2021 Climate News Wrap-Up

“The Year in Climate News” — looking back over 2021. A lot happened.

2021 was yet another year that felt like five. … Before summer had even begun, drought, heat and fires had already torn across the West. … Despite inaccurate claims from Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, we explained: No, the reason for the blackouts was not frozen wind turbines. The main problem was frigid temperatures that stalled natural gas production, which is responsible for the majority of Texas’ power supply. Fast forward to early June, when it wasn’t technically summer yet, but the American Southwest was already baking and drying up.”

The Year in Climate News
A lot happened this year. Jog your memory with stories compiled by The New York Times climate desk.

To get where we want to go, we need to know where we are and have been. Thank you always to the New York Times for its climate coverage.

New Year Party Invitation

💚🎊🎉 Dear Friends! Please don’t spend this last day of 2021 alone! (unless you want to). YOU are invited … to a worldwide New Year’s gathering all day starting right now!! The Deep Adaptation* New Year’s gathering is happening for 24 hours (starting about 4 hours ago), and it is wonderful! Chatting & socializing with collapse-aware companions all across the globe. I just had coffee and hung out for about an hour and a half with deeply likeminded people, good music. ☕️🎵🎶☮️

I will be going in & out all day as my work flow permits. See Zoom invite below! Such a friendly wholesome way to ring out the old year and welcome the new. Hope to see you there!! As I have mentioned on this blog, I’ve been involved with Deep Adaptation for awhile and draw a lot of sustenance from this group of compassionate, aware, and sensitive humans. 💚💚💚

* Deep Adaptation is a concept, agenda, and international social movement. It presumes that extreme weather events and other effects of climate change will increasingly disrupt food, water, shelter, power, and social and governmental systems. These disruptions would likely or inevitably cause uneven societal collapse in the next few decades. The word “deep” indicates that strong measures are required to adapt to an unraveling of western industrial lifestyles. The agenda includes values of nonviolence, compassion, curiosity, and respect, and a framework for constructive action.” (Wikipedia) https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Adaptation

You are invited to attend the DAF 2022 Global Countdown event – which has just started, and will keep going for another 24 hours! 🙂

Here’s the Zoom link to join: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82130055381?pwd=QU9VNEFPMzZhbWV0VkNiN2RJS2FYUT09

Volunteers and participants in the Deep Adaptation Forum are planning various activities over this time, from music to readings and conversations. See the evolving programme here. We will also be sharing this slideshow, which presents an overview of the activities of various DAF groups and circles.

Do feel free to jump in at any time, and for any amount of time, to meet whoever is online, and have a drink and/or a chat.

End of Year Housecleaning – Scribbly Notes

My final end-of-year housecleaning task today includes both paper stacks and electronic dregs. I forgot about some notes I’d scribbled from various webinars, videos, random fragments that popped into my head, talks that I was preparing, etc., in the latter part of this past year starting in August. Since it’s nowhere near as large a volume of material as “My Year in Webinars 2020,” a monster post I did back in September where I spewed forth a year and a half’s worth of conference and webinar notes, I’m pasting the text directly in here rather than uploading it as a PDF. Warning: The notes below are mostly just dribs and snips, unlikely to be useful to most folks. But, as always, if you/your community should desire a talk on any of the topics herein, I can either put a talk together for you, or track down other speakers for you. 

Meta-note: I’m doing this radical new thing where I don’t beat myself up and call myself a loser and a train-wreck for having scraps of tiny spiral notebook notes that I’ve left lying around for months without typing them up and doing something with them. This novel “not beating myself up” thing saves a wondrous amount of energy, which I can use to just type the darn notes up already and maybe enjoy the beauty of the day while I’m at it. If this self-leniency resonates with you at all, I encourage you to experiment with it! (As I type, gentle golden light beams over my shoulder and flickers on the wall, in the shape of the leaves of the trees in the yard to the west of my office window. And I hear some of the lighter-weight windchimes gently chiming every once in a while. Bonus: The breeze is strong enough to feel pleasant wafting through the window but not so strong as to scatter my pile of tiny little ballpoint-scribbled papers all over the room.)

Florida Native Plant Society Lunch & Learn Fri 8/20/21

FWF & FDOT study “Economics of Roadside Vegetation”

Partnership to Save Plants: FDOT, FWF, FNPS

FDOT Native Plant Working Group

ETDM planning phase is best time to get involved with a plant rescue

FDOT ETDM environmental screening tool

TRIBE On Homecoming and Belonging

Sebastian Junger

Humans need to feel:

1 – Competent at what they do; 2 – Authentic in their lives; 3 – Connected to others

“Treating combat veterans is different from treating rape victims because rape victims don’t have this idea that some aspects of their experience are worth retaining.”

