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  • Mining ‘more important’ than farming

     

    The Mining Amendment Bill, which would ban any new mining on areas defined as prime agricultural land, was also defeated in parliament on Thursday.

    “Ultimately mines generate many, many more jobs than agricultural production,” Mr Rees said.

    Mr Macdonald told reporters on Friday that while 100,000 NSW people were employed in farming, much of the work was part-time and seasonal.

    He said the work created $5.6 billion in terms of exports.

    But he said the mining sector, which employed about 75,000 people directly or indirectly, contributed $12.4 billion in exports last year.

    “You have to remember the mining communities really contribute significantly to those localities where there is significant mining,” he said.

    The comments follow a long-running battle involving farmers in the Liverpool plains in northern NSW, who have been lobbying state and federal politicians to stop BHP Billiton from mining coal in the area.

    Nationals leader Warren Truss criticised the NSW government’s stance.

    A spokesman for Mr Truss told AAP the statements “sound like they’re coming from people more concerned about mining royalties than food security”.

    Mining had built the nation, however “you can’t eat coal,” the spokesman said.

    “The NSW government would do well to listen to the concerns of people and try and work out a reasonable compromise rather than shooting the messenger,” the spokesman said.

    NSW Farmers Association president Jock Laurie said the issue had been put firmly on the agenda and it was clear the bill had a lot of support despite its defeat.

    “We need to ensure that the voice of agriculture is heard,” Mr Laurie said in a statement.

    “Prime agricultural land and its water resources must be retained and the nation’s agricultural resources safeguarded.”

  • Will Emerging Markets Make Renewable Energy More Democratic?

     

    Over the years, the industry has been expanding to new countries, dividing the market among a larger number of countries every year. But in an economic downturn, with price declines amid an oversupply of solar panels and wind turbines, that trend could be accelerating. And as more countries pass a variety of climate-change legislation, industry insiders predict that — in the coming years — the clean-energy oligarchy will become ever more democratic.

    This change may be most visible among developing countries, such as China, which has doubled its wind market in each of the last four years. With 6.3 gigawatts (GW) of new wind-power installations and 12.2 GW of total installed capacity in 2008, the Chinese market was the second-largest — after the United States — last year. And the GWEC expects the market to double again this year, in spite of the recession. India was the third-largest wind-energy market last year, with 1.8 GW of new installations, and had the fifth highest total capacity, with 9.6 GW.

    While the rest of the list of top wind markets comprise the usual suspects, including Germany, Spain, Italy, France and the U.K., the list of the fastest-growing wind economies holds some surprises. Among countries with at least 50 megawatts of annual wind installations, the five fastest-growing markets include:

    • Hungary, which grew more than fifteenfold to 62 megawatts in 2008 from a mere 4 megawatts in 2007;
    • Norway, which expanded its market nearly 13 times to 102 megawatts in 2008 from 8 megawatts in 2007;
    • Brazil, which rose ninefold to 94 megawatts from 10 megawatts;
    • Portugal, which increased nearly sixfold to 712 megawatts from 123 megawatts and
    • Turkey, which more than quadrupled to 345 megawatts from 97 megawatts.


    Courtesy Jennifer Kho, Data Source: GWEC

    Steve Sawyer, secretary general for the GWEC, said he expects to see a boom in Turkey before the other emerging markets in Europe. The country’s rapidly-growing economy, combined with “no indigenous fossil-fuel resources to speak of,” tremendous wind resources and a government that’s greening up to enhance its bid to join the European Union, has contributed to the speedy growth of wind power in Turkey, he said. The country’s windiness and high electricity prices make wind projects competitive without any major subsidies, he added.

    Brazil is likely to continue its strong wind growth — the country already has one of the cleanest electrical grids in the world, mostly dependent on hydro power, he said — while Chile and South Africa also have huge potential to be a bright spot in the next few years, Sawyer said.

