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Is Climate Change Inaction Like the Sinking of the Titanic?

May 7, 2015 @ 23:46 By Gavin Webber 10 Comments

Who feels like we are all on the RMS Titanic, sailing full steam ahead, not knowing that the iceberg was about to appear on the horizon?  I do for one and increasingly so now.  I wrote a version of this article way back in 2009, and have rewritten it for current day events.  Not much has changed in those six years.

As were the passengers and crew of this mighty vessel were unaware of the fate on its maiden voyage, so are most of the 7 billion passengers also unaware of the fate that awaits the Mothership Earth.

Now this post is not meant to offend the memories of the Titanic tragedy, but written to offer a simple comparison against the events of that voyage, and the plight of our current civilisation and vessel that holds and nurtures us—our home Mothership Earth.  It is a call to action to awaken those passengers still in a deep slumber.

RMS Titanic

I have written this article because there is a strong connection to the RMS Titanic story within our family.  You see, my wife Kim’s Great Grandfather, William James Major, was a fireman on-board this ship.

Had he been at his post and in one of the boiler rooms fulfilling his duty, his chances of survival would have been slim indeed.  Thankfully, he was off duty, and was one of the crewmen allocated to lifeboat #13, and out of the 2,227 passengers and crew members who set sail, only 705 Titanic passengers and crew survived, him being one of them.  That is a 31.6% survival rate.

There were many factors that lead to the sinking of the Titanic on her maiden voyage, and I shall attempt to compare some of these events to the apparent chosen path of the passengers of Mothership Earth, if we to continue to maintain our current course and speed.

The Titanic was deemed by many to be ‘unsinkable’ which instilled a false sense of security amongst the passengers and crew.  The captain,  Edward Smith was a capable seaman and this was planned to be his retirement voyage.  Also on-board were Bruce Ismay, Chairman of the White Star Line.  Mr Ismay had a point to prove, and wanted to be the first trans-atlantic liner to set a new record crossing time.

The bridge crew and the helmsmen were never really in control of this behemoth of a vessel, but mere puppets as you shall read later.  So it was inevitable that the order from Mr Ismay to the Captain upon setting sail from Cherbourg, was to increase power, and therefore speed, for the entire voyage.

With the course set in, and power and speed increased, with no regard of the safety of the vessel.

So, image the bridge crew as Our Australian Government and their buddies as vested interest (i.e. Fossil Fool industry) around the world, and liken them to the Captain, Mr Ismay, the powerful owner of the White Star line, Mr Ismay’s father, as the greedy corporations of our current time.  We, my friends, are the passengers and crew of this mighty Mothership Earth.  Increased power for the corporations, and relaxation and comfort for all those passengers who choose to sail on her.  We have everything we would ever need even if we don’t know we actually need it yet.  The peak of luxury in our age.

But unknown to the passengers of the Titanic, some of the lifeboats had been removed to make way for a gymnasium for first class passengers.  This left the ship without a full capability of lifeboats should the unthinkable happen to the unsinkable!  I compare this to our current fossil fuel situation.  Our conventional oil and natural gas supplies have peaked soon, and the climate crisis is going from bad to worse. Many on Mothership Earth will start to miss out on a seat in the lifeboat, and panic will prevail, just as it did on the Titanic.

Many ice warnings were sent to the ship during the voyage, in fact 21 warnings including 7 on the day of the tragedy.  As ordered the Titanic steamed onward at top speed towards the reported pack ice that was drifting down from Greenland.  The two radiomen on-board passed the warnings to the bridge officers throughout the day, and these in turn were passed on to Captain Smith who ignored them, due to the insistence of Mr Ismay.

The radiomen were mostly kept busy during the day sending stock market messages from the wealthy on-board and receiving quotes back from the NYSE.  Even when the radiomen received a signal at 11pm from the steamship Californian, who was 10 miles to the Northwest, to inform the Titanic that she had stopped for the night by ice blocking her way.  One of the radiomen on the ill-fated ship sent back a snappy reply, “Shut up old man I’m busy.”

So to compare the two comparisons, the science community have given us all, including our government, many warnings about climate change and so far have done little to prevent its occurrence.  The media, corporations and economists are infatuated by continued economic growth to the detriment of the resources supplied on loan to us by Mothership Earth.

