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Our Challenge

As Stewart Brand said in the introduction to the Whole Earth Catalogs,

"If we are going to act like gods, we might as well get good at it."

And Biomimicry is one key, and in a sense, one of the legacy's of the Whole Earth movement. Like Buckminster Fuller's comprehensive antipatory design science, Biomimicry is (1) the exploration and understanding of nature, i.e., the environment, as the technology and economy of an exquisitely evolved and designed regenerative life support system (living machine) that has been tested and developed over 3.8 billion years of evolution (see-the time line of evolution) and then (2) applying those battle-hardened principles to all aspects of human activity--designing, creating, and managing of society, from industrial products, to urban and regional systems, to public policy, business, the economy, etc., i.e., Sustainability 2030 and the leading edge of the sustainability response.

Key Questions

Sustainability 2030's (S2030) research/practice program addresses the following key questions:

1. How can you/we become effective, powerful, even transformational forces for sustainability?

2. What is the program required for ultimate sustainability success--the end game?

3. Who has part of the answer now (current sustainability champions), how far do they take us, and how can we harness the state-of-the-art leading edge sustainability to an innovative research/practice program that gets us to ultimate success in the limited time remaining?  (more)

Mission

Advance, accelerate, and amplify an accurate understanding of the sustainability challenge and how to harness the power and potential of sustainability for an effective response before time runs out. The Strategic Sustainability2030 Institute  (S2030I) is a web-based think/do tank (more).

Announcements

UPCOMING:

April 2013, Chicago, APA National Conference.

May 13-15, 2013, Seattle, Living Future unConference.

PAST (2012):

October 23-26, Portland, EcoDistrict Summit 2012.

July 31-Aug. 4, Portland, Ecosystem Services Conference.

May 2-4, Portland, The Living Future Unconference for deep green professionals.

June 15-18, Brazil, Rio+20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development

Affiliations
International Society of Sustainability Professionals
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Our Challenge

as Buckminster Fuller observed, is

"to make the world work for 100% of humanity, in the shortest possible time, through spontaneous cooperation without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone."

This goal is the essence of sustainable development! The Buckminster Fuller Institute (BFI) provides access to Bucky's legacy, including his comprehensive anticipatory design science revolution. Check out their website, their programs, and engage.

Problem & Way Out

  

Caption: "Sadly, the only proven way to achieve global GHG reductions so far has been economic recession." Comment: Fortunately, shifting to 100% renewables would catalyze the global transition to durable prosperity and community well-being in a way that would eliminate GHG production AND grow the economy <<continued>>. (See also: strategic sustainabilitynatural capitalismits four strategies, and RMI's Reinventing Fire [energy] Program.) 

APA Links
FEATURES1

Green Urbanism - Formulating a series of holistic principles

Green Growth - Recent Developments (OECD)

Foundation Earth - Rethinking Society from the Ground Up

Reinventing Fire - A key transformational initiative of RMI worth knowing/watching.

A Quick-Start Guide to Strategic Sustainability Planning

NEW Report: Embedding sustainability into government culture.

New STARS LEED-like sustainable transportation tool for plans, projects, cities, corridors, regions.

Strategic Community Sustainability Planning workshop resources.

Leveraging Leading-Edge Sustainability report.

Winning or losing the future is our choice NOW!

How Possible is Sustainable Development, by Edward Jepson, PhD.

Legacy sustainability articles -- the Naphtali Knox collection.

FEATURES2

TNS Transition to Global Sustainability Network

EcoDistricts -- NextGen Urban Sustainability

Darin Dinsmore: Community & Regional Sustainability Strategies and Planning

Sustainable Infrastructure: The Guide to Green Engineering and Design

APA-SCP (Sustainable Community Planning) Interest Group

Sustainability Learning Center

New path breaking Solutions Journal

Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

Strategic Sustainability -- distance learning at BHT

Q4 Consulting - Mindfulness, Sustainability, and Leadership

RealClimate--Climate Science by Real Scientists

World Cafe--Designed Conversation for Group Intelligence

Real Change--Research Program for Global Sustainability Decision Making

RMI Conference, SF, 10-1/3-2009

Real Time Carbon Counter

Global Climate Change - Implications for US

Agenda for a Sustainable America 2009

ALIA Institute Sustainability Leadership

Frontiers in Ecological Economics

Herman Daly -- Failed Growth to Sustainable Steady State?