    Chile has few of its own energy sources, except hydropower, and in May, lost much of its natural-gas supply for several days when Argentina halted exports to deal with a supply shortage. That volatility helped attract substantial wind-energy investments, Sawyer said, adding that Chile could see several big projects come online by the end of this year or next year. One challenge, however, is that the Chilean market isn’t large enough to sustain a manufacturing industry, and will likely rely on Brazil to supply its turbines, he said.

    Meanwhile, South Africa has far and away the world’s most progressive policies on climate change, Sawyer said. Under former president Thabo Mbeki, the government made a strong commitment to renewables, he said. The country in April announced a feed-in tariff of 1.25 South African rand (about US $0.15) per kilowatt-hour of wind. Sawyer said he hopes the new administration of President Jacob Zuma, who was sworn in earlier this month, will continue to support renewables.

    Sawyer also sees Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Turkey, and possibly the Czech Republic, growing “very quickly.” In addition, Pakistan has installed its first commercial wind farms and has enormous growth potential, he said, but it will take “a good deal more political stability there for that market to really bloom.”

    Aside from the above-mentioned countries, Michael Liebreich, CEO of New Energy Finance, a London-based research firm, said that renewable energy is becoming popular in Romania, which has shot up to No. 4 on the list of top clean-energy markets. He added that several Latin American countries, including Peru and Mexico, also popped on to the Top 15 list in the first quarter. Only one Latin American country, Brazil, made it on the list last year, he said. “Latin America is a big secret [market],” he said. “We expect several Latin American countries to do very well.”

    Emerging Solar Stars

    Meanwhile, the list of emerging solar-power markets has little in common with that of emerging wind markets. The fastest-growing solar markets above 10 megawatts of annual installations include

    • Czech Republic, with 54 megawatts installed last year, up nearly elevenfold from 5 megawatts in 2007;
    • Greece, with fivefold growth to 15 megawatts in 2008 from 3 megawatts the previous year;
    • South Korea, with expanded more than five times to 258 megawatts from 50 megawatts;
    • Spain, which more than quadrupled to 2.5 gigawatts from 526 megawatts and
    • Italy, which also more than quadrupled to 271 megawatts from 60 megawatts. (As noted earlier, Spain and Italy already are among the world’s largest wind markets, although not the fastest-growing.)

    Jenny Chase, manager of the Solar Insight Service at New Energy Finance, said feed-in tariffs drove most of this growth last year. And she expects many of the emerging markets to keep growing. Chase forecasts that the Czech solar market will grow 48 percent this year to 80 megawatts, based on a generous tariff and relatively easy permitting, but said that financing will remain a challenge.


    Courtesy Jennifer Kho, Data Source: New Energy Finance

    She predicts the Greek market will more than triple to 50 megawatts, in spite of an almost impenetrable bureaucratic process for applying for government incentives and permits. New legislation passed in January should speed up the process, at least “in theory,” she said. Chase also expects the Italian market to more than double to 671 megawatts, based on a strong feed-in tariff and a fairly sunny climate on par with Greece. Solar developers in Italy may struggle with financing, as with everywhere else right now, as well as some permitting bottlenecks — although nothing as bad as in Greece, she added.

    Still, the outlook isn’t all sunny. Chase predicts that the Spanish and South Korean markets will decline this year. Spain’s shrinking market hardly comes as a surprise, as the country — which grew to 2.5 gigawatts last year based on a generous incentive, capped its incentive program at 500 megawatts this year. That represents an 80 percent drop in the market size, expected to put the Spanish market — which surpassed Germany to be the No. 1 market last year — back below Deutschland.

    “Spain is currently trying to figure out how they’re going to pay their annual feed-in-tariff bill,” Chase said. “Spain is a bit of a disaster area and the government is probably trying to exclude as many projects as possible from the 2008 feed-in tariff.”

    In South Korea, a similar feed-in tariff cap could slow the market, she said. Rumors suggest that large projects could be capped at as little as 50 megawatts, she added, although she has not been able to confirm the number.