We are ignoring our own form of ice warnings including melting global ice caps and the world’s glaciers.  Quite an ironic comparison really.  It was an iceberg that sank the Titanic and it will be melting ice and warmer oceans that sink and disrupts the climactic patterns of the Mothership Earth!  We are all so busy trying to get to where we think we should be, we are forgetting about the vessel that carries us on our daily voyage.

As the Titanic sailed through the night, the wealthy upper class dined in opulence before retiring for the night, and the steerage class passed time, reassured by the noise of the engines and flow of seawater upon the steel hull.  A new country and life awaited many of them, all hoping for better opportunities.  Little were any of them aware that the ship was not really unsinkable and there was a design flaw in the watertight compartments.  If a certain number of the watertight compartments flooded, there was a good chance that the ship would sink.

What does that mean in our current time period?  We drive our cars, thinking that petroleum products will be available at the service station, that there will be food in the supermarket shelves, and water will run when we turn on the tap.  We live in a disposable culture, only recently discovering the value of recycling in the western world.

Opulence in the west and dreams of a western way of life in developing nations reminds me of the different classes on-board the ship.

The Mothership Earth also has a design flaw of sorts.  A limited carrying capacity and not enough lifeboats!  We have overshot the planet’s carrying capacity due to the abundance of cheap oil to grow massive amounts of food, and are now confronted by limited natural resources.  Both issues are similar to the capacity of the ship and the limited lifeboat capacity of the Titanic on that dreadful night, with climate change being the icy waters that surround them.

At [11:40]pm in calm weather and on a clear night, the mighty vessel struck an iceberg that ripped a hole in the ship’s side that was long enough to fill many of the watertight compartments, thus forcing the ‘unsinkable’ to indeed become sinkable.  The crew of the ship attempted to avoid a head on collision, however due to the vessels speed and a flaw in rudder design, the ship still scraped the side of the massive iceberg.  The hole in the hull was a tipping point if you like, just like the melting at our poles is today.

The passengers and crew were not aware of the impending danger that awaited them, in fact it wasn’t until at least 30 minutes later that the crew were aware that she was taking on water.  Many of the passengers slept through the entire incident and had to be woken up to begin abandoning the ship.

From [12:15] am, the radiomen began sending their first distress signal, only to get a reply 10 minutes later from the Carpathia.  Within two hours the Titanic was sinking bow first, with the watertight compartments flooding one after the other, and the radio failing due to lack of power from the flooding engine rooms.  The crew, who were totally unprepared for this type of event struggled to launch what lifeboats they had, and struggled to convince many bewildered passengers that this was necessary for their safety.

Many passengers must have thought that if the ship were so unsinkable, why were they being forced onto the lifeboats.  Many would drown, especially from third class and steerage, simply because there were not enough lifeboats and the ones that were launched were not filled to capacity.

The radio message sent at [1:45] am was the last message and it read, “Come as quickly as possible”.  It was sent in hope, as the last of the lifeboats pulled away from the sinking ship.  Still the band played on until the deck was so tilted that they couldn’t sit and play.

Those not safely on a lifeboat stood little hope of more than a few minutes of survival due to the freezing temperature of the water.  The Captain went down with the ship, as did the first officer, however Mr Bruce Ismay was one of the first onto a lifeboat.

So, with all the scientific warnings, and with many dire new discoveries of approaching tipping points regarding climate change, with our population having gone from 1.6 billion in 1900 to 7 billion in 2015 due to the abundance of cheap oil, and with our resources dwindling whether they be fossil fuels (stoking climate change and overpopulation) or precious minerals and natural resources including land and mass species extinction, have we hit the same proverbial iceberg?

It paints a pretty grim picture when compared to a real life event that could have been avoided.  As with the Titanic, instead of steaming ahead at top speed, we need to reassess, and slow to avoid the impending disaster that soon await the fate of all who are passengers on Mothership Earth.  Is our rudder too small, and that we may not be able to turn away soon enough, with the speed of progress, growth at all costs, resource depletion, and increasing carbon emissions hold back our inability to act in time.

As for the officers of the Titanic, who I’ll liken to our current day Government, who are failing to act decisively, because of the pressure exerted upon them by the corporations and vested interests like Mr Ismay and the Board of the White Star Line.

Will this pressure be too great, with vested interest lobbying our poor, misguided crew at every chance?

What will happen to the passengers of Mothership Earth?

Will there be enough lifeboats, or will there be a mass die-off as in the case of the Titanic with the lower classes bearing the brunt of climate change and increasing ecological disasters?

