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Showing posts from November, 2021

Every tree counts

 Guardian author Senay Boztas wrote on 26 November 2021 in an article called ‘Every tree counts’: Dutch come up with cunning way to create forests for free"  ( LINK ):  : "The idea behind it is simple: every day unwanted tree saplings were being cleared and thrown away when those young trees could be carefully collected and transplanted to where they are wanted."   Trees can contribute materially to reducing atmosphere carbon and to restoring oxygen, but they need space to grow. Much of the land in our cities is currently covered with concrete and asphalt to make it easier for people to drive and to park cars. According to Leander Jones in the Guardian on 6 October 2021 ( LINK ):  "A 2014 report commissioned by Berlin’s regional parliament found that 58% of traffic space was devoted to cars, even though only a third of journeys on Berlin streets (and only 17% within the S-Bahn ring) were made by car. Only 3% was set aside for bicycles, which accounted for 15% of jou

Hope and the Climate Crisis

 On 18 November Rebecca Solnit wrote in the Guardian about avoiding despair. In her article "Ten ways to confront the climate crisis without losing hope" ( LINK ) she says: "The world as we knew it is coming to an end, and it’s up to us how it ends and what comes after. It’s the end of the age of fossil fuel, but if the fossil-fuel corporations have their way the ending will be delayed as long as possible, with as much carbon burned as possible. ... If we succeed, those who come after will look back on the age of fossil fuel as an age of corruption and poison. ... We must remake the world, and we can remake it better. " Remaking the world is what the Christian church is about. In Christopher's sermon this morning he talked about one desperate prisoner in a harsh London gaol overcoming his fear and changing the world around him. Such thing happen, but they do not happen without our engagement and commitment. Rebecca Solnit has ten recommendations that include ba

Selfishness, greed, apathy

In Christopher's sermon he quoted Gus Speth, a climate scientist who said as long ago as 2016 that the causes of problems with the environment were selfishness, greed, and apathy, and that those problems could not be solved by technology. In the COP26 climate conference many countries are reluctant to take steps that might impact their economies, and the very rich in these countries appeared to be reluctant to sacrifice increases in their own wealth for the welfare of the planet. The apathy of those who are not very rich may well grow from a fear that they will suffer. In the eco-church committee meeting this week we discussed encouraging people to pledge to take at least one action that would improve the environment. Small things matter. We could pledge to eat less meat during the week, or only to eat meat that is environmentally sound (cattle fed in pastures not feedlots, or free range chicken). We could pledge only to buy new clothing from environmentally sound sources, and only