    Overall, Chase expects this to be “a shockingly hard year” for solar companies. The New Energy Finance forecast ranges from a bearish 5.5 gigawatts, which would represent a 5 percent fall from a 5.8-gigawatt global market in 2008, to a more bullish 29 percent increase to 7.5 gigawatts.

    “We just cannot see as much demand as there potentially could be supply,” Chase said. “I think the solar industry will be really surprised at how low solar prices can go.” Low prices, of course, could be good for the industry in the long-term. “It will open up new markets that we haven’t even considered,” she said. 

    Any growth this year will have to come from a larger number of markets, she said. Many of the emerging markets have suffered from pent-up demand because, even if they wanted solar panels last year, anyone who had panels available sold them to Spain, she said. “Now manufacturers are interested in talking to them.”

    Comparative Development

    In terms of deployment, wind power is about a decade ahead of solar, and that goes for the degree of market-share distribution as well, Sawyer said. “Solar is where wind was 10 years ago, with most of the market in two to three countries — all Spain and Germany, with a little bit in the U.S. and Japan,” he said. “In wind, it was all Germany and Denmark, and a little bit of Spain, and now that’s changed. We’ve got a dozen countries over 100 megawatts.”

    The largest wind market, the United States, accounts for only 20.8 percent of the cumulative installed capacity and but accounted for 30.9 percent of the new wind installations last year, while Spain made up some 45 percent of the global solar market last year.

    Sawyer expects the top 10 wind markets to keep growing, continuing to capture the lion’s share of the world market for some time. But he forecasts the top 10’s market share will drop by about the middle of the next decade, when the industry comprises 20 or 25 major markets.

    It makes sense that more developing countries are turning to wind power, he said. While the solar industry isn’t yet large enough to fulfill the electricity needs of rapidly developing economies at an affordable price, wind is, Sawyer argues. “Wind is competitive now, unless you have large quantities of cheap coal and no concern about the climate,” he said. “Wind is many times the cheapest and best option for adding large quantities to the grid in a very short amount of time.”

    Freelancer Jennifer Kho has been covering green technology since 2004, when she was a reporter at Red Herring magazine. She has more than nine years of reporting experience, most recently serving as the editor of Greentech Media. Her stories have appeared in such publications as The Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, BusinessWeek.com, CNN.com, Earth2Tech, Cleantechnica, MIT’s Technology Review, and TheStreet.com.

     
  • Are there limits to population growth in Australia?

     

    Australia has a high population growth rate compared with other high-income nations, mainly because of its high level of immigration. Although birth rates are below replacement level, there is also a natural increase in population levels. This is due to the lag effect of increases in population a generation ago, which resulted in increased numbers of women of child-bearing age. There is very little agreement among scientists as to how many people Australia can support, and even less about what environmental impact high levels of population would have. Some biologists, geographers and environmentalists argue that Australia already has more people that the environment can cope with, and that a sustainable population level would be more like ten million people.

    .

    The case against limits to growth of population in Australia

    Land degradation has sometimes been attributed to population levels. But the NPC’s population issues committee argues that Australian soils are in fact feeding more than fifty-six million people (both within and outside Australia), and that they provide wool and cotton for even more people. Moreover, it argues that the damage done to the soils was done by very small populations: the colonial settlers who cleared the land and the farmers (now less than 5 per cent of the total population) who still clear the land and sometimes cause further soil erosion. Similarly, mining also provides the needs of a wider population. The committee argues that the “environmental impact of any industry which exports a very large proportion of its output is therefore weakly related to domestic population needs and requirements” (pp. 41-2).

    It has also been argued by Lyuba Zarsky, an economic consultant, that even coastal tourist development is a result of economic growth in the Asia&endash;Pacific region rather than pressures from population in Australia. “While immigration can exacerbate environmental problems, strong curbs on immigration by themselves will do little to restore Australian farmland, improve forestry practices, or conserve coastline” (1991, p. 125).

    .