EOF - Macroeconomics and Ecological Sustainability

Gil Friend - Truth About Green Business

Sustainable Transpo SF

Google Earth-Day KMLs

AIA Sustainability 2030 Toolkit

Donella Meadows - Which Future?

Urban Mobility System wins Bucky Challenge 2009

Renewable Economy Cheaper than Systems Collapse

Population Growth-Earth Forum

Breakthrough Ideas-Bucky Challenge

Urban & Regional Planning-Cities at a Turning Point

John P. Holdren-Meeting the Climate Change Challenge

Stephen Cohen's Weekly Column in the New York Observer

« COP15 - Planetary Cardiac Arrest? | Main | Could Endless Fusion Finally Arrive? »
Sunday
Dec062009

Climate Challenge Briefing from Jan 2009

Good briefing on climate challenge and potential for COP-15 from Feb 2009.

UN Climate Conference: Thecountdown to Copenhagen: In 331 days' time, 15,000 officials from 200countries will gather in the Danish capital with 1 goal: to find a solutionto global warming. Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor, presents the firstin a series of dispatches on the crucial summit. 

Known officially in UN-speak as COP 15 - the 15th meeting of the parties ofthe UN's Framework Convention on Climate Change - the meeting in Denmarkwill try to work out a way for the world to act together to preserve thethin envelope of atmosphere, soil and sea which surrounds our planet andenables us to live, in the face of rising temperatures which threaten todestroy its habitability.

All the world's major governments, including the once-scepticaladministration of the US President George Bush, now formally accept thattemperature rises have already begun, are likely if unchecked to provedisastrous for human civilisation, and are being caused by emissions ofgreenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide from our power plants, factories andmotor vehicles. 

But if all the major governments now accept it, getting them to agree on howto tackle it still seems a very long way off indeed. The essential problem,to use the jargon, is burden-sharing. We know the world has to cut its CO2emissions drastically, and soon. But which countries are to cut them, by howmuch?

The penalty for failure could not be higher. It is just 20 years since theworld woke up to the danger of rising carbon emissions destabilising theatmosphere. Two decades ago it seemed a fairly distant threat, prefiguredprincipally in supercomputer climate prediction programmes; something thatwas likely to happen a comfortably long distance away, such as at the end ofthe 21st century. 

Three things have altered since then. First, the changing climate is nowvisible, not just in computer predictions, but all around us: spring insouthern Britain, for example, is arriving about three weeks earlier than itdid 40 years ago. At this time last year a red admiral butterfly, anarchetypal creature of the summer, was photographed perching on a snowdrop,a flower of the winter - a previously unheard-of occurrence. 

Second, it has become clear in the past five years that the earth isresponding to the increasing CO2 loading of the atmosphere much more rapidlythan scientists initially thought. There are numerous examples but toinstance just one, the summer sea ice of the Arctic Ocean is melting farmore quickly than anyone imagined. 

Third, it has become apparent, even more recently, that global emissions ofCO2 are shooting up at a rate that far exceeds anything the UN'sIntergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) thought possible when itsketched out future emissions scenarios in a special report in 2000. Eventhough we have had 20 years to think about emissions cuts, and 11 years ofthe Kyoto protocol, the treaty which actually prescribed the first cuts forthe industrialised countries, emissions are soaring as never before. 

Some leading climate scientists are now openly voicing concerns that thismakes it increasingly unlikely we can meet the aim of keeping globaltemperature rise to about 2C above the pre-industrial level, which isgenerally regarded as the most that may be endured by human society withoutmortal danger. (We are now at about 0.75 degrees C above pre-industrial, andanother 0.6 of a degree is thought to be inevitable because of the CO2 whichhas already been emitted). 

Certainly, if we are to have any chance at all at holding the increase totwo degrees, there is wide agreement that global emissions have to peak verysoon - probably by 2015 or 2016 - and then rapidly decrease, to 80 per centbelow present levels by 2050. The later the peak, the greater (and thereforemore difficult) the subsequent decrease would have to be. 

That's the pathway the world has to follow. Copenhagen offers the chance toset out along it. But even if the deal in December is not as ambitious asscientists and environmentalists insist is necessary - and at the moment,that seems pretty likely - it is vital that there is actually an accord.Disagreement would be a catastrophe.

 

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