Bill McKibben and Chip Giller want you to get pumped up for the International Day of Climate Action.
When Grist was launched 10 years ago, a key idea behind it was that the web could be used to spread the news about what’s really happening across the planet. Turned out to be true.
Now the question is: Can the web spread more than information to the farthest corners of the planet? Can we really use it to effect the outcome of the most important scientific questions we’ve ever faced? And the answer to that looks to be “yes” as well.
Those of you who’ve been following 350.org know that the campaign has gone viral in recent weeks, in the lead-up to the International Day of Climate Action. There will be more than 4,000 events in almost 170 countries on Oct. 24—pretty much every place that isn’t Burma or North Korea. It’s certainly the most widespread day of environmental action ever—as far as we can tell, it will set the record for political action in general. And it’s all been done without much coverage from radio and TV and the newspapers. It’s been the electronic media—the network of bloggers and YouTubeists that Grist helped to spawn—that have been spreading the word.
No matter where you live, there’s something going on nearby on Saturday—in Afghanistan, and in Iraq, and in Iran, and in the coup-ridden capital of Honduras. Underwater on the Great Barrier Reef, and on the shores of the Dead Sea in Palestine and Israel and Jordan. In 300 Chinese cities, and just as many places in India. Against the backdrop of Machu Picchu and the Pyramids. And in a thousand American cities and towns. If you want to see what these actions will look like, check out some of the best early pictures on Flickr.
And every one of these events is scientifically literate—people just like you are taking a data point and using it to make a political point. 350 parts per million is the safe upper limit for carbon dioxide in our atmosphere—and we’ve already surpassed it. The Copenhagen climate talks in December won’t just be a forum for negotiations between China and the U.S.—the real talks are going on between humans on the one hand and physics and chemistry on the other.
Help spread the word in the next few days, on the web and also to the mainstream press, so they’re not entirely left out of this huge spectacle. Call your local newspaper editor or radio station or AP bureau, and ask if they’re going to cover the International Day of Climate Action.
And, of course, join in the action yourself. Wherever you are, there will be an event going on nearby; find one. One of us (Chip) will be on Vashon Island, Wash., with his family, at the farmers market where the local action is taking place. The other (Bill) will be in Times Square in New York City, coordinating the showing of photos from events all over the world on three of those huge JumboTron advertising signs usually devoted to vodka or cigarettes. Where will you be?
Comments
View as Flat
megaloptera Posted 4:00 am
20 Oct 2009
If you mean the Kerry Boxer bill, think again. According to Dr. Jim Hansen, it is "worse than nothing" and
will do more harm than good. http://www.climatesos.org
The bill is cap and trade in disguise; even though Kerry Boxer hide behind the new "pollution reduction" lingo. The bill will not result in getting us to 350, that's for certain. It is really a fossil fuel bill: opens up more offshore drilling, provides billions for nukes, risky carbon capture and sequestration, and natural gas frackiing. It ignores 10% of total U.S. GHG which come from biomass burning and is not under the cap. Ignoring 10% of the U.S. emissions actually blows the cap off the Kerry Boxer plan for 20% reductions by 2020.
Please 350.org, be realistic: tell us how, politically and scientifically, we can get Congress to act within the next 8 weeks on a climate bill that will curb climate change. Political realists know it won't happen with the Kerry Boxer bill as a framework.
http://www.climatesos.org
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PSawtell Posted 10:26 am
20 Oct 2009
I am grateful to 350.org for building a movement, for planting a data point as an image of ecological viability, and for inviting us into the sorts of stunts that get that number into the news. The 350.org movement is "real climate action" on a cultural and psychological scale.
Here in Denver [www.350Denver.org], the chance to participate in a global movement has inspired neighborhoods and churches to mobilize for October 24. The number 350 has allowed students and seniors to understand that climate change is not an abstraction. And after Saturday, we will build on that base for even more political action and community education.
There is political brilliance in a global day of action that vividly proclaims danger, without bickering over the numbing details of tax policy and biomass burning. This Saturday, we will celebrate the expansion of the movement that is essential for political action.
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