    Carrying Capacity

    Population biologists sometimes talk about the ‘human carrying capacity’ of an area. This refers to the ‘maximum rate of resource consumption and waste discharge that can be sustained indefinitely in a defined region without progressively impairing ecological productivity and integrity’ (French 1991, p. 123). Another term used is ‘cultural carrying capacity’, which recognises that people will not find it desirable to live at the limits of human carrying capacity because the quality of life would be unacceptable. The world could, as indicated above, support many more people living a subsistence lifestyle&emdash;but is that what we want?

    The impact that a population has on an area obviously depends on their practices and culture, particularly on how many resources they consume and the volume of wastes they discard. J. H. Cushman and Andrew Beattie, population biologists, point out that the Australian continent ‘could support more Swedes (and far more Ethiopians) than Americans’ (1992) because of the differences in the amounts people from these nations consume (assuming they did not start consuming like Australians when they got here, since Australians consume almost as much per person as North Americans).

    Environmental degradation is a product of numbers of people, consumption per person and the environmental impact of each unit of consumption. Increasing numbers of people in Australia will affect Australia’s resource use unless the extra numbers can be compensated for by lower consumption per person or increased resource&endash;use efficiency. In a study for the NPC, G. McGlynn estimated that, in order just to keep resource use constant while population and incomes were increasing at current rates, a 3.11 per cent increase in efficiency of resource use per year would be required. However, another study cited by the NPC showed that increases in efficiency have not exceeded 2.1 per cent since 1965. (Population Issues Committee 1992, p. 44)


    Source: Sharon Beder, The Nature of Sustainable Development, 2nd ed. Scribe, Newham, 1996, pp. .

    © Sharon Beder

  • A Moral Dilemma

    Garrett Hardin’s “lifeboat ethics” essay addresses this question.8 Those

    who argue that it is a global concern appear to avoid the issue of national sovereignty and responsibility in terms of both cause and remedies. Overlooked is the unforgiving fact that, regardless of an individual nation’s Footprint, in a world where nearly all nations exceed their maximum sustainable population level, at best, a zero-sum situation exists. Providing capacity to other nations implies reducing one’s own nation’s sustainable population level and Footprint  —and continual declines in standard of living. In a literal sense —especially considering immigration— it also intimates that individuals in exporting nations are being replaced by those in capacity importing nations —those inhabitants in or from the other less well-situated and frequently unaccountable countries.

    If Hardin’s “lifeboat” ethics and it displacement connotations is misplaced, then capacity-importing nations must be able to continue current practices without limit.
     

  • Sustainablity Initiatives

     

    Sustainability Education

    Education for Sustainability – Reorientating Australian schools for a sustainable future (PDF). John Fien. Tela Paper 8. Australian Conservation Foundation. 2001

    Education for sustainability involves approaches to teaching and learning that integrate goals for conservation, social justice, appropriate development and democracy into a vision and a mission of personal and social change.

    It seeks to develop the kinds of civic virtues and skills that can empower all citizens and, through them our social institutions, to play leading roles in the transition to sustainability.

    Sustainability Issues

    Teaching for a Sustainable World: International Edition. Griffith University and the Department of the Environment, Sport & Territories. 1997

    We need a new ecological ethic, an ecologically oriented value system based upon empathy with other species, other people and future generations, and respect for natural and social limits to growth.

    We need social systems, institutions and practices that support careful planning in order to minimise threats to nature and the quality of life.

    Issues of ecological sustainability and social justice

    There are great differences in the availability and use of resources around the world, with poverty and need in some areas matched by overproduction and over-consumption in others.

    • How can the over-consumption, waste and misuse of resources by some people be reduced?
    • How can the severe poverty that causes many to exploit the earth just to survive be eliminated?
    • How can the pressure on the environment from both causes be overcome?

    Some economic activities do great harm to environments, resources and communities.

    • How can economic activity be made of benefit to the communities and the companies involved, and without critical damage to the environment?

    Economic growth in some parts of the world is so high that it is leading to the production and consumption of many items that are super-luxuries and use resources that could be used to satisfy the needs of many of the world’s poor.

