Environmentalism Blog

It's Stewardship, Not Environmentalism | (pro(vo)cation)

May 20th, 2012

Making the world around us a better place seems like a fairly universal, non-partisan goal.

But at least in Utah, the words “environmentalism” and “environmentalist” can have strong negative connotations. That connotation isn’t unjustified either; to me, the environmentalism of past generations seems grating, simplistic and occasionally condescending. Like the author of this Grist article, I’m concerned about the environment, but even I don’t really feel comfortable calling myself an “environmentalist.”

In response, I think that when we talk about the environment, especially in Utah, we need a better and less polarizing term that better captures our values. That term, I believe, is “stewardship.” Moreover, I think if we really want to push traditionally ”green” policies, we’ll only talk about “stewardship.” For the sake of effectiveness, let’s expunge “environmentalism” from our vocabulary.

One reason for using this word in Utah is obvious: stewardship is a canonical value of the LDS Church. “Environmentalism,” on the other hand, is vilified by the political right.

But stewardship is a broader term as well. Environmental writers from many locations and backgrounds use it frequently already. And in any case, it seems to capture a better sentiment: people are supposed to wisely take care of the earth. In that way, “stewardship” can help people see that widely held values align with concepts they might otherwise reject as “environmentalism.”

Stewardship is also an active value, rather than a prohibitive one. So, for example, stewardship might suggest that we should plant trees rather than not cutting them down, as environmentalism tended to emphasize. We should walk to get places, rather than not driving so much. We should conserve and recycle, rather than not dumping trash in landfills.

Where “environmentalism” has come to imply a whole slew of pain-in-the-neck rules and anti-behaviors, “stewardship” implies active engagement. The end result is similar — less pollution, more trees, etc. — but stewardship focuses on individual action and simply “deactivates” destructive behavior collaterally.

This isn’t a new or revolutionary argument. And of course it’s a semantic issue that needn’t change the actual policies currently being pursued by green-oriented Utah citizens. But it’s also an issue that if properly “packaged” with more accurate terminology, can help people see that they have more common ground than quarrels. In other words, Provo may never be a city of environmentalists, but it’s already filled with potential stewards.

A plaque on a foot bridge over the Provo River. It reads, “We do not inherit the world from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.”

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Environmentalism as advertising

May 20th, 2012

From Ben and Jerry’s ice cream:

He insists that focusing on “shared values” – rather, presumably, than share value – is “very profitable”. Whereas conventional companies “pay a whole bunch of money to advertising agencies to come up with a made-up story to try to make the public feel good about their brands, a value-led business puts its resources into adding to the quality of life in the community. That builds customer loyalty.”

Super, go for it. Have fun, make money.

But of course, this only works with those who share or desire those values that you are pushing. And there are some very different value systems out there. There is an, admittedly and thankfully very small, market out there for a company whose values include being beastly to Jews. I don’t think it will shock anyone at all to hear that there really are racists in our society who would respond to having their idiocy pandered to. Or sexists, capitalists, neoliberals and all sorts of groups that have slightly different value systems from those put forward by Ben and Jerry’s.

And yes, there are those who will respond to the idea that the Brazil nuts in their ice cream were harvested from wild forests. Although quite why they should, given that the nuts don’t grow well in plantations and are thus not commercially farmed in that manner is a tad beyond me.

So, companies that appeal to the values of their potential customers: yup, great idea. Have fiun and make money. But I’m afraid you cannot complain if some of them appeal to values you don’t share: for many will not share the values that you push.

Which leads then to the joy of this market thing. Companies that do define themselves by these values get to compete for the attentions of those who care about such things. Those catering to the rarer prejudices will either fail or stay small, those who cater to the mass ones successfully will prosper and grow fat. Which is excellent, isn’t it?

For it is how we get both Simon Cowell and the Royal Philharmonic, both Virgin Airlines and Ryanair and both Walls and Ben and Jerry’s.

