Wednesday April 18, 2007 Global warming’s harmful impact...
Transcript of Wednesday April 18, 2007 Global warming’s harmful impact...
www.oakvillebeaver.com12 - The Oakville Beaver, Wednesday April 18, 2007
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■ By Andrew FruchSPECIAL TO THE BEAVER
Even if all greenhouse gas-pro-ducing activities were haltedtomorrow, global warming wouldstill continue for the next several
decades due to the damage alreadydone.
That was the message deliveredto a crowd of concerned Oakvilleresidents at a forum on globalwarming organized by the OakvilleCommunity Centre for Peace,
Ecology and Human Rights(OCCPEHR), on Saturday.
“For the first time, a UN (UnitedNations) report unequivocally con-nects rising temperatures andhuman activity,” said RichardPeltier, a professor at the University
of Toronto, and contributor to thelatest UN report on climate change.“This is a critical time for decisionand this is really why our politicalsystem has been riled to the extentthat it has been in attempting toaddress this issue.”
The forum took place at St. John’sUnited Church, with Peltier as thekeynote speaker. Oakville Mayor RobBurton chaired the meeting.
In his presentation, Peltier used a“hockey stick” graph to point out the ris-ing greenhouse gases in the atmospherein correlation to human industrial devel-opment over the last 200 years.
Peltier said people can expect increas-es in severe weather and continued melt-ing of the polar regions. One graphshowed three possible outcomes for glob-al warming. The first outcome would bethe result of ignoring the problem, whichshowed a continuing trend in globalwarming gaining momentum. The sec-ond outcome, which showed moderatereform, saw global warming continuingto rise at about the current pace. Thefinal outcome, which is only possible ifaction is taking immediately, showed adrastic decline in the rate of global warm-ing.
“We have a built in inertia in the sys-tem, such that we can’t do anything tochange what will happen in the next 20 to30 years,” said Peltier. “But after thattime, the choices that we make, thechanges that we make in our industrialsystem will have everything to do withwhere we end up at 2100”
The second speaker at the forum wasJack Santa Barbara, a professor atMcMaster University, who spoke of solu-tions to global warming and minimizinghuman energy consumption.
“We are addicted to high energy con-sumption, not just oil, but electricityand other sources,” said Santa Barbara.“This is the major problem. We use hugeamounts of energy compared to otherpeople in the world, and it’s much morethan we actually need for our wellbeing.”
According to Santa Barbara, there isdata showing that if North America uti-lized only one third of the energy cur-rently being used, quality of life indica-tors such as education and longevitywould still be still be good.
“When people talk about reducingenergy, they sometimes get scared,” saidSanta Barbara. “They think we have to goback to the Stone Age, but that is not thecase.”
The Town of Oakville seems ready todo its part to reduce energy consumptionand fight global warming.
“If we want to be sustainable, we’vegot to learn to conserve and avoid energyuse where we can,” said Burton.
The Town has taken a few initiativestowards becoming what the mayor hopeswill be the most “livable” municipality inCanada.
So far, Oakville has added four hybridvehicles and two Smart cars to the Town’sfleet. By the end of the year, the process ofconverting all traffic lights to L.E.D.lights will be complete, and the Town haspurchased 100,000 kilowatt hours ofgreen energy.
Despite the gloomy predictions, themayor was optimistic about the future.
“One of the things that I’ve noticed inmy study of history and economics isthat when people have to, they change,”said Burton, “And that is one of the mostbeautiful things about the human race.”
Global warming’s harmful impact is long lasting