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T
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im Flannery’s
hero-like status was evident at last night’s launch of his new book,
“Atmosphere of Hope”.
| Tim Flannery signs a book for one of his many fans after last night's book launching at the University of Melbourne. |
Some who had been admirers and supporters since Flannery
wrote “The Weather Makers” a decade ago were almost breathless when the
scientist, chief of Climate Council and author walked by.
Some 400 people were in the Basement Theatre in the
Melbourne School of Design at the University of Melbourne to hear Flannery talk
about why and how despair after the dishevelment of the Copenhagen United
Nations climate summit in 2009 had changed to hope.
The world, as Flannery pointed out, has had a levelling-off
of greenhouse gasses in 2014, something he attributed many things – “like an
army of mice nibbling away at a very big problem” – and that gives him hope.
Although he was optimistic about many things, such as
carbon-negative cement, Flannery was still a realist and said: “There is no
doubt that in the lead up to the Paris meeting our focus needs to be firmly on
cutting back on fossil fuels, that’s really the name of the game, we need to
reduce emissions from greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels if we
are to have any hope of stabilizing our climate.”
Flannery saw humanity as having little chance of avoiding the
two degree “guardrail” that has been broadly accepted throughout the world, but
pinned his hopes on mitigating the worst changes our damaged climate will bring
by adopting what he is calling “the third way”.
And although the ideas, such as deliberate growing of
seaweed, are largely nascent and in some instances still little more than
computer simulations they, as he said about solar energy, riding your bicycle
or simple using less energy, like the ”army of mice” chewing at the problem.
The full audio from last night’s launch will soon be on the
Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute website.
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