These questions go unanswered as yet, but there are signs that we are heading full steam at the approaching “iceberg”, with the majority of the passengers of Mothership Earth blissfully unaware, and still dressed in their finest clothes dinning, or in this case, consuming until they drop, egged on by our Government and corporations.  Some say we may have already taken a hole in the bow.

I am not saying that the disaster is inevitable, we just need to slow or steer away, by reducing consumption, reducing GHG emissions, and stabilising population growth.  Only by achieving all three will we avert the climate crisis.

Lets hope that as the passengers of Mothership Earth are loaded onto what ever form of lifeboats that are available, I wouldn’t want them to be still be wondering “Why have I been woken?  I thought we were unsinkable!”

My only hope is that we wake up well before and avoid the iceberg completely.

It is up to us to do something about it.  Now get out there and get to waking up as many of the passengers as you can by sharing this post any way you can!  It may be the only way.

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Filed Under: climate change, Climate Reality, Denial, greenhouse gas, Peak Everything, Peak Oil

I’m Sick of Inaction on Climate

April 15, 2015 @ 22:18 By Gavin Webber 14 Comments

Yes, I’m sick.  Sick and tired of the way our Government is eroding every single environmental agency and target we have, and is brazenly anti-science.

I’m sick that we have little action on climate change in this country when the rest of the world is forging ahead.

I’m sick that our fully functional price on carbon was rescinded by short-sighted politicians with little thought for future generations and only focused on profit and greed.

DSC_0101

I’m sick of the political ping-pong that our Renewable Energy Target has become and in the process stifling investment in renewables across the country.  It needs to stay the same or increase because it is the only real action this country has on climate change in the current political vacuum.  How many more enquiries does the Wind industry have to go through and why doesn’t coal-fired power stations which are heavy polluters not under the same scrutiny?

We have sunshine in abundance.  We have steady winds in many places throughout this wide brown land.

So why is the Government putting a noose around the neck of renewables all the while cheering on the fossil fuels industry?  It is shallow thinking, short-sighted and just bad leadership.  Leadership of the worst kind.

In fact in all my years, I don’t think I have ever seen a government so hell-bent on the destruction of our land and our planet.  It is shameful.

That is why I am raising my voice.  That is why I am speaking out where ever I can.  I shall no longer be politically agnostic (not that I really was), because when there are bad things happening, one should not be quiet.  One should stand up and be counted.

I will sign any petition, attend any rally, get the message out there any way possible, because we all need to do more, government and citizens alike, to solve the climate crisis and put a price back on carbon.  It is the only way we are going to get any traction on this, the biggest issue mankind has faced.  The time for inaction is over.  The time for action is now!

Who else is sick of this bull?  Hands up!

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Filed Under: activism, climate change, Climate Reality, green, greenhouse gas

TGoG Podcast 075 – Australian Price on Carbon with Massachusetts Climate Action Network

July 29, 2014 @ 21:23 By Gavin Webber Leave a Comment

mcan-minute-button Price on CarbonWhen the price on carbon legislation here in Australia was repealed on July 17th 2014, I along with many concerned citizens, were distraught.  Our country went from an effective price on carbon emissions to a big fat nothing where major polluters are free to pump as much greenhouse gas as they like without financial consequences.  You can read about my reaction in this post titled Black Thursday.

Listen to the Episode Below (00:49:16)
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I had the good fortune this week to talk to the team at the Massachusetts Climate Action Network about the repeal of the Clean Energy Future legislation, lessons learnt, and how events unfolded.  This was to help them with their own efforts of getting action on climate happening over there in the US.

Have a listen to the podcast, and let me know how we went.  I know that at 7am on a Sunday morning, when the interview took place, I had just finished my first coffee for the day, so I was a little slow to begin with!

I also promised that I would keep on talking about this and solutions as much as I could.  There have been so many opportunities to do so since then.  I have two Climate Reality presentations locked in locally, which I am looking forward to cutting my teeth on.

If anyone would like to book a Climate Reality presentation anywhere in the greater Melbourne area, so that you can get a better understanding of climate change and the current situation, please drop me a line via my contact page, and I am sure we can organise something soon.

If you got value from the podcast, please pop over to iTunes and rate it and leave a review. You can also do the same within Stitcher Radio if you use that service.  It would help me out so much, and elevate the ratings so that others can find out about the podcast and learn about sustainable living in the ‘burbs and all the things I talk about on the show.

You can subscribe to the show via RSS or iTunes or Stitcher for your portable device.  Just use the subscription buttons below.