    • How can the resources consumed by such luxuries be redirected to aid the poor or be conserved for future generations?

    Relatively high population densities and growth rates in certain parts of the world, and the associated pressure on the local resource base, are symptoms of the legacy of colonialism and present-day structural inequalities in the world economic system rather than causes of environmental problems. Appropriate social development lies at the heart of the solution to population and environmental pressures.

    • How can the nexus between the environment, social development and population growth be formulated to ensure the sustainable use of resources?

    The indigenous and farming peoples of many countries have developed an ethic of sustainability and associated land use practices that have preserved their culture and harmony between people and nature for millennia.

    • How can the rights of these people be maintained and the knowledge and wisdom they possess be shared with others in all parts of the world?

    Women and young people have a vital role to play in environmental care and development, now and into the future. They have viewpoints, skills and interests that can help maximise the potential for sustainable development.

    • How can the wisdom, courage and talents of women and young people be used as a model for sustainable development policies and practices?

    The most effective arena for action on sustainability and justice issues is the local community.

    • How can people best organise themselves locally – and liaise with others nationally and globally – to collaborate in the movement towards sustainable development.

    Regional Sustainability

    Regional Futures – Sustainability in our regions. Australian Conservation Foundation. 2000.10

    Those regions that are tapped into the global economy are booming, while those regions based on traditional rural and industrial enterprises tend to be falling behind.

    A new agenda to support regional development is urgently required, and while the focus has tended to be on the social and economic aspects of the regional divide, a truly sustainable long term future for all regions must be underpinned by a healthy environment. Indeed environmental action in the regions can build social and economic sustainability.

    Sustainable Cities and Towns

    National Summit on the Future of Australia’s Cities and Towns – Communiqué. 2004

    To be successful into the future, Australia’s cities and towns must:

    • be diverse, vibrant and inclusive communities.
    • be globally competitive.
    • reduce ecological impacts.
    • enhance equity of access.
    • demonstrate good quality design.

    Strategies include:

    • a national, shared vision.
    • an integrated governance framework.
    • a good information base.
    • a national settlement strategy.
    • active citizen programs.
    • better infrastructure.
    • a sustainability audit of taxes, charges, funding and pricing.

    A National Action Framework will be considered by ministers within their own jurisdictions and at the-next Ministerial Council meeting.

    Components of the National Action Framework include:

    • a shared national vision.
    • benchmarking framework.
    • office of sustainable communities.
    • national information exchange and analytical tools.
    • community engagement.
    • reduced car dependency.
    • equitable broadband connectivity.
    • managed growth and decline.
    • cities for climate protection.
    • national infrastructure funding program.
    • a signed Kyoto protocol.
  • Learning to live with climate change will not be enough

    Another 69 years would pass before scientists warned a U.S. president of the potential for serious climate disruption, and still another 30 years before the first report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

    Now, facing climate destabilization, our choices for action are said to be adapting to a warmer world or mitigating the severity of climate change by sharply reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Of course, neither adaptation nor mitigation alone will be sufficient, and sometimes they may overlap. But in a world of limited resources, money, and time we will be forced often to choose between the two. In making such choices, the major issues in dispute have to do with estimates of the pace, scale, and duration of climatic disruption. And here the scientific evidence tilts the balance strongly toward mitigation.

    The argument for adaptation to the effects of climate change rests on a chain of logic that goes something like this: Climate change is real, but will be slow and moderate enough to permit orderly adaptation to changes that we can foresee and comprehend. Those changes will, in a few decades, plateau around a new, manageable stable state, leaving the gains of the modern world mostly intact ? albeit powered by wind, solar, and as-yet-undreamed advanced technologies.

    In other words, the developed world can adapt to climatic changes without sacrificing much. The targets for adaptation include developing heat- and drought-tolerant crops for agriculture, changing architectural standards to withstand greater heat and larger storms, and modifying infrastructure to accommodate larger storm events and rising sea levels, as well as prolonged heat and drought. These are eminently sensible and obvious measures that we must take.

