Step It Up 8

 

Monday, 5 Feb 2007

Here's why the world needs both the scientists of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and Alpha Phi sorority of the University of Texas at Austin.

The IPCC is one of humanity's signal achievements. Launched by the United Nations in the late 1980s, just as global warming was emerging as an issue, it managed by 1995 to gather a consensus of the world's climatologists around the proposition that humans were warming the planet. That was a marvel, and in the years since they've issued two more reports -- the most recent on Friday -- documenting the increasing confidence with which we know what we know. This most recent assessment is powerful for the swagger inherent in its (somewhat tedious) prose. Sunspots? Forget it. "Natural cycles"? Give us a break.

But the IPCC's power lies, in some measure, in its apolitical nature. It doesn't tell the governments of the world what to do. At most, if offers scenarios about what might happen if we followed different general trajectories. (And in this report it does offer a masked, but barbed, statistic: had the world's leaders heeded the first warnings about climate change and done the work to hold emissions level by 2000, we'd now be facing temperature increases of 0.1 degrees Celsius per decade, not 0.2. That's a big difference.) The IPCC can only issue the warning, provide the data. It's Paul Revere, spreading the alarm. But if the rest of us roll over and go back to sleep, the warning accomplishes nothing.

Which brings us to Alpha Phi sorority sisters.


This picture of them stepping it up -- taken as part of Energy Action's Climate Challenge week in January, and featured on the It's Getting Hot in Here campus action blog -- is in its way just as important as all the graphs and charts in the back of the IPCC report. It shows that the message is getting through -- to everyone. "We have approximately 180 members, and we are excited to help cut carbon! We wanted to show that it's not just hippies who care about global warming! We all care!!" one member wrote. (That's a truly nice way of putting it, by the way. "Hippies" of various sorts -- those of us out of the mainstream in various ways -- usually start these kinds of movements. But they only work when everyone else joins in. Hooray for the hippie-sorority combination.)

Alpha Phi is not alone. The momentum building toward our April 14 day of action continues to amaze us: every day another couple of dozen people around the country sign up to host rallies, marches, bike rides, hikes. We thought we might, if we were lucky, reach a total of 500 scheduled actions sometime in early April; we blew by that number Thursday afternoon.

I still can't read documents like the IPCC report without getting sad -- the sheer shock of what we're doing to the planet never wears off, not even after two decades of working on it. But I can't look at the picture of those Texans without breaking into a smile (almost) as wide as theirs. We're finally starting to wake up. If Alpha Phi can do it, so can the rest of us.

Bill McKibben, a scholar-in-residence at Middlebury College, is the author of a dozen books, most recently The Bill McKibben Reader. He serves on Grist’s board of directors and is cofounder of 350.org.

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  1. Delay And Deny's avatar

    Delay And Deny Posted 2:46 am
    11 Jan 2007

    Promoting Climate Change

    I've started a movement to promote and enjoy climate change.   Balmy weather, lower energy costs and more arable land being available are just some of the key advantages.
    Land in Alberta: For years, the entrenched Liberals have bought up the warm coasts and jacked up prices to keep themselves rich.  Now the huge central areas of North America will open up and make land cheaper and cheaper.   Buying a house will no longer be something done in a life time, or even a decade, but in a single transaction ($20,000 for a 4 bedroom in Saskatchewan?  Here you go, put it on my Visa!
    Warm Weather: All the money I save in electricity will go to letting me drink more lattes and have more time off to enjoy the Internet as Me: The Time Man of the Year.
    Paint It Black: I see the girls go by in their summer clothes.  Yeah, and now it will be all year round!  No more long months looking at big puffy winter suits...now micro-skirts will be de rigeur fasion.  Hoo-rah!
  2. Billhook Posted 5:32 pm
    08 Feb 2007

    Urgency & FocusBill - I'm writing from my home in Wales to applaud your efforts at mobilizing people.
    I'd make a few points that I hope may be helpful.
    1st, many Americans don't seem to realize that they cannot commandeer developing nations' co-operation in the supremely urgent task of halting greenhouse gas emissions -
    A global framework for the allocation of national emission-rights for this century is requisite to any serious change on the issue.
    Without that framework, which must be equitable to be negotiable, and must be scientifically stringent to be effective, we will remain in the present "After you, Claude" catch-22, where no nation will risk its economy by making serious cuts in its emissions.
    The title of that framework (which was first presented to the UN back in 1990) is Contraction & Convergence",

    and, put succinctly it is about
    Contraction - of global GHG emissions to respect Earth's capacity,

    and

    Convergence - of all nations' emissions-rights to global per capita parity.
    This framework is open to negotiation as to the dates by which a given global cut is made and by which per capita parity is achieved.
    Further information is at the website of Global Commons Institute - http://www.gci.org.uk
    So I really hope that the masses of people you motivate to come out and demonstrate will do more than call just for the US gubmint to "do something useful".
    Best of luck,
    Billhook
  3. MikeF Posted 4:25 am
    15 Feb 2007

    Re: Sir Richard Branson's recent announcementSo what does everyone think about Richard Branson's announcement last week that he would award a $25 million prize to anyone who can figure out how to remove a billion tons of carbon dioxide per year from the atmosphere?
    Is this a step forward or too little too late?

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