3 factors seem to crucially affect a combatant’s transition back into civilian life:

1 – Cohesive and egalitarian tribal societies – resource-sharing; “social resilience” – egalitarian wealth distribution

2 – Ex-combatants shouldn’t be seen — or be encouraged to see — themselves as victim

3 – Vets need to feel that they’re just as necessary and productive back in society as they were on the battlefield.

“One way to determine what is missing in day-to-day American life may be to examine what behaviors spontaneously arise when that life is disrupted.”

THE REAL GOAL (notes for a permaculture talk I was putting together perhaps?)

• Can’t always get what we (think we) want

• Social Capital

• Leverage Points

Low: Tinkering with numbers

High: Beauty; what gets defined as beautiful

(Notes for another talk I gave)

Friday talk

– 5 R’s (Refuse, Reduce, Reuse, Repurpose, Recycle)

– Story of Stuff 2:37 intro

– Cradle to Cradle book McDonough 

– Permaculture ethics; don’t buy anything you wouldn’t be willing to bury in your backyard (tall order but worth aspiring to)

– J2ZW; Terracycle.com

– Modular local plant (Dutch)

– Lo-Tek Resiliency book

– Ants, worms

– “Compost happens”

– New type of bioaccumulation

First permaculture design principle (that I learned) was

Relative location

– Food: grow some of your own and buy from local farmers

– Business: support local shops, restaurants

– Employment: DIY, telecommute

– Education: DIY, homeschool, online, unschool

– Church, community

Permaculture is a set of design principles, inspired by observing how nature works. It’s meant to allow people to more effectively meet their basic needs with less burden on other species and on the ecosystem. In fact, with ecologically smart design, we can actually BENEFIT the ecosystem more than if we were doing nothing (not that doing NOTHING is actually possible) by applying these principles.

I wonder what this country could have been like if African or Native American cultures could have become our dominant culture, instead of bleached Anglo becoming our dominant culture. People idolizing English-looking buildings, lawns, etc. Trucks with trailers carrying ride-on mowers and edgers and leaf-blowers to one piece of ground after another. Our culture is an experiment in what happens when a whole country decides that art and beauty are impractical and optional. 

New England Historic Society webinar

Transmission of material culture from England to New England 1620-1720

“You don’t have sumptuary laws unless people are dressing sumptuously.”

In England, materials were scarce and workers were plentiful. New England was opposite.

Woodlots limited in England – deforestation; wood plentiful in New World

Job opptys limited in England; construction jobs plentiful in New World (my ancestor who came over in 1630 was a house-carpenter and cabinetmaker, as was my ancestor who fought in the Revolutionary War)

Colonists enacted regulations re timber harvesting (uh hello! Native Americans had managed forests!)

Ornate chest on left was older — SIMPLE chest on right was newer; relied on technology and transport

Mortise & tenon joinery

A turner could make a chair five times as fast as a joiner could

PW – Peter Woodbury of Beverly

Sawmills were popular in colonies because unlike in England, joiners guilds didn’t fear competition, and also deforestation was not a concern.

Sawmills were the repository of colonial venture capitalist funds

Q&A

– How did Native Americans cut down trees and make furniture?

Don’t know; wish I had learned. Working on it right now.

Presentation by Nancy ___, senior curator.

Goofy cabinet design on spindly legs — maybe they did it “because they could” (new technology)

COP26 TED Climate Session 1 – YouTube

1) Slide of global tipping points – they cascade. Example: polar ice melting –> temperature turnover over ocean –> alters monsoon pattern in Africa

2) We have surpassed 4 of 9 boundaries

SPEED & SCALE

Action Plan for Solving Climate Crisis Now (6 components)

1 electric cars

2 decarbonize

3 food

4 protect nature

5 clean up industry practice

6 tech (mechanical trees etc) for carbon removal

Book cont’d

Climate change amplifies inequities. USA historically largest emitter, MUST go first. 

– to show world it can be done

– to drive down cost, AND

– to fund transition in less rich countries

Climate crisis is humankind’s greatest opportunity to address longstanding inequities.

Speaker on geothermal (young woman – impressive) – Drills, fracturing rock (my opinion it sounds like a deal w the devil) (Her idea of repurposing the oil drilling industry’s skills and equipment is very tempting in its sensibleness, however)

Greenhouse gases (different speaker I think?)

