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  21 Apr 00 - Two perspectives on Earth Day
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>From Marcia Rutan, Snohomish County Solid Waste Management Division,
Everett, WA:
 
According to today's Seattle Times, education is a higher priority in this
country than the environment. This is not true for numerous other countries
in the world. In other countries, there is a more obvious relationship
between the state of the environment and the wellbeing of the people, and it
is far more urgent. Poverty and environmental damage have a direct
correlation, as does population. In this country we are blessed with wealth
beyond most of the globe's imagination. It is our luxury and good fortune
that we can prioritize education.  However, to forget that we are
inextricably bound with the rest of the globe by the environment, by a
planetary ecosystem that cannot be compartmentalized in the long run, is
foolish.
 
A common phrase I've heard is "Every day is Earth Day."  While I applaud the
obvious intention in this comment, which I interpret as an ongoing
commitment and concern for the environment, I would invite all of us to
share with the rest of the globe a heightened awareness on Earth Day.
Earth Day gives the whole world together the chance to say: "Hey! The
environment is important and worth acknowledging as one human family."
Despite cultural, gender, racial, economic, or any other differences, the
planet is home to all of us. I invite us all to commemorate this day
somehow, in whatever way works, to add to the global impetus to turn the
tide of environmental degradation and to fully reclaim this planet with the
WHOLE system in mind, not just the interests of the few. One way I sometimes
think of this is that I may love a person all year round, but I will also
take time on their birthday to especially celebrate them. I
think of Earth Day as the Earth's birthday, worth special effort.
 
Another concern I hear is that Earth Day now lacks punch, that it's a
marketing scheme, that it's so diluted - what's the point? I too would love
this day to be a full-out holiday, with offices shut down, only bicycle
transport allowed, when all people would actively demonstrate a
huge commitment for the environment. I struggle with this question, because
I see that so much more is needed and could be done. But by following
various news accounts and working with teens through the YMCA Earth Service
Corps and others, I've seen that there are a great many people who are
genuinely passionate and concerned, and using Earth Day to do something to
demonstrate that commitment. I honor these people who refuse to buckle under
to despair or cynicism and who take on celebrating this one day of the year
in honor of the Earth, no matter what!

In conclusion, despite the obvious shortcomings of Earth Day, and despite
the fact that protecting and strengthening the health of the environment
requires year-round attention and dedication, Earth Day is a once-a-year
global opportunity, fully deserving of our participation and support. 

E-mail: marcia [D O T] rutan [A T] co [D O T] snohomish [D O T] wa [D O T] us 

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>From the Tidepool website, a project of Ecotrust, a Portland, Oregon-based
nonprofit (forwarded by Karen Hamilton and Eric Nelson):

EARTH DAY AT 30
By Donella Meadows 

If, in the thirty Earth Day celebrations we have held since 1970, the human
population and economy have become any more respectful of the Earth, the
Earth hasn't noticed.

The planet is not impressed by fancy speeches. Leonardo DiCaprio
interviewing Bill Clinton about global warming is not an Earth-shaking
event. The Earth has no way of registering good intentions or future
inventions or high hopes. It doesn't even pay attention to dollars, which
are, from a planet's point of view, just a charming human invention. Planets
measure only physical things -- energy and materials and their flows into
and out of the changing populations of living creatures.

What the Earth sees is that on the first Earth Day in 1970 there were 3.7
billion of those hyperactive critters called humans, and now there are over
6 billion.

Back in 1970 those humans drew from the Earth's crust 46 million barrels of
oil every day -- now they draw 78 million.

Natural gas extraction has nearly tripled in thirty years, from 34 trillion
cubic feet per year to 95 trillion. We mined 2.2 billion metric tons of coal
in 1970; this year we'll mine about 3.8 billion.

The planet feels this fossil fuel use in many ways, as the fuels are
extracted (and spilled) and shipped (and spilled) and refined (generating
toxics) and burned into numerous pollutants, including carbon dioxide, which
traps outgoing energy and warms things up. Despite global conferences and
brave promises, what the Earth notices is that human carbon emissions have
increased from 3.9 million metric tons in 1970 to an estimated 6.4 million
this year.

You would think that an unimaginably huge thing like a planet would not
notice the one degree (Fahrenheit) warming it has experienced since 1970.
But on the scale of a whole planet, one degree is a big deal, especially
since it is not spread evenly. The poles have warmed more than the equator,
the winters more than the summers, the nights more than the days. That means
that temperature DIFFERENCES from one place to another have been changing
much more than the average temperature has changed. Temperature differences
are what make winds blow, rains rain, ocean currents flow.

All creatures, including humans, are exquisitely attuned to the weather. All
creatures, including us, are noticing weather weirdness and trying to
adjust, by moving, by fruiting earlier or migrating later, by building up
whatever protections are possible against flood and drought. The Earth is
reacting to weather changes too, shrinking glaciers, splitting off
nation-sized chunks of Antarctic ice sheet, enhancing the cycles we call El
Nino and La Nina.

"Earth Day, Shmearth Day," the planet must be thinking as its fever mounts.

"Are you folks ever going to take me seriously?"

Since the first Earth Day our global vehicle population has swelled from 246
to 730 million. Air traffic has gone up by a factor of six. The rate at
which we grind up trees to make paper has doubled (to 200 million metric
tons per year). We coax from the soil, with the help of strange chemicals,
2.25 times as much wheat, 2.5 times as much corn, 2.2 times as much rice,
almost twice as much sugar, almost four times as many soybeans as we did
thirty years ago. We pull from the oceans almost twice as much fish.

With the fish we can see clearly how the planet behaves, when we push it too
far. It does not feel sorry for us; it just follows its own rules. Fish
become harder and harder to find. If they are caught before they're old
enough to reproduce, if their nursery habitat is destroyed, if we scoop up
not only the cod, but the capelin upon which the cod feeds, the fish may
never come back.

The Earth does not care that we didn't mean it, that we promise not to do it
again, that we make nice gestures every Earth Day.

We have among us die-hard optimists who will berate me for not reporting the
good news since the last Earth Day. There is plenty of it, but it is mostly
measured in human terms, not Earth terms. Average human life expectancy has
risen since 1970 from 58 to 66 years. Gross world product has more than
doubled, from 16 to 39 trillion dollars. Recycling has increased, but so has
trash generation, so the Earth receives more garbage than ever before. Wind
and solar power generation have soared, but so have coal-fired, gas-fired
and nuclear generation.

In human terms there has been breathtaking progress. In 1970 there weren't
any cell phones or video players. There was no Internet; there were no
dot-coms.

Nor was anyone infected with AIDS, of course, nor did we have to worry about
genetic engineering. Global spending on advertising was only one-third of
what it is now (in inflation-corrected dollars). Third-World debt was
one-eighth of what it is now.

Whether you call any of that progress, it is all beneath the notice of the
Earth. What the Earth sees is that its species are vanishing at a rate it
hasn't seen in 65 million years. That 40 percent of its agricultural soils
have been degraded. That half its forests have disappeared and half its
wetlands have been filled or drained, and that, despite Earth Day, all these
trends are accelerating.

Earth Day is beginning to remind me of Mother's Day, a commercial occasion
upon which you buy flowers for the person who, every other day of the year,
cleans up after you. Guilt-assuaging. Trivializing. Actually dangerous. All
mothers have their breaking points. Mother Earth does not soften hers with
patience or forgiveness or sentimentality.
---
Donella H. Meadows is an adjunct professor of environmental studies at
Dartmouth College.  This column is also on the Internet at
http://www.tidepool.org/gc/gc4.21.00.cfm
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