Archive for the 'Polar' Category

Happy International Polar Day

International Polar Day - September 24, 2008Today is a very spe­cial day, a day to cel­e­brate Peo­ple. I almost missed this cel­e­bra­tion, but SpaceCol­lec­tive user LED gave me a heads up. I launched a vir­tual bal­loon to show my par­tic­i­pa­tion. Inter­na­tional Polar Day is a part of a big­ger cam­paign last­ing all of 2008, Inter­na­tional Polar Year (IPY). IPY aims to focus many sci­en­tific efforts on polar regions to study the effects of cli­mate change on Atmos­phere, Ice, Land, Oceans, Peo­ple, and Space.

Join us around Sep­tem­ber 24th in learn­ing more about Peo­ple and the Polar Regions. Using the side­bar on the left of these pages you can find many ways to get involved includ­ing hav­ing local and global dis­cus­sions, tun­ing in to radio broad­cast from Arc­tic Canada, and launch­ing a vir­tual balloon.

I read this book: The Survivors

The Survivors by Hammond InnesI just fin­ished a book that I must rec­comend. It is called The Sur­vivors. I feel so down since I fin­ished this book. It is the essence of every­thing I love about books lately. Adven­ture, suspense…

I bought The Sur­vivors along with Ren­dezvous with Rama, another gem from Coun­ter­point. I mean, it was on the vin­tage paper­back shelf. I paid $1 for this book. I bought it solely on the cover. Per­haps my great­est find at a used bookstore.

I am deeply obsessed with polar regions for the same rea­son I’m obsessed with the ocean and outer space. It’s the unknown, it can­not be con­tained. We can­not really grasp it, even with our thoughts. It is the sub­lime. It is beau­ti­ful and bleak.

Polar regions have incred­i­ble occur­rences that only hap­pen at the poles. Auro­ras? High con­cen­tra­tion of mete­orites? Yeah! Talk about feel­ing small. The thought of it all over­whelms me.

The Sur­vivors fol­lows the story of Dun­can Craig, who left his job in Lon­don in search of some­thing new. He trav­els to South Africa where he thinks he will be able to find work. The work he finds is far dif­fer­ent than he imag­ines. He becomes a skip­per of a catcher in a whal­ing fleet. The cir­cum­stances in which he becomes employed are sketchy. There is a lot of unrest in the fleet and spec­u­la­tion of mur­der and wrong doing. There is a rush to get out into the Atlantic and sort out all the trouble.

As the story begins to become monot­o­nous, Craig goes into the floes in res­cue of another catcher whose hull was cracked from the ice. This sim­ple res­cue esca­lates and many ships go down, includ­ing the large fac­tory ship The South­ern Cross. With over 500 men on the ice, they must fig­ure out how to sur­vive with­out freez­ing to death or being crushed by the ice­bergs mov­ing through the floes. Whoa! You begin to get an idea of what it would be like to be stranded on the ice, how small we are in the scheme of things, how lit­tle con­trol we actu­ally have.

And this is the real deal. While research­ing this post I came across this blurb about the author: “Ham­mond Innes was a writer who made a point of research­ing the mate­r­ial for his adven­tures in great depth. If he was writ­ing about oil-rigs then he spent time on an oil-rig; if about the Antarc­tic then he spent time in the frozen South.“1 Ham­mond Innes had per­sonal con­tact with the forces of the Antarc­tic. He wit­nessed the mag­ni­tude of the ice. I can’t imag­ine any­thing more per­fect. This book is “a rous­ing adven­ture yarn of derring-do on the Antarc­tic” writ­ten by an author who expe­ri­enced it first hand.

1 Asto

Polar Cities

1959_chicago_tribune.jpgIf there was some­thing that you really believed and knew that if acted upon it could save human­ity, what would it look like to ded­i­cate your life to this cause? What if you were wrong? What if peo­ple crit­i­cized you for it? Would it still mat­ter? You would never know whether you were right until you knew. Over the past week I’ve been think­ing a lot about cli­mate change. What sparked this cur­rent thread was a news story I read about Dan Bloom and his plan for the cli­mate cri­sis. He has ded­i­cated him­self to this project in a vul­ner­a­ble and unin­hib­ited way. Dan Bloom’s idea is to pre­pare for the loom­ing cli­mate dis­as­ter by build­ing Polar Cities. I totally geeked out on the idea of Polar Cities and I was able to inter­view Dan Bloom about him­self and his plans.

Tell me a lit­tle about your­self. How did you become inter­ested in cli­mate change and polar cities?

dan_bloom.jpg

I was inter­ested in cli­mate change and global warm­ing before 2007, in other words from 1971 to 2006, just as a nor­mal news­pa­per reader, aware of the sit­u­a­tion, but not deeply aware, nor very con­cerned, just nor­mal low-frequency aware­ness from news­pa­per and mag­a­zine arti­cles I had read from col­lege grad­u­a­tion in 1971 to life in the real world of the early 21st Cen­tury. THEN one day, I read two arti­cles in the news­pa­per here in Tai­wan: one was about the upcom­ing IPCC report on cli­mate change, released in Feb­ru­ary 2007, and then two was an inter­view with James Love­lock the UK sci­en­tist who said that in his view in the future, there might be only “breed­ing pairs in the Arc­tic” to con­tinue the human species after global warm­ing “events” cause mass migra­tion north and mass die offs of humans, from a pop­u­la­tion of 10 bil­lion to maybe just 200,000 left. When I read this, I had a eureka moment, I woke up at the moment. At first I was depressed. I wrote a long essay on my blog about how things are really screwed. But after re-reading what I wrote, which was basi­cally depress­ing and sad writ­ing, I woke up again and said to myself: Hey, you can’t go around mop­ing about and feel­ing sad for the world, try to do some­thing pos­i­tive, some­thing to give you and oth­ers hope. So I visu­al­ized humans liv­ing in polar cities in the north­ern areas in the year 2500 or so, and that is how I began this quixotic adven­ture. Via the blo­gos­phere. And 12 months later I found an artist, in Tai­wan, where I live, Deng Cheng-hong, who agreed to make some illus­tra­tions for me, on com­mis­sion. I paid him for his work and two months later he gave me these amaz­ing illus­tra­tions. He is genius. In fact, his visual images have made this project leap off the page and into people’s imag­i­na­tions, so all credit goes to him. James Love­lock has seen these images and said to me via email: “It may very well hap­pen and soon.”

