All posts tagged Environment

Fall & Winter Documentary Trailer

“Fall & Winter” is a documentary that explores the origins of our global crisis in order to better understand the catastrophic transition we have now entered. This film presents the ideas and experience of a wide range of people dedicated to confronting this crisis head on. The result is an analysis of our failing institutions and culture so we may be equipped to handle drastic collapse and foster a vital, fundamental rebirth in the way we live on this planet.

FallWinterMovie needs your support! Please visit our Kickstarter page: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/manderson/fall-and-winter-a-documentary-film

Disneynature – Oceans

Disneynature, the studio that presented the record—breaking film “Earth,” brings OCEANS to the big screen on Earth Day, 2010. Nearly three—quarters of the Earth’s surface is covered by water and OCEANS boldly chronicles the mysteries that lie beneath. Directors Jacques Perrin and Jacques Cluzaud dive deep into the very waters that sustain all of mankind—exploring the harsh reality and the amazing creatures that live within. Narrated by Pierce Brosnan and featuring spectacular never—before—seen imagery captured by the latest underwater technologies, OCEANS offers an unprecedented look beneath the sea in a powerful motion picture that unfolds on April 22, 2010.

[pro-player]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JnZ7Ym6sss&feature=related[/pro-player]

Read more of this film at http://disney.go.com.

The Story of Bottle Water

Today is World Water Day – a day to celebrate and become ever more savvy about this incredibly finite resource that we all have to have access to in order to survive. Annie Leonard and crew are also on their game today, releasing a new “Story of…” video, this time on bottled water. The 7-minute animated film The Story of Bottled Water, debunks myths and clarifies just what kind of strategy goes into conning Americans into buying more than half a billion bottles of water every week, when it’s a fraction of the cost if you just go to your faucet. Watch the full video after the jump.

The Story of Bottled Water is co-produced with five leading sustainability advocacy organizations, including Corporate Accountability International, Environmental Working Group, Food & Water Watch, Polaris Institute and Pacific Institute.

[pro-player]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Se12y9hSOM0[/pro-player]

Fortunately, more people are becoming aware about how ridiculous it is to buy plastic bottled water. A Harris Poll found that 29% of the people surveyed switched back to the tap this year. That’s a great sign. But it doesn’t stop at just the average consumer. It also has to happen in restaurants, at conferences and events, and even among government bodies.

“Cities and states are spending hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars on bottled water, and that’s not to mention what’s spent to deal with all the plastic bottles that are thrown out,” said Leslie Samuelrich of Corporate Accountability International. “It sends the wrong message about the quality of the tap. What if we instead spent that money supporting public water systems or preventing water pollution in the first place?”

And it’s not only the US who is guilty of such a bad habit. Just last summer we noted that the BBC is spending about $670,000 a year Not only does the BBC spend nearly half a million pounds a year on bottled water for coolers, it also spends an undisclosed amount on bottled water for hospitality events – of which it held 103,000 last year alone – and staffers are allowed to order bottled water for any meetings lasting longer than two hours. That’s a lot of bottled water!

“Bottled water usage is in decline in the United States for the first time in three decades, thanks in part to the hard work of our partners on this film. We hope this film helps to drive the final nail in this huge rip off,” said Annie Leonard.

Source obtained from: www.treehugger.com

The Birth of an Ocean

By Lana Gunnlaugson, Program Coordinator Marine & Freshwater

Ever wondered what lives on the ocean floor, and how it came to be there?

Tonight, CBC will present the first of four special episodes offering a view of the sea most of us have never seen. The One Ocean series attempts to reconnect us to our oceans through an underwater journey that only a few have ever witnessed.

The series begins 4 billion years ago with the birth of the ocean, which helped transform the Earth’s surface into the hospitable home we oxygen-loving animals live on today. Oceans gave us life, and we still depend on them to sustain us. From acting as the planet’s thermostat to absorbing half its carbon dioxide, the oceans provide us with many of the ecosystem services that we need to survive. It goes beyond this, too. Many who have touched the ocean knows that its beauty and power has touched them too.