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Failed Metaphors and A New Environmentalism for the 21st Century

May 17th, 2012

Peter Kareiva, chief scientist for The Nature Conservancy, where he is responsible for developing and helping to implement science-based conservation throughout the organization and for forging new linkages with partners. Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he has also received a Guggenheim Fellowship and is a member of the Ecological Society of America and the Society for Conservation Biology. Peter also cofounded the Natural Capital Project, a pioneering partnership among The Nature Conservancy, Stanford University and WWF to develop credible tools that allow routine consideration of nature’s assets (or ecosystem services) in a way that informs the choices we make everyday at the scale of local communities and regions, all the way up to nations and global agreements.

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Borepatch: Environmentalism as a signalling device

May 17th, 2012
It can’t be realistic policy – that requires a suspension of disbelief of epic proportions – and so the new World Wildlife Fund report can only be posturing among environmentalists.  Certainly no western government can even begin to implement its proposals:
Analysis Extremist green campaigning group WWF – endorsed by no less a body than the European Space Agency – has stated that economic growth should be abandoned, that citizens of the world’s wealthy nations should prepare for poverty and that all the human race’s energy should be produced as renewable electricity within 38 years from now.

But then we get onto the big stuff. First up, there must be an “immediate focus” on “drastically shrinking the ecological footprint of high income populations”.

That means you, Reg reader: you are to accept a massively lower standard of living, in order to reduce your “footprint” to match your nation’s “biocapacity”. Then you’ll have to take another cut, because your nation – being rich – has more “biocapacity” than a poor country does (despite their claim that planetary resources are finite, WWF acknowledges that new “biocapacity” can be created in the form of cropland, forests etc), but this should be shared with the poorer lands under “equitable resource governance”.

That means less heating when it’s cold – no cooling at all, probably, when it’s hot. It means sharply limited hot water: so dirtier clothes, dirtier bedding and a dirtier you – which will be nice as you will also have to live in a smaller home and travel almost exclusively on crowded buses or trains along with similar smelly fellow eco-citizens. Food will be scarcer and realistically much less nutritious (milk for kids will be a luxury, let alone meat, fruit, coffee, that sort of stuff. Get ready to eat a lot of turnips, if you’re a Brit.)

Want proof that these policy proposals cannot be implemented?  OK, here you go:

Yet incoming socialist president François Hollande claimed after his victory over Nicolas Sarkozy that he would bring an end to this mythical austerity: “We will bring back Europe on a track for jobs, growth and the future… We’re no longer doomed to austerity.”

This is just a willful, purposeful distortion. What the heck is he talking about? Certainly not France.

If not France, then where?

In Italy and Spain, which have been dependent on tens of billions of cash infusions from the European Central Bank (ECB) to refinance their debts, cuts are hardly anywhere to be found either. In Spain, spending was cut by just €11 billion in 2011, a mere 2.3 percent reduction. In Italy, spending actually increased by €4.3 billion.
Both countries borrowed an additional €117 billion last year alone, raising their combined debts to €1.939 trillion. So, no austerity there. Just debt slaves.

It’s dumbfounding to watch the environmental movement in action, as they become increasingly divorced from reality.  It’s like nobles in the ancien régime, knowing that something was different but never talking to anyone who might know just why.  Bloody commoners – glad nobody invites them to our parties.  And so, the collapse.

The media echo chamber seems very damaging to the entire environmental movement here, as does the (so far very successful) fundraising strategy of dialing the fear up to eleventy.  While that brings in perhaps a Billion dollars a year to the WWF machine, it’s divorced from reality.

The whole spectacle is rather sad, really.  A once noble cause has become the crazy guy in the intersection, shouting about the end of the world.

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The Watering Hole: Conservationism vs. Environmentalism

May 17th, 2012

The theme of this year’s Latornell conference, Prescription for a Healthy Environment, brings into focus the relationship between human society and its environment and more specifically our dependence on the environment.  Indirectly though it also draws attention to one of the most enduring dichotomies in our business.

