of Old Acapulco from Roqueta Island


I just got a link to this month's Women's Press and see that the article on my blog is featured and I haven't written a thing in 10 days.  I'll blame vacation for that.  We've been back from our trip to Acapulco for a few days but I'm only getting back into the swing of things now.

I have no idea how my carbon use impacted the world during our vacation, but I certainly thought about it a lot.  Like everything, there were ups and downs.  On a daily basis, I expect that our carbon use was lower.  We walked a lot, took cool showers, slept in an unair conditioned - unheated room and ate at restaurants (so the heating of the stoves was shared with several people). We didn't shop much and had little waste. On the other hand, we were located on a high hill and it was hot, so we took a taxi home from our walk almost every day - and the taxis are old and battered and stinky- so I assume they pollute a lot.  And, of course, we had that very long plane ride guzzling up gas for which I have previously bought a carbon offset to allay my guilt.

Nothing is simple.  Walking around Acapulco,  I thought about our impact on the earth.  We were staying in the old town and I am sure that in very many ways the carbon use of residents must be lower than here - warm weather, fewer car owners, poorer people, so there can't be as much consumption and waste.  But still, the impact by people on this area is clear.  Noisy buses and taxis and cars fill the bay side street and buildings cover the hills, with few parks in between. The bay has struggled with pollution, though it looked quite blue/green and clear when we were there so I hope that the city has been successful in its efforts to keep the water clean. Hillsides are still a dumping spot for garbage, though I've seen worse.

Acapulco is one of those cities where you can clearly see how the city has changed with time.  It is located on a long curved bay and if you stand in the old town at one end, you can see how the buildings become more modern as the they progress along the curve of the bay, from the 1950's to the 70's to the 80's and 90's and then the 2000's directly across the bay a few miles as the crow flies and 10 or more along the bay front. (The newest development is further away still - out of sight.)  On the modern end, there are fewer taxis and more personal cars.  The cars are newer with more pollution controls, I assume, the buildings taller and air conditioned.  The stores are fancier and full of gift shops and boutiques.  It would be interesting to make a comparison of the ecological impact of those two ends of the city - the modern, airconditioned, polution controlled newer end and the old, noisy, poorer end where taxis clatter, buses roar with boom boxes pulsing but people have less money to spend.
Riding The Black Pearl Bus - Buses are privately owned and carry their own unique decor and sound system.  Choose carefully before boarding!  The "music" was so loud on this one that we didn't last more than a few blocks before having to get off.

Unfortunately, I don't speak enough Spanish to have the slightest idea what is going on in Acapulco and Mexico generally for that matter, but I can GOOGLE it!  Here's an interesting link to Mexico's National Climate Policy.  Hmm, Mexico has set a goal of reducing carbon emmisions by 50% of the 2000 level.  They are also implementing pricing for electricity and water that reflects actual costs and ecological costs of their use.  Hmmm.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

The Users and the Losers


" We cannot help the world until we change our way of being in it."
Bishops of the United Methodist Church

Source: Atlas of the Biosphere

I saw this map yesterday at a conference I attended of United Methodists exploring how to mobilize an earth care movement among Minnesota United Methodists.  I'm happy to see that the Methodist church is taking action on climate change.

The map shows a global look at per capita oil usage.  In the presentation it was shown with a second map which showed the countries that are most impacted by climate change.  It was striking to look at the two maps together because the countries most impacted by climate change were the ones with the least per capita oil usage.  As with so many other things in our world - the ones who are causing climate change are not the ones suffering the most from that change.  Food for thought...

Unfortunately, I can't find that other map.  They were both from the website of Sage: Center for Sustainability & the Global Environment, which as it turns out has links to many, many resources and I just wasn't sure where to look, so sorry for the lack of a completed blog post.  Perhaps someone else will help me figure out where to find it and I can look it up.

My weekend was actually full of work on climate change - an all day conference yesterday, and my first meeting with the land and water use group that is part of a transition town movement in our neighborhood.  So I've been doing lots, but the blog posts are slow in coming.  I'll try to get it all sorted out and share more over the next few days.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Can One Person Make A Difference?



January 1, 2014

I've decided to bite off a big chunk for this year's New Year's Resolution - doing my part to save our world by writing a daily blog (with a requisite daily action) on one woman's (me) attempt to reduce our carbon imprint and I NEED YOUR HELP!

1.  I'm really not very consistant, but I figure if I tell the world about this resolution, I have kind of commited myself.

2.  I could use your support, so encouragement will really spur me on.

3.  I will run out of ideas, so send me yours.

4.  The more people who read this blog increases the chance that my one person will expand to more - and more is what we need.

So please read from time to time, give me some encouragement, and share your ideas.

Can one person make a difference? :
What spurs me on in this personal quest is a graph I saw that compared the per capita carbon footprint of many countries in the world.  The US's carbon use was at the top of the graph reaching out to the edge far far beyond any of the other countries.  We are a country of consumers and that is the issue.  It isn't just the milage we drive or the heat we use to keep our houses warm - particularly here in Minnesota - it is everything.  We consume without even thinking about it and we need to cut back - not just a little bit - a whole lot.  I can't find that graph, but here's a similar one that you might find interesting. It doesn't look as bad as the first chart I saw until you realize that to stop the warming, our carbon imprint - and everyone else's - has to be about where India is on the list (scroll down):

http://carbonfootprintofnations.com/content/environmental_footprint_of_nations/

And of course, if you are still wondering, the goal is to slow the path we are on that is warming our climate to such a degree that our forests will change, our coastal cities will flood and many species will become extinct.  The earth will survive, but people and animals and plants are going to have a hard time of it.

Here is another interesting link.  It is an interactive map from the EPA.  You can click on different regions of the US to see the projected impact of climate change for each region and there are other links to see what the locals are trying to do to adapt.

http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/

Coincidentally, this arrived in my email today.  It's a chance for us all to sign a pledge to make
saving the planet your own New Year's Resolution:
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/432/762/747/?z00m=20691258

Wish me luck!

Christy