I watched a sneak preview of the One Ocean series last night and definitely recommend tuning in for this series if you have ever been fascinated by the ocean and how it works.

Here’s the full schedule:

  • The Birth of an Ocean: MARCH 4 AT 8 P.M.
    The Birth of an Ocean explores the ocean*s tumultuous history and how the ocean transformed the earth into the livable, blue planet it is today.
  • Footprints in the Sand: MARCH 11 AT 8 P.M.
    Traditional fisheries, over-development and the places of recovery that can give us hope for a healthy future ocean all intersect in Footprints in the Sand.
  • Mysteries of the Deep: MARCH 18 AT 8 P.M.
    Starting in the deepest part of the ocean, Mysteries of the Deep takes us to a secret and magical world of bizarre creatures and new discoveries deep beneath the surface.
  • The Changing Sea: MARCH 25 AT 8 P.M.
    The Changing Sea explores some of the most stunning underwater locations in the world as it sets sail on a scientific race – a race to predict the fate of the global ocean.

One Ocean is produced by CBC’s The Nature of Things and Merit Motion Pictures, in association with National Geographic Channel.

Source obtained: www.davidsuzuki.org

The Botany of Desire

Humans frequently assume that we are the architects of biological change, rather than mere participants. Genetic mapping and engineering do paint a compelling picture of us in the genetic driver’s seat. But what if we’re manipulated by the very agents we believe we’re manipulating? What if, for example, in our attempts to create a more cold-tolerant tomato, we’re unconsciously fulfilling the tomato’s desire to expand the environment in which it thrives? It’s discomforting – some would say, ridiculous – to think of ourselves as haplessly duped marionettes in an elaborate drama manipulated by the omniscient tomato – especially when things like consciousness and desire are not frequently listed among the tomato’s better-known traits.

And yet it cannot be denied that the tomato has achieved a depth of genetic diversity and breadth of distribution that it may never had known, had it not appealed to a specific set of human desires. In making itself so delicious (entire cuisines are built upon it), nutritious (rich in lycopene and Vitamins A & C), and easy to preserve (thanks to high acid content) it earned a free boat ride from the New World back to the European mainland, where it proceeded to re-write culinary history. Thus did a lowly, spindly member of the sometimes-poisonous nightshade family manage to effectively put human legs and boats and farmers to work for it, moving it from its original western Andean home to farms and backyard gardens around the world.

We have grown accustomed to the idea of measuring the environmental impacts of our consciously chosen actions. We’ve come to see that many of our choices have unintended environmental consequences, many of them harmful. But what about those unconscious choices that have sprung from pure desire, whether it be a desire for control, for taste, for intoxication, or even the simple desire . . .

. . . for beauty? And what about the unintended positive effects of those actions? Is ours the only set of desires acting to orchestrate the rhythms of our world?

[pro-player]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdXOeWMwX-4&feature=player_embedded[/pro-player]

There is a world of life that indeed responds to our desires; and in doing so, fulfills desires of its own. Such is the premise and on which Michael Pollan’s The Botany of Desire: A Plant’s-Eye View of the World is built. One of his earlier books, The Botany of Desire uses four separate plants to make the case that humans have been exploited by these species to advance a decidedly non-anthropocentric genetic agenda. The four plants examined are tulips, potatoes, apples, and marijuana – crops that have, genetically speaking, become wildly successful based on their appeal to human desires for beauty, control, sweetness, and intoxication, respectively.

Pollan’s is an investigation whose premise is now (pardon the pun) ripe for exploration. And it’s the focus of a striking new PBS production that is set to air Wednesday, October 28th. In pursuing his inquiry from such an angle, Pollan highlights the unexpectedly intricate relationships humans have established with the natural world at a time when we can better appreciate the beauty of how little control we actually have over nature.

Source obtained from: www.thecleanestline.com.

Also check out Michael Pollan’s site: www.michaelpollan.com.

Russ Roca Bicycling Photographer

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-82-iF7Lds[/youtube]

Also check out his stuff http://russroca.blogspot.com and www.russroca.com