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Mother's Day: Environmentalism and Maternal Health | Sierra Club …

May 14th, 2012










Around the world mothers are facing many health challenges caused by environmental factors.
(Marc Van Der Chijs, Flickr)





By Kavitha Pramod
May 13, 2012

Today children and families around the country will be celebrating their love for their mothers.  Along with the flowers, brunches, and cakes this Mother’s Day, take a minute to recognize important environmental issues affecting the well-being of mothers and their children in this country and around the world.

On the environmental front here in the United States, it is well-known that pesticides and other chemicals make their way into many products that we eat, drink, and use in our homes.  In the United States, a 2012 study was conducted to take a closer look at a common insecticide used to treat fruits and vegetables.  “Chlorpyrifos” is a pesticide that is often applied to products in order to kill insects.  In this study, exposure of pregnant mothers to this chemical was linked to changes in the brains of small children.  The side effects of pesticides bring to light the need for local and organic produce. We can also advocate for women who work in agricultural settings by supporting organizations such as Project HOPE and Project LEAF.

Worldwide, there are even more challenging environmental issues affecting mothers-to-be. According to Water.org, poor nutrition and drinking dirty water leads to the tragic deaths of thousands of babies and young children every day.  And by the same token, access to fresh water for pregnant women is extremely important in allowing them to maintain their health and to protect them from serious diseases that can be transmitted by unclean water.  In addition, women in these communities are often required to travel many miles by foot to collect whatever water is available to them, regardless of how clean it is.  Having to collect water in this way is grueling work, and puts a very great strain on both mothers and children in these communities.

The Mother’s Day Every Day campaign aims to address the challenges faced by mothers and children in this country and around the world.  This campaign, a collaboration between CARE and The White Ribbon Alliance, is drawing attention to the fact that thousands of women and children die during pregnancy and childbirth daily, and often for reasons that are preventable.  Skilled birthing attendants, family planning, and strong health care systems can save women and newborns’ lives, and the organization continually works to generate support for these services.

Mother’s Day is indeed a special day of the year where families come together to celebrate the important role that mothers play in all of our lives.  This Mother’s Day, Sierra Club Green Home encourages you to consider all of the mothers around the world who can benefit from the work of organizations such as Water.org and The White Ribbon Alliance and, if you think your mother would appreciate it, maybe make a donation in her name.

For related articles, see:
A Stove That Saves Lives and Slows Global Warming
25 Eco-Friendly Gifts for the Holidays 

© 2012 SCGH, LLC.

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Paradigms and Demographics: More History of Environmentalism …

May 14th, 2012
Look how little the leopards have lost their spots!

Professor Gasman’s Haeckel’s Monism and the Birth of Fascist Ideology provides insights into the coherent fascist intellectual doctrine that, by 1920, was embraced by a wide swath of European academics and artists. Defining features of this cohort were:

They referred to themselves as: ecologists, naturalists and socio-biologists.
They were pseudo-scientists bent on subverting real science.

Their mantras were: natural, holistic, and organic.

Their Religion of Nature was basically a revival of Pantheism. They worshipped Earth as a divine living organism. Human achievements were disparaged as scant and fleeting compared to Nature’s glory.

They desired scientist-led governance. Scientists probed Nature’s divine realm, hence scientists alone understood the political implications of Nature’s laws.

They were pessimistic and denied the existence of progress.

They exhibited a longing for primitivism.

They were organizationally and ideologically linked to the organic foods movement.

They were organizationally and ideologically allied with the occultist/neo-pagan milieu.

They were divided between those who wanted to replace Christianity and those who wanted to modify Christianity.

They dreaded human overpopulation and were active in eugenics/population control strategizing.

They considered humanitarianism to be scientifically incorrect.

They described society as an organism that grew organically out of Nature.

