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Letter #20 Fresh perspective on four and a half billion years When I wonder what our modern conveniences ask of the Earth, the late David Brower, father of the modern environmental movement, gives me perspective.
Brower used to describe the Earth's four and a half billion years as a
six-day week, with each day representing about 750 million years.[1]
When creation got started at midnight on Sunday, the planet was a mass
of gasses, water, dust and rock. Charge built up, and the Earth was
bombarded by a billion years of lightning storms. At noon on Tuesday,
nucleic and amino acids, the building blocks of life, first appeared.
Early plants made oxygen and paved the way for animals. Over the next few days, millions and millions of species emerged--and
millions left. By Saturday morning (Brower's sixth day) at seven a.m.,
enough chlorophyll had accumulated for fossil fuels to begin forming.
That afternoon, around four p.m., great reptiles thrived. Five hours
later, they went extinct. At about three minutes before midnight, apes appeared. We homo sapiens
arrived one-half minute before midnight. We hunted and gathered. Moses
received the Ten Commandments--rules focused on relating with one
another, not with the Earth. As our species' population grew, we cut
down forests for military ships and agriculture. At one fortieth of a second before midnight, in 1800, one billion
people lived on this planet, and the Industrial Revolution began. Its
technological advances lowered death rates, lengthened lifespans,
created a growing economy and an increasing human population.
Manufacturing's use of natural resources and its waste did not threaten
the entire ecosystem's integrity. With 1834's invention of a battery-powered motor, 1859's discovery of
oil (one eightieth of a second before midnight), and our ability to
generate electricity and transmit it over long distances (1889), we
created a civilization dependent on fossil fuels and electricity. Our
technologies did not function compatibly with biological systems. We
built CO2-emitting, toxic waste-emitting power plants to
smelt ores and manufacture refrigerators, washing machines, radios, TVs
and vehicles... that do not biodegrade. Our tools for daily living began to
threaten the planet's ecological integrity substantially. In 1934, FCC
engineers prohibited "harmful interference... broadcasts that interfere
with existing radio or TV (and now cellular and Internet) broadcasts--not
biological functions. At two-hundredths of a second before midnight, we
discovered how to split the atom. In the 1960s, we began extracting
elements (previously kept in the ground) like cerium, cobalt, coltan,
lithium, neodymium and quartz for color TVs, desktop computers and
printers, air conditioners, solar panels and much more. In 2007, we got smartphones--hand-held Internet portals each made from
1000+ substances. [2] As with desktops, every text, video stream and
Google search depends on internationally deployed, energy-intensive,
greenhouse gas-emitting factories, data centers and access networks:
every online activity threatens wildlife habitats. Mobile devices'
infrastructure further increases online activities' energy consumption. Since the early 1900s, one hundredth of a second before midnight, our
species has consumed four times as many resources as in all previous
history. In 1902, the U.S. had 150 miles (241 km) of paved roads. Today,
the country has 2,678,000 miles (6,552,000 km) of paved roads. In 1912,
when Brower was born in California, the state had 6,000 miles of salmon
streams, and roughly 80 percent of the original Redwoods still stood.
By 1992, 200 salmon streams and less than five percent of the Redwoods
remained. In the 21rst century's first two decades, the U.S. lost more
than 11 million acres of farmland to development. Worldwide now, about 1.5 billion households have refrigerators, two
billion have air conditioners and 1.4 billion own vehicles. We've got
more than 14 billion mobile devices and 1.7 billion TVs. U.S. adults
spend nearly six hours per day watching videos. In the time remaining before Brower's sixth day ends, many people
believe that economic growth and production can continue indefinitely.
"These people are considered normal," Brower said, "but they are stark
raving mad." He wondered if we could curtail our addiction to growth and
create a sustainable economy. He wanted a snappy way to say "enough." Perhaps limits to growth begin with awareness that unless we know our
part of the problem, we can't be part of the solution. Personally, I
don't know how to live without electricity, a refrigerator, a washing
machine, a car, a computer, a radio or a telephone. I know that
manufacturing and operating each of these depends on extractions and
electricity. My husband and I might grow two percent of our food. Most
of what we eat therefore depends on roads, trucks, trains, railroads,
airplanes, airports, cargo ships, telecommunications and large,
commercial farms. Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925), the founder of Waldorf Schools and
biodynamic farming and much more, spoke about the Earth as a living
being. He perceived that the planet and humanity were both entering old
age.[5] Like all living beings, our species and the Earth will
eventually die. How do we prepare for the collapse of ecosystems and
social structures? Could we become aware of what we take from the Earth--and question what the Earth asks of us? [6] As we explore these questions, we'll need humility, courage and community. REFERENCES Katie Singer writes about the energy, extractions, toxic waste and
greenhouse gases involved in manufacturing computers, telecom
infrastructure, electric vehicles and other electronic technologies. She
believes that if she's not aware that she's part of the problem, then
she can't be part of the solution. She dreams that every smartphone user
learns about the supply chain of one substance (of 1000+) in a
smartphone. Her most recent book is An Electronic Silent Spring. She
currently writes about nature, democracy and technology for Wall Street
International Magazine. Visit www.OurWeb.tech and
www.ElectronicSilentSpring.com.
and a question for humanity
a column about nature and technology
by Katie Singer