David Suzuki… “Who says a better world is impossible?”

From our inbox to you: David Suzuki… “Who says a better world is impossible?”

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Who says a better world is impossible?

Cars, air travel, space exploration, television, nuclear power, high-speed computers, telephones, organ transplants, prosthetic body parts… At various times these were all deemed impossible. I’ve been around long enough to have witnessed many technological feats that were once unimaginable. Even 10 or 20 years ago, I would never have guessed people would carry supercomputers in their pockets — your smart phone is more powerful than all the computers NASA used to put astronauts on the moon in 1969 combined!

Despite a long history of the impossible becoming possible, often very quickly, we hear the “can’t be done” refrain repeated over and over — especially in the only debate over global warming that matters: What can we do about it? Climate change deniers and fossil fuel industry apologists often argue that replacing oil, coal and gas with clean energy is beyond our reach. The claim is both facile and false.

Facile because the issue is complicated. It’s not simply a matter of substituting one for the other. To begin, conservation and efficiency are key. We must find ways to reduce the amount of energy we use — not a huge challenge considering how much people waste, especially in the developed world. False because rapid advances in clean energy and grid technologies continue to get us closer to necessary reductions in our use of polluting fossil fuels.

It’s ironic that anti-environmentalists and renewable energy opponents often accuse those of us seeking solutions of wanting to go back to the past, to living in caves, scrounging for roots and berries. They’re the ones intent on continuing to burn stuff to keep warm — to the detriment of the natural world and all it provides.

People have used wind and solar power for thousands of years. But recent rapid advances in generation, storage and transmission technologies have led to a fast-developing industry that’s outpacing fossil fuels in growth and job creation. Costs are coming down to the point where renewable energy is competitive with the heavily subsidized fossil fuel industry. According to the International Energy Agency, renewable energy for worldwide electricity generation grew to 22 per cent in 2013, a five per cent increase from 2012.

The problem is that much of the world still burns non-renewable resources for electricity and fuels, causing pollution and climate change and, subsequently, more human health problems, extreme weather events, water shortages and environmental devastation. In many cities in China, the air has become almost unbreathable, as seen in the shocking Chinese documentary film Under the Dome. In California, a prolonged drought is affecting food production. Extreme weather events are costing billions of dollars worldwide.

We simply must do more to shift away from fossil fuels and, despite what the naysayers claim, we can. We can even get partway there under our current systems. Market forces often lead to innovation in clean energy development. But in addressing the very serious long-term problems we’ve created, we may have to challenge another “impossibility”: changing our outmoded global economic system. As economist and Earth Institute director Jeffrey Sachs wrote in a recent Guardian article, “At this advanced stage of environmental threats to the planet, and in an era of unprecedented inequality of income and power, it’s no longer good enough to chase GDP. We need to keep our eye on three goals — prosperity, inclusion, and sustainability — not just on the money.”

Relying on market capitalism encourages hyper-consumption, planned obsolescence, wasteful production and endless growth. Cutting pollution and greenhouse gas emissions requires conserving energy as well as developing new energy technologies. Along with reducing our reliance on private automobiles and making buildings and homes more energy-efficient, that also means making goods that last longer and producing fewer disposable or useless items so less energy is consumed in production.

People have changed economic systems many times before, when they no longer suited shifting conditions or when they were found to be inhumane, as with slavery. And people continue to develop tools and technologies that were once thought impossible. Things are only impossible until they’re not. We can’t let those who are stuck in the past, unable to imagine a better future, hold us back from creating a safer, cleaner and more just world.

Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Senior Editor Ian Hanington.

 

Curb Side Battery Collection April 2015

 

Curb side battery collection for Durham Region Spring 2014…

 

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  • Event: Curb Side Battery Collection
  • Date (s): April 20 through to April 24
  • Instructions: Place used batteries in zip lock bags, or clear plastic bags with a zipper style seal. Place on the bags the orange sticker (provided by the region) onto the bags to identify them.
  • Please Note: Only undamaged batteries should be set out for collection, no leaky ones please and no automotive batteries. 
  • Please place your bagged and labelled batteries on top of your blue recycling bins. 
  • Where to get the orange stickers: Stickers would have been provided with the 2014/2015 Waste Management calendar. 
  • To Find Out More: www.durham.ca/battery: 1-800-667-5671

source: Whitby This Week: April 8 2015 Edition

The Blue Dot Movement: Day of Earth Support April 19 2015 across the nation.

 SGC Admin: From our inbox to you: The Blue Dot Tour becomes the Blue Dot Movement: 

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 On April 19, let’s connect from coast to coast

Six months ago, we had no idea how big this would get. What started as the Blue Dot Tour in the fall of 2014 has now grown into the Blue Dot movement, and it’s all thanks to people like you!

Almost 70,000 people just like you have joined us at BlueDot.ca, including more than 14,500 volunteers who’ve signed up to take action in their communities and ensure that everyone has the right to fresh air, clean water and healthy food.

So what’s the next step? How do we keep this momentum building? And how do we show all of Canada just how motivated and committed we are to this vision?

By coming together all across the country.

On Sunday, April 19, join us as we stand together in a national day of action called Connect the Blue Dots.

Organizers in communities across the country are hosting events big and small to celebrate this movement. In living rooms and community spaces, parks and outdoor places, everyone can join in by connecting with friends across the street and across the country, all committed to protecting the people and places we love.

YES — I want to join a Connect the Blue Dots celebration in my community!

In more than 30 communities, organized Blue Dot volunteers have already helped convince their local leaders to pass municipal declarations recognizing environmental rights. This is real progress, and it’s worth celebrating!

There’s strength in numbers. This national day of action is a powerful way to show Canadians that lasting change happens when everyday people come together.

Visit the website and find out more about the local celebrations near you.

On April 19, join the celebration. Let’s come together.

Sophika Kostyniuk
National Organizing Manager
David Suzuki Foundation

  • The David Suzuki Foundation is a registered charity in both Canada (BN 127756716RR0001) and the United States (94-3204049).
  • We are located at 219-2211 West 4th Avenue, Vancouver, B.C., V6K 4S2, and we also have offices in Montreal and Toronto.
  • Please visit our website for more information on how to contact us.

News from ECO-Justic: Microbeads, World Water Day, Wild Fish

Post Date 04/10/2015: SGC Admin: From our inbox to you… From ECO-JUSTICE

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Microbeads add up to big problem for Great Lakes
How we’re taking action to protect the Great Lakes and ensure that Canada addresses the threat toxic plastic microbeads pose to the environment and, by extension, our health.

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Why it’s time for Canada to recognize our right to water
As the international community came together in support of World Water Day, we couldn’t help but give pause to the startling inequities around drinking water quality and access within Canada’s borders.

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Canada’s wild fish need to be handled with care
Eco-justice lawyer Morgan Blakley checks in with an update on three court cases aimed at addressing systemic problems in Canada’s aquaculture industry.

As Canada’s only national environmental law charity, Ecojustice is building the case for a better earth.

Devon Page, executive director
Ecojustice. celebrating 25 years

ecojustice.ca | facebook.com/ecojustice | @ecojustice_ca
Toll Free – 1-800-926-7744
214-131 Water Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6B 4M3