They saw direct continuity between biological and sociological laws, and contended that bio-evolutionary laws should literally be the basis for human laws.

They believed human survival required abject conformity to the environmental totality. Human liberation would come not through dominion over Nature but through submission to Natural Law.

They opposed capitalist industrialization and sought to reinvigorate beleaguered countryside interests undermined by the rise of industrial cities. Hostility to industrial capitalism manifested in criticism of what was deemed lifeless scientific-mechanical thinking.

They stridently opposed democracy.

Gasman did not set out to expose similarities between environmentalism and fascism. His book makes no reference to environmentalism nor ventures off the topic of European academic trends circa 1870-1920.

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The Radio Ecoshock Show: Is It Too Late for Environmentalism?

May 11th, 2012

http://bit.ly/K0hULK

Peak oil, the energy crisis and the “climate hurricane” with expert Robert Rapier. Then green law professor Michael M’Gonigle explains “Exit Environmentalism” – leaving the old campaigns, and maybe society, behind. Radio Ecoshock 120509 1 hour.

Give up hope and exit out of environmentalism? In the UK, deep greener Paul Kingsnorth says he’s leaving the climate movement, which is lost anyway. Who else is on the way out the door?

This week we’ll hear a challenging interview with one of the co-founders of Greenpeace International. Michael M’Gonigle has been battling since the late 1960′s. He teaches environmental law at the University of Victoria in Canada. Two hosts from the podcast “The Extra Environmentalist” interview Michael for Radio Ecoshock – about his new strategy which he calls “Exit Environmentalism”. Just in case, we’ll top that off with a shot at techno-optimism.

But first, I’ll talk with chemical engineer and biofuels specialist Robert Rapier

We go at the fundamentals of the energy crisis – peak oil, Asian demand, speculation and all that. Rapier compares greenhouse gas emissions from Asia to an unstoppable hurricane. I don’t agree with everything all our guests say, but Robert takes me closer to “exit environmentalism” with his clear cold logic about the real world we live in.

Brain stimulation from Radio Ecoshock. I’m Alex Smith.

Download just the Robert Rapier interview (CD quality 22 min)

Download just the Michael M’Gonigle interview (26 min CD Quality).

ROBERT RAPIER: IS THE CLIMATE CHANGE DEBATE JUST “ACADEMIC”? WILL AMERICA BECOME AN ENERGY GIANT ONCE AGAIN?

How realistic are biofuels as a replacement for oil? Are we headed for energy independence – or an energy crash?

Robert Rapier would know. He’s got 20 years’ experience as a chemical engineer, working with all kinds of fuels. Currently Robert is Chief Technology Officer at Merica International, a renewables and forestry company based in Hawaii. Rapier is also Managing Editor of “Consumer Energy Report”, and a regular guest on mainstream media. His latest book is “Power Plays, Energy Options in the Age of Peak Oil“.

I called up Robert after reading his article “Why the Debate Over Global Warming Is Academic“. It’s a new perspective, and I grilled him on it. Here is part of Robert’s reply in the Radio Ecoshock interview:

What is likely to happen is our emissions will probably continue to decline somewhat from here. But Asia-Pacific’s emissions are going to continue to grow unabated.

It’s not only Asia-Pacific. Africa, the Middle East, South America – all these developing regions are rapidly increasing their fossil fuel consumption. I say it [climate change] becomes “academic” because while we debate and debate how we’re going to get our emissions down, the emissions just continue to climb.

The reason I liken it to a hurricane – you know we can talk about whether climate change is going to be really bad and disastrous and so forth, just like when we watched hurricane Katrina come in. The night before it came in, I told my wife, I said ‘I’m afraid this is going to destroy New Orleans.’ But one thing we didn’t talk about is ‘Well, how do you stop the hurricane?’