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 Until next time, stay green and keep keen!

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Filed Under: climate change, Climate Reality, greenhouse gas, Podcast, TGOG Podcast

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About Gavin Webber

An Ordinary Australian Man Who Has A Green Epiphany Whilst Watching A Documentary, Gets a Hybrid Car, Plants A Large Organic Vegetable Garden, Goes Totally Solar, Lowers Consumption, Feeds Composts Bins and Worms, Harvests Rainwater, Raises Chickens, Makes Cheese and Soap, and Eats Locally. All In The Effort To Reduce Our Family's Carbon Footprint So We Can Start Making A Difference For Our Children & Future Generations To Come.

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    I've crowed about Gavin's podcast before but I just have to recommend it once again - I love that he shares his learning as well as his successes - it helps the rest of us try try try again! Thanks Gavin!

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    I really enjoy listening to Gavin, he has a kind lovely voice. He covers some great relevant topics for the everyday greenie. With lots of tips or how to or what not to do. Thanks Gavin, love it!!

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    I can highly recommend Gavin’s podcast ! I have followed Gavin’s blog since the very beginning and have loved to see his journey unfold. Gavin has a lovely speaking voice so this podcast is always very easy to listen to. Gavin has a very authentic approach to his green living lifestyle. He shares the ups and downs but always provides motivation and practical steps that we can all implement.

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    This is a great podcast if you want to improve your life in so many aspects and become a more sustainable person. I love the soothing voice, the good pace, and it contains lots of useful information. Recommended!

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    A wonderful show!

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    This is a great podcast if you're looking for practical info on saving money by living more sustainably from someone who's made that journey over the last few years. Told in a nice, easy conversational style

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    Thanks Gav for sharing what has (and hasn't) worked along your journey for living a greener lifestyle. Inspiring and achievable for anyone, I look forward to this podcast weekly.

  • Local food equals less waste
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    Another brilliant podcast from Gavin Webber encouraging us, and showing us how, to cut down on food miles, growing our own food, and cutting down on food waste. Gavin is a really interesting speaker, showing us how to eat better, growing our own food and how to live more sustainably.

  • Honestly australian
    December 15, 2014 by HodgepodgeOz from Australia

    Fantastic podcast, with a wide variety of well thought and researched topics. Gavin is a honest, forthright pod aster with a genuine interest in helping others get green. Like a day alongside is a day wasted, so too is a week without listening to Gavin. Highly recommended for people starting out, or those in the midst of their new lifestyle. Keep it up Gavin, wish there were more great reviews! Kimberley

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    Gavin has a great passion for living this greener lifestyle that motivates others to do the same. The podcasts are always interesting and informative. :)

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    Gavin's enthusiasm and passion for creating a more sustainable world is nothing short of contagious. Thanks Gav, you are my weekly source of motivation for living a sustainable life! :)

  • Gavin speaks from the heart
    October 13, 2014 by Green gavin from Australia

    Gavin's podcasts are required listening for anyone planning to live a more sustainable life. He doesn't preach, but tells you his story from the heart. You'll laugh, smile, share in his concerns and along the way you'll pick up some great tips on living a simple life.

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    This is a wonderful podcast. Not only does Gavin talk knowledgeably on a range of sustainability topics from gardening tips all the way to the issues facing humanity as a whole, but he does so in such a wonderful voice, it's like listening to my Dad, love it!!

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    Gav knows how to share his journey to a more sustainable life in a manner that shows just how easy it really is. Not to mention healthier, economically beneficial and generally rewarding. The podcasts are an easy way to absorb Gav's great lifestyle. I recommend to anyone.

  • Thanks Gavin!
    August 31, 2014 by Honeywoodmilk from Australia

    Great practical advice for a greener lifestyle. This podcast is for anybody interested in growing their own food in suburbia, saving electricity, brewing beer, making cheese, all that wonderful business and most of all, saving money! Thanks Gavin, love the podcast mate!

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    Like you we are having winter here in Chile—brrr! Every bit we can save on heating we will.

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    Excellent podcasts, which are full of information to help get started on a sustainable lifestyle.

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    I highly recommend Gavin's podcast and blog. Down to earth, entertaining and inspirational. Thank you.

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    Gavin & his guests make this green journey lots of fun.

  • Great green listen
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    Gavin is a great down to earth, tell it like it is aussie with a passion for sustainability and growing food and making cheese

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