Showing posts with label Sustainable Living Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sustainable Living Festival. Show all posts

23 February, 2016

Taking the practicality of Beneath the Wisteria to Tatura

This week’s Beneath the Wisteria gathering will be in Tatura.

We have agreed to meet in Tatura to be a part of the town’s “Practical Living Trail” which in turn is a part of Victoria's Sustainable Living Festival.

And so with the emphasis on sustainability, this piece from the Richard Heinberg “Museletter” seemed both appropriate and relevant.

The Saturday, February 27, Beneath the Wisteria gathering in Tatura, at Stuart Mock Place in Hogan St, starts at 11:00am and continues for about an hour.

A market and various other attractions will be happening at the time and those planning to join us should being a folding chair.

Read the Museletter 285 - “Why Sustainability?”

08 February, 2016

Beneath the Wisteria moves to Tatura to join the 'Practical Living Trail'

This month’s Beneath the Wisteria will be in Tatura as a part of Victoria’s Sustainable Living Festival.


Tatura Transition Towns is staging a “Practical Living Trail”, to become an integral part of the annual state-wide festival and so Beneath the Wisteria is moving its meeting spot for a month.

The gathering in Saturday, February 27, still at 11:00am, will be at Tatura’s Stuart Mock Place in the town’s main street.

Those planning to attend should being a folding chair as there is uncertainty about what seating is, or will be available.

Beyond the change in venue, all remains as usual – the gathering is free, last for about an hour and those attending are encouraged with them their thoughts about how communities and individuals should respond to climate change.

A host of events are planned for the “Practical Living Trail”, including a sustainable building forum starting at 12:30pm at the Mechanics Institute Hall in Tatura’s Hogan St.

25 October, 2015

Shepparton speaker's group re-brands itself


G


George Marshall speaking in
Melbourne before coming
to Shepparton.
eorge Marshall visited Shepparton earlier this year explaining why there is “wired-in” disconnect between humans and climate change.
The co-founder and director of the British organization “Climate Outreach and Information Network” (COIN) spoke to about 70 people and made the visit to Shepparton while in Australia for the “Sustainable Living Festival”.

COIN has rebranded itself as simple “Climate Outreach” and in launching its new website has released a new video – “Find out who we are, what we do and why we do it”.

01 March, 2015

Renewed interest in renewable energy, at Woodend


Energy and Resources Minister,
Lily D'Ambrosio.
Renewable energy projects, including solar energy schemes are staging a revival in Victoria under the new Andrews Labor government.

The Woodend local sustainability group is launching two green energy projects: a new solar energy scheme and the resurrection of a longstanding plan for three community-owned wind turbines.

Today, at the Sustainable Living Festival in Woodend, Energy and Resources Minister Lily D'Ambrosio will announce a $100,000 grant for a 30-kilowatt solar farm.

Read about what is happening in the story headed: “Andrews government shows renewed interest in renewables”.

17 February, 2013

Avoiding the most difficult - we need to 'speak the words'


The obvious is being conveniently avoided by most in ongoing conversations about how we mitigate and address the damage we are doing to our climate.

The amazing and palatial
BMW Edge theatre.
Necessary changes are so extensive, dramatic, demanding, confronting and contrary to the contemporary understanding of the imagined good life that no one appears game to speak the words.

Many allude to what is needed in subtle ways, but fearing alienation from the mainstream or worse, a social shunning by most they avoid the direct spelling out of the urgent and needed action.

Let us be clear - everyone needs to stop doing anything that is the outcome of burning fossil fuels.

Melbourne’s February SustainableLiving Festival was wonderful and on show was a powerful exhibition of peoples’ innovative nature and skills, along with a fascinating array of speakers, films and demonstrations all aimed at helping us better understand how we could live in quieter and less energy intensive manner.

The festival, despite all the wonderment and energy it brought to the conversation about addressing climate change, would not have been possible, at least on that grand scale, with the input of fossil fuel powered energy.

Just on a personal sense, let’s consider my debt to fossil-fuels:

Journey to and from Melbourne by diesel powered train;

Travel within Melbourne on trams using electricity from fossil-fuel powered generators;

Food and drinks from establishments relying entirely on electricity;

Business cards, brochures and various handouts (some of which I brought home) were all available because of a finite resource;

The palatial beauty of the BMW Edge theatre (the venue of many presentations) was an exhibition of the power of fossil-fuels;

Many of those who spoke at the festival, or were exhibitors or worked on an exhibit, were able to participate because of energy derived from fossil-fuel;

In fact, most everything in sight, including the well-manicured plants and grass, existed because of fossil-fuel.

My trip, enjoyable and rewarding as it was, was made possible because of energy from fossil-fuels. That process, in itself, is not sustainable.

Clearly, if we are to slow the damage to our atmosphere and so slow climate change, we need to end our dependence today, not tomorrow, on fossil-fuels.

That, I know, is an unrealistic call, but the intent of the innovation on show at the Melbourne festival needs to be redirected from solving a particular problem, as important as that is, to rather helping the broader community understand how it can emotionally deal with a revolutionary change to their lifestyle.

Our way of living, even that of the Sustainable Living Festival, is predictably and scientifically impossible to sustain and so rather await the catastrophic collapse of society we should be devoting time, energy and effort to understanding an alternative.

The alternative is about close knit, resilient,  multi-use communities with a grasp on their governance, in which the basic method transport is walking or cycling, basic foods are available locally, and neigbourhoods, in which sharing is a way of life, are about people, rather than machines.

Arriving at that point will only happen with a significant “bottom-up” push accompanied by an equally courageous “top-down” leadership.