Are polar cities your response to the cli­mate crisis?

Yes, this project is my per­sonal response to the cli­mate cri­sis, my small con­tri­bu­tion to the ongo­ing global dis­cus­sion. It’s my way of tak­ing part in what I think is a pos­i­tive way in the debate.

Are the aims of polar cities to accom­mo­date a lucky few or all of humanity?

City Illustration by Deng Cheng-hong

The aim of the polar cities project is to accom­mo­date all of sur­viv­ing human­ity, in an open demo­c­ra­tic human­i­tar­ian way. These cities are not just for the lucky few or the rich or the pow­er­ful. My phi­los­o­phy and aim is to start plan­ning for these adap­ta­tion cities now, in 2008, so that by the time we need them, humankind has fig­ured out how to make them open and demo­c­ra­tic. But if things get really bad in the future, out of a world pop­u­la­tion of maybe 15 bil­lion peo­ple in 2500, there might be only 200,000 sur­vivors. In that case, these peo­ple will be the lucky few. Or unlucky few, some might say. But they will be the breed­ing pairs who keep the human species alive for many gen­er­a­tions inside these polar cities and then come out and repop­u­late the Earth again when the time is right. The polar city era might last 100 years or 1000 years or even 10,000 years. So these polar cities are lifeboats for humankind, for the human species, not just for the lucky few. I have no chil­dren, so there is no per­sonal intent here for me. I am doing this because I have com­pas­sion for the future. A deep com­pas­sion for the future, and this is now my life’s work. Unpaid. On my own time. On my own dime. My con­tri­bu­tion, in a small minor way, to the ongo­ing debate, pro and con, about cli­mate change.

In a recent Guardian arti­cle, James Love­lock is quoted as say­ing “Enjoy life while you can” in regards to the cli­mate cri­sis. Do you see ideas like recy­cling and car­bon off­set­ting as useless?

Love­lock is my men­tor in all this, and that recent Guardian inter­view was very insight­ful, I thought. I agree with him on many of the things he said. How­ever, he is 88 and I am 58, so being 30 years younger I still have more hope and opti­mism that we can solve this cli­mate cri­sis prob­lem with real solu­tions. So yes, recy­cling and car­bon off­set­ting are impor­tant ideas and I agree we should imple­ment them as best we can, and do all we can NOW to try to mit­i­gate global warm­ing in the here and now. I have not given up hope. I still think we can solve this Long Emer­gency, but there will have to be some sacrifices.

Is tech­nol­ogy part of the problem?

It is a part of the prob­lem and a pos­si­ble solu­tion to the prob­lem, too. My fin­gers are crossed. I hope some­one can come up with a tech­no­log­i­cal fix for the cli­mate cri­sis. That is where my hope lies. Yes, but in the case that worst come to worst, I feel that polar cities can be our lifeboats to get us through a long period of north­ern life, maybe for 30 gen­er­a­tions of humans.

The polar cities have been likened to fall­out shel­ters, how would you respond to this?

I never thought of polar cities as fall­out shel­ters. But we could call them global warm­ing shel­ters. Lifeboats. I see them more as lifeboats. The cold war men­tal­ity of fall­out shel­ters is not really appro­pri­ate for polar cities. But head­line writ­ers have wild imag­i­na­tions and I appre­ci­ate all head­line writ­ers attempts to grap­ple with these issues.

Do we need a sense of impend­ing dis­as­ter to give our­selves some­thing to work towards?

You are right. Yes, we need a real deep sense of impend­ing dis­as­ter to wake us up. Love­lock and Hansen and oth­ers are impor­tant in issu­ing wake up calls to human­ity. I am just a sol­dier in the trenches launch­ing my polar cities idea as a non-threatening thought exper­i­ment to wake peo­ple up in another way, visu­ally. I remain an eter­nal opti­mist and I wake up every day full of energy to fight this cli­mate cri­sis. This IS the fight of human­ity, all human­ity. We need all the ideas we can get.

Arctic Life Forever

Note: This post is a lit­tle dated, but it seemed nec­es­sary to com­plete the thought.

Happy IPY!

“Inter­na­tional Polar Year (IPY) will see thou­sands of sci­en­tists, from more than 60 nations, work­ing together on 220 projects at high latitudes.“

Joseph Peeples, Antartica, 1963

“We still know very lit­tle about Antarc­tica and the Arc­tic. But the big dif­fer­ence is that we now know the regions are very important.“

Joseph-1

It seems in times past my grand­fa­ther has lived out my dreams or passed his expe­ri­ences to me genet­i­cally. I am in love with the ocean, the arc­tic, the color blue. I lose my mind when I see the ocean, its vast depths, its secrets we will never know. Some­day maybe I can spend time in the arc­tic and at sea. Obvi­ously not for mil­i­tary con­quest, but there must be a way.