The environmental movement is taking off in so many sectors and in so many nations around the world that it’s hard to keep up. While watching the CBC this morning it was announced that “The National” a regular Canadian program not unlike our 20/20 or dateline is airing a special at 9:00 pm tonight called “Ready or Not, Living in a Warmer World.” I think it’s a bit of a misnomer however, to think we are all collectively going to fry in an overheated world when the truth of the matter is that our ocean currents and air currents will shift as a result of global warming so that some places will be freezing while others will be frying. So skeptics of global warming that keep referring to Lowell Ponte’s book “The cooling” to point to another “chicken little” of his time that was wrong are in fact reinforcing the reality of his prediction relative to global warming. That said, watch the The National tonight, channel 9, at 9:00 pm. It will feature many things among them the massive dyke system in place to keep London from flooding. It was said that it was originally built with the idea of being used or needed once a year. It is already being used 10 times per year. There is also another town in Britain that is literally falling into the ocean, while an island nation in the Indian Ocean is slowly disappearing.
Another island nation that has officially put a time on its demise as the year 2050 is Kirabati located on the equator and to the NE of Australia. Many of our fathers in the military during WWII and Korea passed through or stopped at many of Kirabati’s neighbors, which are the Solomon Islands, Tonga, Fiji, Tahiti, and New Guinea. All are much smaller islands with the exception possibly of New Guinea and it says a lot about their imposing doom also. Kirabati is home to 100,000 people and just 20 years ago had a landmass the size of 3 Alaskas. It’s diminished by half now, mostly covered with saltwater, its total land mass the size of the NY city limits. It used to have small pockets of freshwater pools overtaken now by the ocean. The mayor or head of the island nation is a realist and said he doesn’t think the islands will exist at all and soon and gave an official time when the nation will cease to exist. What does that say for all the other smaller islands mentioned? Along with fighting global warming we must realize there will be a need to make room elsewhere for thousands of people that will no longer have a habitat in which to live. Hear that all of you who pooh, poohed the demise of the polar bear? Substitute human beings clinging to the last of their habitat and move over to make room for them. Not so pooh, poohable anymore is it?
And what about our state of Hawaii? The massive rainfall and mudslides were a concern to me last year. It did not get enough coverage. My husband and I have eyed Hawaii as our retirement place for years. To be certain, we won’t be buying anything near the beach. That doesn’t leave much but mountainside lodging and with the mudslides last year, that’s not so enticing anymore either. Anyone else have Apocalyptic flash backs like me? “No mountain high enough, no cave, no valley, absolutely no refuge as a place to hide.” I’m just wondering what’s going to happen to the millions of people that have relocated in the Southwest with only one source of water shared among 3 states? Just months ago I wrote about that for the future, but the future is getting to be shorter and shorter a span for my comfort. If the fires and the drought keep advancing in those states there will be a huge mecca of people moving out of there. Move over again. We need to get moving, we’re still lagging behind.
Nations like Spain have entire solar parks in place already the size of 70 soccer fields with 60,000 panels with the intention of increasing to 100,000. They have completed 2 solar producing plants with the first to start production this month. For 2007 they plan on building at least 2 more really large 50 MW plants tied to that same solar park. The other day I heard Portugal is ready with the largest solar producing plant in the world. Iceland who will run it’s entire nation by hydrogen in the near future is opening its doors for an experimental process that may be able to bind excess CO2 to porous rock beneath the earth’s surface that will form a stable mineral that could remain there for millions of years. That is of course if any nation goes the extra mile to require all of its coal burning facilities to become gasification plants that trap all the excess CO2. Even China realizes it has polluted itself to death and is investing 64 billion dollars, uprooting thousands of citizens, to divert a river in the south to the north and along the way create new green cities. Nations everywhere seem to be coming up with renewable energy sources relative to their geological locations. Iceland has abundant water supplies so their energy of choice is hydrogen; sunny Spain and Portugal are using that source.
All of this from the rest of the world and yesterday I get a newsletter from Earthjustice that companies in the U.S. are still in an all out race to get permits for yet another 150 coal burning facilities across the country before new laws are established to nix them altogether or require they capture their CO2 emissions. Not fair considering our entire ski industry has managed to go green and fast. It knows global warming challenges its survival. Boy when money is at stake watch em turn green fast. And it’s really not fair considering many of us are changing out light bulbs, upgrading our homes for better efficiency, looking to buy hybrid cars, choosing to forego beef and pork, and do whatever little or large we can to contribute. What kind of role model is our industry in the U.S.? No wonder no one likes us.
John Dingell is right and fair with his remark that if we point all fingers at the auto industry to get on board to clean up its act than everyone else should have to do likewise. That would be coal burners, manufacturing, and yes those pollution producing, hell on earth for animals, CAFO’s or industrialized farms, which could disappear altogether, and I wouldn’t miss them. They were evil at their conception. We put out animated movies like sweet little “Charlotte’s Web” for our children to watch the intelligent, cute little pig when in reality what we do to animals is short of satanic. If we want to call ourselves a Godly nation than I propose we act it. I’ve sent this message to many congressional people, Cheney, and Bush included: Where do you think your going with all the fortune you’ve gained by raping the earth, raping your own? Of course I never get an answer. If we are made in the image of God, than it’s not a stretch to imagine God weeps for what we’ve done. The prophecy of His wrath is an altogether different scenario we would be wise to avoid.

Sorry, CBC’s The National is not at 9:00pm our time but Canadian time. So it’s airing at 10:00 tonight on channel 9. If you wanted to see it, it can be viewed via video on The National website. The website’s viewer is actually better because you can pick specifically what you want to watch. It appears London is in trouble from flooding. Not good.
[...] Here that Michigan? Here we have emphasis on drinking water again. Read my blog about Kiribati: http://www.blogsmonroe.com/world/?p=48. For Australia the consequences of even moderate sea level rise is multiplied. The same Nova [...]
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[...] I wrote a blog in 2007 about the Kiribati Islands, another island nation nearby the Solomons, that is losing landmass at an alarming rate. The population there is about 100,000. The Kiribati official there thinks his island nation will cease to exist by 2050. http://www.blogsmonroe.com/world/2007/04/the-rest-of-the-world-is-going-green-fast/. [...]