– Nitrous oxide

– Methane (holds heat)

– Carbon dioxide (lingers)

Most methane is from RECENT emissions; cutting methane is fastest most immediate opportunity to slow down warming.

Pie chart shows Ag, Energy, and Waste Management being about equal thirds

Energy production is largest and cheapest to address. Most emissions are from PRODUCING fossil fuels.

Oil fields in Texas are now wasting enough gas to heat 2 million homes. Mainly because government and industry have been DATA-DEPRIVED. But the technology is getting better. 

– Waste management solution: Generate electricity from landfill methane

– Ag: Suppress methane in cow guts. Use digesters to digest manure and make electricity. 

Also ag: RICE. Maintain shallower level of water in rice fields.

Countdown.TED.com or on YouTube channel

Solomon Goldstein-Rose (very young man – impressive)

– He considers nuclear “clean” (I disagree)

– Also seems to assume that our modern Western industrialist models of education, health, etc. are the ideal that we should impose on every other “backward” country (this was just my immed reaction; need to watch video again)

Says we need to multiply today’s global electricity production by 12 times! 

It’s not OK to simply replace today’s world with a “clean” version. 

DO Look Up!

Yesterday I subscribed to Netflix just so I could watch Don’t Look Up, the darkly comic portrayal of human denialism in the face of an impending event that will destroy the entire planet and everyone on it. The film, with its star-studded cast including Meryl Streep as POTUS, is currently trending #1 on Netflix. I found the film well worth watching.

Someone in the Deep Adaptation group just posted this link to a YouTube by Leonardo DiCaprio (who played the role of the lead scientist in the film):

DiCaprio on the film and the actionable window for climate

At the end of his 4-minute talk, Mr. DiCaprio shares a link for those who want to know what actions we can take.

Also: Hear from director Adam McKay on that super-powerful triple ending!!

DEEP GREEN at the F.R.E.S.H. Book Festival!

For the first time ever, DEEP GREEN book will be at the FRESH Book Festival! Dates are Fri-Sat Jan 7-8 at the Midtown Cultural & Educational Center in Daytona Beach. (There’s also a virtual component, so you can attend regardless of your geographic location.)

Admission: Kids, students, and teachers get in free!! Seniors are $5.00 and general admission is $7.00.

Special Note for kids, families, teachers! We have several really wonderful children’s book authors (some of whom actually dress up in character)! Please spread the word, the youth are out of school and we hope lots of young people can make it.

More info on this outstanding, internationally recognized book festival and also on the film festival (Thursday eve Jan 6; it is always excellent):
https://www.freshbookfestivals.net

So excited! I love this annual festival and always look forward to it. Am thrilled to be there as an author. Visit the link in the first paragraph to see the announcement poster with names and photos of all the authors.

New! DEEP GREEN on TikTok

Hey!! I have a TikTok channel now.
15-second micro video postcards from my everyday life. Hope you enjoy these little snippets! I set my standard video time at 15 seconds because I think that’s a cool length for a video. But, I’m not used to it, so I keep getting cut off. I’m really enjoying the format though.

For longer vids you can always visit my YouTube channel. I haven’t posted much there lately but I might again at some point. And, you can also just type my name in the YouTube search field; that’ll bring up a lot of videos of me speaking that are not on my channel per se.

Retirement Manifesto

First, two disclaimers:

• I’m not in any position to tell anyone how they “should” approach retirement, or any other aspect of their financial affairs. Everyone comes from different circumstances, and there are reasons why finance is a sensitive subject. As always on this blog, and in my book, I’m merely sharing my own ideas and my own journey, and hope you will find at least some of it helpful in crafting the unique work of art that is your own life.

• Even though I have my ideals that I’m aiming for, it doesn’t mean I’m there right now or will ever get there (though it is my aim). I always endeavor to be transparent about any gaps that exist between my ideals and my actual practice (be it in finances or in any other realm), but I’m mentioning this to you right now just in case it’s not clear.

OK! Disclaimers done.

In my book, I mention that at some point awhile back (actually wow, it was 20-plus years ago now; how time flies), I realized that my money that I had invested in a retirement account was out there in the world doing stuff that I might not approve of.

This realization hit me way before I had even heard of permaculture or regenerative living (living our lives in a way such that we give to people, other species, and ecosystems more than we take). So I wasn’t really sure what to do with it. It did stick with me though, and formed the seed for my current mind-set around income, retirement, and money in general.