    But at some point there are limits to what can be done and the places in which such measures can be effective. With predicted changes in Arguments for mitigation are rather like those for tuning the water off in an overflowing tub before mopping. temperature, rainfall, and sea level rise, it is unlikely that we can “promote ecosystem resiliency” or adapt to such changes with “no regrets,” as some have suggested. On the contrary, ecological resilience and biological diversity will almost surely decline as climatic changes now underway accelerate, and going forward we will surely have a great many regrets ? chiefly of the “why did we not do more to stop it earlier” sort.

    Accordingly, more extreme adaptive measures called “geoengineering” are being discussed. These include proposals to fertilize oceans with iron to increase carbon uptake, or injecting sulfur dioxide into the upper atmosphere to increase the reflective albedo and thereby provide temporary cooling. But since the effects of geoengineering are largely unstudied and its risks largely unknown, it is a “true option of last resort” in the words of one analysis. Accordingly, “the best and safest strategy for reversing climate change is to halt the buildup of greenhouse gases,” as a recent article in Foreign Affairs suggests.

    Proponents of mitigation, on the other hand, give priority to limiting the emission of heat trapping-gases as quickly as possible to reduce the eventual severity of climatic disruption. The essence of the case for mitigation is that:

    Growing scientific evidence indicates that the effects of climate change will be greater and will occur faster than previously thought.

    The duration of climate effects will last for thousands of years, not decades.

    We are in a very tight race to avoid causing irreversible changes that would seriously damage or destroy civilization.

    The effects of climate destabilization can be contained perhaps only by emergency action to stabilize and then reduce CO2 levels.

    Practically, climate mitigation means reversing the addition of carbon to the atmosphere by making a rapid transition to energy efficiency and renewable energy. Arguments for mitigation, in other words, are rather like those for turning the water off in an overflowing tub before mopping. Those advocating mitigation believe that we are in a race to reduce the forcing effects of heat-trapping gases before we cross various thresholds ? some known, some unknown ? tipping us into irretrievable disaster beyond the ameliorative effects of any conceivable adaptation.

    There are five reasons why focusing on mitigation is a far-better choice than emphasizing adaptation. First, the record shows that climate change is occurring much faster than previously thought, will affect virtually every aspect of life in every corner of Earth, and will last far longer than we’d once believed. The small cloud that Arrhenius saw on the distant horizon in 1896 is growing into a massive storm, dead ahead.

    The effects of climatic destabilization, in other words, will be global, pervasive, permanent, and steadily ? or rapidly ? worsening. Given the roughly 30-year lag between what comes out of our tail pipes and Adaptation targets will often move faster than we can anticipate as climate disruption becomes manifest. smokestacks, the climate change-driven weather effects we now see are being caused by emissions that occurred in the late 1970s. What is in store 30 years ahead when the forcing effects of our present 387 parts per million of CO2 are manifest? Or further out when, say, the warming and acidifying effects of 450 parts per million of CO2 ? or higher ? on the oceans have significantly diminished their capacities to absorb carbon? No one knows for certain, but trends in predictive climate science suggest that they will be much worse than once thought.

    The implications for climate response strategies are striking. For example, it is now obvious that impacts will change as atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases rise, meaning adaptation targets will often move faster than we can anticipate as climate disruption becomes manifest in surprising ways. To what climatic conditions do we adapt? What happens when previous adaptive measures become obsolete, as they will?

    Similarly, at every level of climate, forcing the changes will be difficult to anticipate, which raises questions of where and when to intervene effectively in complex ecological and social systems. Are there places in which no amount of adaptation will work for long? Given what is now known about the pace of sea-level rise, for example, what adaptive strategies can possibly work in New Orleans or South Florida, or much of the U.S. East Coast, or in those regions that will likely become progressively much hotter and dryer ? and perhaps one day mostly inhabitable ? under drastically worsened conditions?