And that’s what I see in Asia-Pacific right now. The reason I say it’s “academic”, I don’t see a viable way to stop them from increasing their fossil fuel consumption because they are already at such a low level per capita. So I’ve likened it to a rich person trying to tell a poor person to live within their means. The poor person is just trying to scratch out a living and increase their standard of living, while the rich person has already done that. We’ve already increased out emissions from a very low level, and we’ve gotten to a very high level. We just don’t have nearly as many people as they do.

The technology does not exist. No country has developed to a high level of development without fossil fuels. So to imagine that it can be done, we are imagining something that has never been done before.”

I offer two points of minor disagreement. First, the people of China and other countries are suffering terribly from air pollution. They may begin to demand clean energy just to preserve their health and their lives. Second, there is a limited amount of oil, and even coal, left. Eventually the pressures generally known as “peak oil” may limit the amount of fossil fuels, and make them uneconomical to use.

I could have offered more reasons, such as an utter economic collapse – which always cuts emissions, or severe and continuing damage from a destabilized climate, which either convinces people and governments to change, or again destroys the infrastructure required for supporting the food system and or industrial society.

Finally, there is always the dreamer’s hope that humans will come to understand they are wrecking the future and make a choice to do otherwise.

Robert Rapier offers us some tough realities though. The average American uses 22 barrels of oil a year. To give up one or two barrels may not be that difficult, with some not too painful lifestyle choices. The average Chinese person uses two barrels a year, Rapier tells us. That second barrel may be used for things like the tractor, the irrigation pump, or heating a home. Nobody is going to want to give that up, almost no matter what the cost is. Low fuel consumers are going to be willing to pay much higher prices per liter or gallon, and keep burning it, because they need it so badly.

Frankly, it’s very discouraging news in the context of fighting climate change. Rapier is not alone in feeling that battle is lost. I begin the program with a quote from Paul Kingsnorth, the UK deep green thinker behind The Dark Mountain Project.

And also coming to the conclusion, and it was a very difficult conclusion to admit to myself, but I think lots of people are starting to admit it to themselves now – coming to the conclusion that a lot of the problems that we are facing can’t be solved, in the sense that we would like to solve them.

For example, we’re not going to stop the climate changing. We’re not going to stop the mass extinction event that we’re in at the moment. Hopefully we can prevent it from getting any worse than it has to get but we’re in it, and it’s happening and it’s too late to do a lot of things about it.”

Is that realism or pessimism? The quote comes from an Orion magazine podcast that I hope to play for you later this season on Radio Ecoshock.

As I have a grandchild that I love, I cannot give up. We are in it. It is happening. But we must do all we can to prevent the worst from happening, and I believe we can.

Continuing with Robert Rapier, I draw on his expertise in biofuels. Can biofuels replace fossil fuels? Absolutely not, he says. The maximum we can expect is ten to twenty percent replacement. Rapier isn’t shy about discussing the negative trade-offs with some biofuels, like corn ethanol. He suggests the “holy grail” of biofuels is algae production. That doesn’t use up land space, and may be biologically sound. However, so far algae production is not economical on any meaningful scale. More research and development needs to be done.

We also discuss the difference between methanol and ethanol. Methanol is derived from natural gas, so it is not a substitute for fossil fuels. It was tested fairly widely in California a couple of decades ago, and found to be a good fuel. The industrial production methods for methanol are well known. But methanol had less political support. Ethanol has the widespread support of the farm lobby, so politicians like it.

Both ethanol (which is derived from plant material) and ethanol are more corrosive than the gasoline we use now.

At one point, U.S. taxpayers were subsidizing European fuels containing ethanol. The subsidized fuel was blended in the U.S. and then exported to Europe. That ended when the subsidies for ethanol expired at the end of last year.

I ask Robert Rapier about the media hype that America will re-emerge as a world energy giant, due to the “trillions of barrels” of reserves in places like oil shale. Rapier says the U.S. will always be an oil importer, as long as it is able. The so called “reserves” are really rocks containing the beginnings of oil, left unfinished by geological processes. It takes a lot of energy just to finish the process.

