With the end of 2013 less than five hours away, it seems
reasonable to say something that recognizes the occasion.
The year just past was less than encouraging for those of us
concerned about issues that are impacting of the health of our atmosphere.
Ideas proposed by Swedish Scientist, Svante Arrhenius,
explained the link between carbon dioxide and global warming in the 19th
Century, but had he predicted our current plight then, that would have been
considered “wild-eyed alarmism”.
The thought about “wild-eyed alarmism” was suggested by
David Archer in his 2008 book: “The Long Thaw: How Humans Are Changing the Next 100 000 Years of Earth’s Climate”.
Archer, a computational ocean chemist and a Professor at the
Department of Geophysical Sciences at the University of Chicago, said: “The potential
climate change in the future is not subtle. If humankind burns all of the coal,
the new climate of the Earth could be the warmest in tens of millions of years,
since long before our evolution as a species. The transition from the natural
climate to the new one would be the most severe global change since the Cretaceous/Tertiary
boundary 65 million years ago that brought a close to the 150-million-year era
of the dinosaurs”.
The final gathering Beneath
the Wisteria for this year less than a week ago, considered the question: “Is
it worth it?”
The rhetorical question was answered, without hesitation, in
the positive and in fact those among the 12 who attended, felt that each of us
needed to boldly spread the message about the need for climate change
abatement.
In fact our January gathering (Saturday, January 25) will
concentrate on defining our purpose.
So the struggle to implant the idea of a need among our
fellows to seriously think about and act upon ideas to mitigate the effects of the
causes of climate change takes on a new urgency in 2014 and so our responsibility
increases, rather than decreases.
It is almost a cliché to say “Stay safe” and although it
might be a cliché, I do urge you to have a safe 2014 and join me in doing what
we can to ensure that when we say “stay safe”, it is an intergenerational hope;
a hope that will become a reality as we work to help people understand that
only changed behaviour will ease the certain difficulties ahead.
-
Robert McLean.

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