Showing posts with label Climate Change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Climate Change. Show all posts

SeanChron | Good Job Earth!


Here's some good news...According to the Global Footprint Network, the annual Earth Overshoot Day has not moved much since 2011, despite population growth. This means that efforts we are all making to reduce our impact on the world IS WORKING!!!

In addition, the Ecological Footprint per person for high-income countries has declined 12.9 percent since 2000. The US per person figure has declined 18.4 percent! Yaaaaaaaaaas!!!

SeanChron | Nina Garcia in Marie Claire: On Thin Ice

I haven't been this excited and inspired about what the role the fashion industry can play in shaping a sustainable future since H&M launched their 'Sustainable Style' campaign.

Nina Garcia, Creative Director of Marie Claire Magazine and judge extraordinaire of Project Runway, recently visited Alaska to see effects of climate change on glaciers first hand. The full article appears in the September issue of Marie Claire and the online article with multiple media elements is available here: On Thin Ice: Can the Fashion Industry Help Save the Planet?

What she experiences is life changing and what she shares about the role the fashion industry can play in helping address climate change is certain to be industry changing.

Below is the teaser video:

Plunge by Michael Pinsky

This thought-provoking art installation in London marks the height to which sea level will rise in 1,000 years using low-energy LED light rings affixed to monuments there. The placement of the rings follows the future course of the Thames if nothing is done to curb emissions.

A span of time so vast as 1,000 years is difficult for the human mind to comprehend. It won't be that high in London for a long time but sea level rise is already impacting many nations, the artist notes.  BP

This Clement World

It is a new musical performance work by Cynthia Hopkins inspired by her recent trip to the Arctic where she witnessed firsthand the effects of climate change. She recently did a Kickstarter to finance its production and performance that closed with sufficient donations to be funded.
Writer-composer-performer Cynthia Hopkins is raising funds to produce a concert version of her work with orchestral and choral elements to fully realize her vision. The work is described by the artist as "a live documentary film infused with three fictional characters that serve as tour guides for an imaginary exhibit conveying the wonders of our currently clement world." BP

CNN's ECOSPHERE Visualizes #COP17 Tweets for Climate Change Summit


For the next two weeks (November 28—December 9), world leaders are meeting in the city of Durban, South Africa, to discuss crucial climate change issues at the 17th Conference of Parties (COP17) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Much anticipation has surrounded this year’s COP because many are hoping that this summit will result in a new global climate agreement. The Kyoto Protocol is the only existing legally binding agreement of this sort, and it commits most developed countries to a set of emissions targets, but the first commitment period expires in 2012. COP17 presents an opportunity to set new targets and extend the Protocol, but it is uncertain whether or not the world’s leaders will take advantage of this opportunity. The world’s top emitters, the United States and China, are not currently a part of the Kyoto Protocol, and unless they agree to take part in the second commitment period, several other developed countries (including Japan, Canada and Russia) are unlikely to agree to extend the Protocol.

Anyway, long story short—COP17 is a pretty big deal, and appropriately, there has been a lot of discussion surrounding the event. CNN’s ECOSPHERE project is a real-time visualization of how online discussion is evolving on topics related to climate change and COP17. ECOSPHERE aggregates tweets tagged with #COP17 and groups them into specific topics or discussions. The visualization is an interactive 3-D globe, covered in virtual “topic plants” that grow larger or faster depending on the conversation surrounding that particular topic. Individual tweets will feed the growth of the appropriate topic plant, so feel free to join the discussion by submitting your own #COP17 tweets! Or, just interact with the rather cool visualization--you can zoom in on specific topic plants, or even individual tweets! EM

Indigenous People's Global Summit on Climate Change

Originally posted on The Smart Set...On April 20-24, 2009, the Inuit Circumpolar Council held a global summit on climate change that brought together Indigenous delegates and observers from around the world to Anchorage, Alaska. The purpose of the Indigenous Peoples' Global Summit on Climate Change was to bring Indigenous peoples from around the world to exchange knowledge, experiences, and solutions in adapting to climate change and to develop a unified voice on climate change going into the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in Copenhagen, Denmark in December of 2009. With over 500 representatives from 80 nations around the world, the summit provided an opportunity to connect the issue of indigenous rights and climate change, as well as share the wisdom of traditional and indigenous peoples around the world in adapting to changing environments.