Rapier compares these “reserves” in the oil shales of the West, in places like Utah and Wyoming, to the gold in the sea. Yes, there are trillions of dollars’ worth of gold flakes in the oceans. No, we don’t have any economical way to retrieve that. Ditto the inflated dreams of billions of barrels of potential oil locked up in the stones of the West.

I highly recommend the Robert Rapier interview. Here is his regular column at Consumer Energy Report.

EXIT ENVIRONMENTALISM, WITH PROFESSOR MICHAEL M’GONIGLE

I first heard Michael M’Gonigle’s talk on “Exit Environmentalism” in a badly recorded You tube video speech at the University of Victoria. It seemed too important to waste. Seth Moser-Katz and Justin Ritchie volunteered to do this interview for Radio Ecoshock, as part of their longer podcast called “The Extraenvironmentalist”. Just Google that, or go to extraenvironmentalist.com.

University of Victoria You tube “Exit Environmentalism” Part 1 61 minute delivered October 27, 2011.

Part 2 Critique and answers 63 min

Be sure to check The Extraenvironmentalist web site for an extended version of this interview with Professor M’Gonigle.

In the interview done for Radio Ecoshock, M’Gonigle questions several aspects of the green model of expectations. For example, we protest and lobby for legislation to be enforced by governments. But that regulation seldom happens – because the legislators depend on the polluters for campaign donations, but even deeper, because governments themselves are the biggest spenders on the growth model that needs to be kept in check. It’s pretty profound when a University teacher of green law says the legal system can’t work to save us from environmental catastrophe.

I’ve known Michael M’Gonigle’s work for some years. He was one of the founders of Greenpeace International, and then Chair of the Board of Greenpeace Canada. We interviewed Michael about his push to green universities around the world, as models for our next generation of leaders. But M’Gonigle might be the first to say, despite his lifetime of work, we have failed. Mass extinction is already developing, and the climate is already spinning up, possibly out of any control. He works his way through our fallacies, trying to reach new answers. Check out this powerful interview.

In this Radio Ecoshock show we had time for just a quick sample from another podcast from The Extraenvironmentalist. Seth and Ritchie interview Dr. Michael Huesemann author of the book “Techno-Fix”. That is Episode number 37.

The Techno-fix podcast runs 1 hour 54 minutes, and I’ve sliced out a couple of sample running less than 10 minutes. It’s definitely just a scratch of the surface, a teaser to encourage you to hear the whole thing.

Still wondering what to think? Is it realistic and cool to hope? Even if the ship is sinking, I must keep on bailing. We’ll have more dialogs on the way forward in coming Radio Ecoshock shows, plus news about the three crises: climate change, the energy crisis, and the fragile economy. Keep tuned to Radio Ecoshock at our new web site, at ecoshock.org.

I’m Alex Smith, thank you for listening.

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Environmentalism makes you puke | The Real Revo

May 11th, 2012

Norovirus is the stomach flu bug that has you driving the porcelain bus for 24 to 36 hours. It gets in your guts and announces “EVERYBODY OUT! ALL EXITS! NOW!” It is nasty. Today there is a new vector for the norovirus.

Oregon public health officials have traced a nasty outbreak of norovirus infections in a group of soccer players to an unlikely source: a reusable grocery bag contaminated with what some experts are calling “the perfect pathogens.”

The incident is raising questions, once again, about the cleanliness of the portable shopping bags that many consumers use to avoid the paper vs. plastic impact on the environment.

But plastic bags kill wildlife, RD! You know, just like windfarms.

Life is pretty much made up of trade-offs, isn’t it?

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Watch Now: Climate Depot's Morano on modern environmentalism …

May 8th, 2012

Watch Now: Climate Depot's Morano on modern environmentalism and human progress Read the Full Article. Sunday, May 06, 2012By Marc Morano – Climate Depot. Comments 0 Print Filed under: videos, mediacd. Get updates by email

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