    Second, the implications of the choice between adaptation and mitigation do not fall just on those able, perhaps, to temporarily adapt to climatic destabilization, but rather on those who lack the resources to adapt, and to future generations who will have to live with the effects of whatever atmospheric chemistry we leave behind. The choice between mitigation and adaptation, in other words, is one about ethics and justice in the starkest form. A few wealthy communities in the developed world may be able to avoid the worst for a time, but unless the emission of heat-trapping gases is soon reduced everywhere, worsening conditions will hit hardest those least able to adapt. The same can be said far more emphatically about future generations.

    There is, third, a “stitch in time saves nine” economic argument for giving priority to mitigation. Stabilizing climate now will be expensive and fraught with difficulties, but it will be much cheaper and easier to do it sooner rather than later under much more economically difficult and ecologically harrowing conditions. Nicholas Stern, for one, estimates “that if we don’t act [soon], the overall costs and risks of climate change will be equivalent to losing at least 5 percent of global GDP each year, now and forever.”

    Fourth, efforts to adapt to climate change will run into institutional barriers, established regulations, building codes, and a human tendency to react to ? rather than anticipate ? events. There are, in economist Robert Repetto’s words, “many reasons to doubt whether adaptive measures will be timely and efficient, even in the U.S. where the capabilities exist.”

    In the best of all possible worlds, effective adaptation to the changes to which we are already committed would be complicated and difficult. In the real world of procrastination, denial, politics, and paradox, however, In the real world of procrastination, denial, and politics, anything like thorough adaptation is unlikely. anything like thorough adaptation is unlikely. Rather, it will be piecemeal, partial, sometimes counterproductive, wasteful, temporary, and ? ultimately ? largely ineffective. In contrast, measures pressing energy efficiency and renewable energy, as complicated as they are, will be much more straightforward, measurable, and achievable. And they have the advantage of resolving the causes of the problem, which has to do with anthropogenic changes to the carbon cycle.

    Finally, beyond some fairly obvious and prudent measures, federal, state, and foundation support for climate adaptation gives the appearance that we are doing something serious about the looming climatic catastrophe. The political and media reality, however, is that efforts toward climatic adaptation will be used by those who wish to do as little as possible to block doing what is necessary to avert catastrophe.

    The conclusion is inescapable: Adaptation must be a second priority to effective and rapid mitigation that limits the scale and scope of climatic destabilization. The priority must be given to efforts toward a rapid transition to energy efficiency and deployment of renewable energy. Until we get our priorities right, the emission of greenhouse gases will continue to rise beyond the point at which humans could ever adapt. In ecologist George Woodwell’s words, “The only adaptation is mitigation.”

    We were first warned of global warming over a century ago and have lingered in increasingly dangerous territory in the belief that we can continue to burn massive amounts of fossil fuels without risking serious The emission of greenhouse gases will continue to rise beyond the point at which humans could ever adapt. climate destabilization. That fantasy is rapidly coming to an end. According to NASA’s James Hansen, we must move decisively to return CO2 levels to 300 or 350 parts per million. If we wait too long to prevent climate change, we will ? perhaps sooner than later ? create conditions beyond the reach of any conceivable adaptive measures. With sea level rise now said to be on the order of one to two meters by 2100, for example, we cannot save many low-lying places and species we would otherwise prefer to save. And sea levels and temperatures will not stabilize until long after the year 2100.

    There will be unavoidable and tragic losses in the decades ahead, but far fewer if we act to contain the scope and scale of climate change now. No matter what we do to adapt, we cannot save some coastal cities, we will lose many species, and ecosystems will be dramatically altered by changes in temperature and rainfall. Our best course is to reduce the scale and scope of the problem with a sense of wartime urgency. And we better move quickly and smartly, while the moving’s good.

    David W Orr is the Paul Sears Distinguished Professor of Environmental Studies and Politics at Oberlin College. He is the author of five books, including Design on the Edge: The Making of a High Performance Building. His next book, Down to the Wire: Confronting Climate Collapse, will be published this summer.

    ? From Yale Environment 360, part of Guardian Environment Network

    Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited 2009