For some years now I have been seeing as deeply problematic the whole idea of stockpiling a bunch of assets (in any form, be it money or otherwise) for the purpose of “retiring” or any other form of old-age security. I see this paradigm as problematic for many reasons:

1) Reliance on stocks (here I mean not stock-market stocks, but the permaculture definition of “stocks”: an amassed pile of assets — think of a squirrel’s acorn stash) rather than flows (“our daily bread,” so to speak) fosters insecurity. Stocks by themselves are more brittle than flows. Also, with stocks, the goalpost tends to keep moving. So, if I amass a million, my mind is going to start urging me to work on the second million “just for an extra cushion; just to be safe.” Also, amassed assets are more likely to make a person a target. And cost money and energy to protect.

2) I see “amassing” as a fear-based reflex, based on the idea (created by the industrial-consumer society we birthed in the USA) that “no one will take care of me in my old age”; “old people have no value”; “I won’t be able to engage in economically productive work once I reach age XX.” Rather than amassing personal stashes of assets, we’d do better to go directly to the root of the issue. For example, devise a regenerative career path that extends right up until we die. Could be teaching, tending sheep, grandchild-minding, business mentorship, herbal medicine consultation “wise witch lady”, shaman, master carpenter teacher, seed-bank tender, librarian/archivist, storyteller, musician, what have you. Traditional societies have always had economic roles for everyone from young children to the eldest elders. If we want to take a lot of the fear out of modern living, we need to retrofit this resilience into our society. My personal ideal is to develop an entirely flow-based path for myself, with maybe just enough stockpiled assets for an emergency house repair fund, though I am not at my ideal yet.

3) Stocks are more likely than flows to disrupt ecosystems (both social and biological; neighborhoods and rainforests). This is because chunks of money or other amassed assets always need a place to “park,” and they will exert a distortive influence one way or another. For example, my neighborhood is full of houses that people from other states have bought as their fourth and fifth houses, AirBnB investment properties etc. Meanwhile low-wage workers struggle to find a place to live in the dwindling stock of affordable rental properties.

4) The work that people are doing to anass that pile of money for retirement “so they can quit working” tends not to be work they’d really want in their hearts to be doing. This tradeoff comes at a heavy opportunity cost not only for individuals but for our collective wellbeing, as much creative energy gets dissipated rather than applied to building the beautiful abundant world we really want.

In a nutshell, my current ideal is to earn the minimum viable income to meet my needs, and be able to work for the rest of my life. And have just a small emergency fund. I don’t know exactly what that means. Income-wise my ideal right now is a steady, consistent $13,000 per year. (My target would be higher, but I am fortunate, through other people’s past hard work, not mine, to own my house free and clear, and have no student-loan debt.) Stockpile-wise, maybe 5k.

I’ve touched on various aspects of finance on this blog and will dig up some links to those posts for you. They include links to some of my favorite articles by other regenerative/permie thinkers as well.

Further Exploration:

• “Flowing Towards Abundance” (Toby Hemenway, resilience.org; originally published on tobyhemenway.com). In permaculture design class when we learned about “stocks and flows,” I immediately realized why no amount of stockpiled money makes people feel secure. It’s the flow, the knowingness of nature’s flow, that brings real security. Article by the acclaimed author of Gaia’s Garden gives an excellent overview of stocks and flows.

Storing Food “in the Belly of My Brother” (post on my blog January 7, 2021). “In the grand scheme of history, it hasn’t been that long that human beings have had ways to store wealth. The relatively recent innovations of refrigeration, banks, and other vessels for storing surplus have made life easier in a tangible way. After all, what would we modern industrialized humans do if refrigeration didn’t exist? We’d have to grocery shop every day. And if there were no banks or other investment vehicles, where and how would we store our money? A cushion of surplus tides us over in lean times. But the dark side of storage is hoarding, and hoarding actually fuels scarcity. …”

• “Calculating Your Income Profile” (a post I made in October 2020). It’s eye-opening to see where your income, and your net worth, stand in relation to 1) other people in rich industrialized nations; and 2) even more mind-blowing, the world! I see extreme wealth disparity as a major source of damage to ecosystems and cultures.

• “Legacy for Future Generations” (a post I made about 3 months ago where I talk about some of my investment choices).

• “Becoming a Local Investor” (series of four posts I wrote when I was brainstorming places I’d feel comfortable (=ethical) storing money, that would give some kind of good return be it monetary or social or both.