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Meltdown Strategies: A Few Short Lists

By Starhawk - 10-9-08

While the financial markets have been melting down around us, another sort of meltdown has been occurring, one even more frightening and dangerous.  Climate change has been progressing, more quickly than anticipated, fueled even more rapidly by methane bubbles released from a warming Arctic sea, in just one of the self-reinforcing cycles that will trigger unstoppable cascades of devastation unless we act now.

None of the presidential debates have addressed the central question of our time:  can we transform our energy, our economy, our food systems and our culture rapidly enough to forestall complete global meltdown?

The present economic woes are frightening, but the environmental crisis is truly terrifying. With all the furor about falling markets and frozen credit, nothing real has changed in the economy. Granted, the repercussions will be that many of us have less money in our pockets and fewer opportunities.  But we still have the natural resources we had a month ago.  We still have our skills, our knowledge, and our productive capacity.  What we’ve lost is a towering edifice of icing with no cake underneath.

But environmental meltdown means we lose the real basis of economy and survival.  We will see more and more devastation like we’ve seen in the Gulf Coast.  We’ll see droughts, floods, lowered food supplies, huge losses in biodiversity and ecological resilience, rising seas that will take out major cities around the world, and all the associated problems of poverty, starvation, refugees and resource wars.  Time is not running out—it’s out!  What we do now and in the next ten years is absolutely crucial.

The good news is, we don’t have to take the path to disaster.  We have the knowledge and technology we need to make the change.  But our politicians, even the best of them, won’t do it unless we make it a top priority.

To do that, it helps to know what the solutions are.  In November, I’ll be presenting at an interfaith conference on climate change called by the archbishop of Sweden.  In preparation, I started writing a Climate Change Primer, trying to briefly list the most important technologies and approaches.  It kept growing, and eventually became too big to send out as an email.  But go to the link below and you can read it or download it as a PDF. If you want to better understand the issue and the spectrum of solutions we need to put into place, it’s a good introduction.  If you are a policy maker or an activist who likes to hound and harass policy makers to do the right thing, it’s a good guide.  And if you’re thinking about how to invest your own time and energy and/or such dwindling funds as you might have, it will suggest fruitful avenues and new approaches.  And here’s the link:

http://www.earthactivisttraining.org/climate_resources.html

And below are a few short, short, short lists to help get us thinking about what priorities we should push for:

Things we can do right away in a lousy economy:


Low Hanging Fruit: (Technologies and solutions that are already up and running, or nearly so, that have the best Energy Return on Energy Investment, will meet the least resistance and will give the biggest bang for the buck in the short run.)
Vital Investments: Even in a lousy economy, we absolutely need to do these things, and they will provide jobs and a vital economic stimulus:
Long term investments: (Things we need to invest in now for the long term future.  If we’re going to borrow billions, let’s spend them on:)
Really Stupid Ideas We Should Oppose:
Okay, this short list has already gotten long.  Again, that link is:

http://www.earthactivisttraining.org/climate_resources.html

And if there’s one important message we send, make it this:

The environment is not an afterthought:  it’s the ground of economy, security and survival.  Environmental protection, environmental justice and regeneration must be our top priorities, because they are the only sound foundation for every other endeavor.




Copyright (2008) by Starhawk. All rights reserved.
This copyright protects Starhawk's right to future publication of her work. Nonprofit, activist, and educational groups may circulate this essay (forward it, reprint it, translate it, post it, or reproduce it) for nonprofit uses. Please do not change any part of it without permission. Please keep this notice with it.



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