Last summer, my family and I traveled to the Monteverde Cloud Forest, an isolated rainforest preserve in Costa Rica. The 30 kilometer unpaved road to Monteverde demanded slow driving to avoid sharp rocks, jack-knifed tractor trailers, large potholes, and mudslides. The ride was physically painful for our backs and gave us headaches. But after relaxing over night in one of the sustainable tourism hotels and touring the nature preserve, we knew the journey had been worth the trouble. We enjoyed the peace and robust beauty of the jungle the next day during a guided tour where we saw a two-toed sloth, a tarantula, hummingbirds, and the rare quetzal bird.
The drive to Monteverde is an apt metaphor for our society’s journey to a sustainable future: the trip may cause temporary, mild discomfort but the destination will meet our needs in new and exciting ways.
What will mild discomfort mean? Is it painful to reduce waste? There are so many examples in our society where we waste material resources. The broken irrigation sprinklers that flood the nearby street waste water. Uneaten prepared food that is thrown away wastes food. A freight ship idling at a port wastes petroleum and creates air pollution. None of these wastes add value in our society.
Then there are the larger systemic changes. Over the next generation, we need to redesign our societies to encourage smart growth, create closed-loop manufacturing systems, and transition to organic agriculture. These will all involve investments in our future that we need to make anyway.
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Yes, (a repeat comment)
It is possible to reduce GHGs by even more and preserve some of the world's most destructive animals.
Is it possible to quit addictions to drugs, cigarettes, fast food, tv, sudoku, speeding, beautiful women, environmental rape, excess and too-much-stuff........ YES.
Is it easy? Different question.
The transition to a sustainable future WILL BE UNCOMFORTABLE - if we are to stay composed (as apposed to decomposed).
Get over the notion of easy solutions and embrace the excitement and beauty of working solutions.
NO WHINING!
Paul Wingate
Post a Comment