05/08/2021

(AU) The Climate Emergency – A Need For Radical Honesty – Laced With Courage And Compassion: Part 1

Pearls and Irritations - Jonathan Page

We have all been abandoned by our “leaders”, a pathetic coterie of self-focused, ignorant and immature individuals who lack courage, compassion and the capacity to recognize an impending catastrophe, with likely societal collapse and massive loss of life (already beginning). There is no possibility of technological salvation.

 
Author
Jonathan Page has been a medical oncologist for 40 years, previously working in major teaching hospitals in Sydney, but now focuses on palliative care and important issues of the psycho-spiritual domain. He also has an interest in ecological matters and human rights.
I’ve been a medical oncologist for 40 years, treating patients with advanced cancer. What can I say about the intractable COVID 19 and Climate Crises?

Perhaps, “The human civilization now confronts the challenging interconnected crises of COVID 19 and Climate Change, (not to mention the crises of health inequity, racism, poverty and child abuse, each exacerbated by all the others)”?

As the great 20th-century philosopher, John Lennon sang:

“I’m sick and tired of hearin’ things
From uptight, short-sighted, narrow-minded, hypocrites
All I want is the truth
Just gimme some truth”
.

In oncology, we often see multiple crises. A previously well patient may present with a serious refractory infection, say pneumonia, in itself a crisis for patient and family alike. Weeks of treatment go by. There is no improvement. Further testing reveals the Big Crisis, underlying cancer. Now life itself is threatened. But there is more. This 50-year-old woman, Joan, lives in an abusive relationship, a third crisis.

In oncology, following the discovery of a cancer, there are often two consultations. In the first, I would spend much time with Joan by herself, and then with the family, obtaining as much information as possible about her past, even from early life, and other important factors, including aspects of the ongoing lung infection, her personal strengths and supports, and her emotional response when told of the cancer and its clear threat to life. Further investigations would be necessary to characterise the cancer in detail and thus plan the best treatment.

So too with COVID 19 and Climate Change, I will approach these crises gently in this Part 1, with a presentation of the “further investigation” and stark reality in Part 2.

In the second meeting with Joan, I would discuss the further results with Joan. Over the years I have had to “break bad news” to so many patients, essentially telling an anxious and desperate patient that their cancer is treatable but not curable. They will thus die sooner than they expected. Some patients indicate early that they do not want to hear this news. Sometimes a family member intervenes to ask me not to break this bad news, that is not to tell the truth, even indirectly or in stages. Clearly, there are ethical issues here. A person generally has a right to know the truth about their own life.

Over the years, despite informing hundreds of patients of their shortened lives, I find that this important duty never gets easier, and nor should it, since I am relating deeply with one person, this particular patient, whose name is Joan, with her own life, that she has kindly shared with me, including details never shared with anyone else. So, I share and feel the reality of her shortened life, with the knowledge that so many dreams will not be fulfilled. Eyes moisten. I can only really be truly present for Joan if I have already become familiar with my own eventual demise, although always necessarily beyond comprehension. I reassure Joan that she will be cared for with compassion right through until the end.

Unfortunately, because of the pneumonia, Joan was never able to receive treatment for her cancer, and died some weeks later, still in hospital.

As with this second consultation, confronting intolerable realities, so in Part 2 I will present current data indicating the truly perilous status of the Climate Emergency.

Just as the pneumonia and lung cancer are related to each other in many complex ways, so too with COVID 19 and Climate Change, reflecting man’s inexorable destructive exploitation of our precious planet. The great majority of indicators of ecosystem health and biodiversity now show rapid decline. The Sixth Great Extinction on this planet has begun. The population sizes of vertebrate species have fallen 68% since 1970. Around 1 million species of all life forms already face impending extinction.

Whilst we are rightly focused on the immediacy of COVID 19, we should not forget the evolving malignancy of Climate Change. Indeed, as with Joan, this malignant process can rapidly become irreversible, possibly amenable to minor mitigation, but ultimately following a trajectory determined by physical laws oblivious to human preferences.

Despite decades of alarming scientific data and witnessing and experiencing directly the catastrophic consequences of the Climate Emergency (wildfires and alarming record temperatures on many continents, unprecedented flooding in Europe and increasing Atlantic hurricane intensity and so on), very little action has been taken.

The reasons for this dangerously inadequate activity by governments in the face of increasing existential risk are not well understood but likely include:

  1. “Scientific reticence” (a self-censoring process when dealing with truly unpalatable data); and also here;
  2. The recent “under-presentation” of opinion and risk (based knowingly on incomplete data for political acceptability); for example, the IPCC 2018 statement that zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 would restrict a global temperature rise to 1.5⁰C; when in fact there was only a 50% chance of doing so, but this also excluded other adverse factors – notably tipping points, so we are now actually at the undesirable 2⁰C, with an urgent need to reach zero by 2030 (not 2050);
  3. “Psychic numbing” and the “nothing response” (noted by the courageous psychiatrist, the late Beverly Raphael, during the nuclear threats of last century);
  4. Significantly, most politicians have limited cognitive and emotional maturity, mostly residing in level 3 of 8 possible levels in Grave’s Model of Human Development. In level 3, (Egocentric Power) the principles include:
  • Living in a world of haves and have-nots, where it’s good to be a have;
  • Avoiding shame, defending reputation, seeking revenge, being respected; remaining self-focused with no awareness of the world;
  • Gratifying impulses immediately; exploiting the world;
  • Fighting remorselessly and without guilt to break constraints;
  • Not worrying about consequences that may not come.

Higher levels of maturation in our “leadership” would allow: the finding of meaning and purpose in life (spiritual progress), a sense of self-sacrifice, seeking order, stability and peace, controlling impulsivity, responding to guilt, promoting righteous living, enabling others to flourish, becoming aware of the world as a complex, sensitive, interactive, interconnected biosphere (Gaia).

In the world of oncology, patients (like Joan) are often faced with an existential threat, the equivalent of their own internal “climate emergency”, (a terminal illness). They would then receive meticulous care, guided by compassion and honesty, remaining fully informed about changing circumstances, with their loved ones also supported. Importantly, there would be a commitment by the caring team to maintain this deep engagement to the end of life, with no possibility of abandonment.

In the very real world of Climate Emergency, as tipping points are passed, with a rapidly worsening prognosis, we have all been abandoned by our “leaders”, a pathetic coterie of self-focused, ignorant and immature individuals who lack courage, compassion and the capacity to recognize an impending catastrophe, with likely societal collapse and massive loss of life (already beginning). There is no possibility of technological salvation.

Furthermore, they have abrogated their fundamental duty to protect the vulnerable, particularly children, who are already aware of the crisis (note Greta Thunberg), and experience eco-anxiety and grief, and internationally, participate in “SS4C” (School Strikes for Climate) demonstrations in large numbers. A major recent Australian protest by children took place on May 21st 2021 against the bizarre plan for our federal government to fund a $600m gas-fired plant.

Not surprisingly adult eco-anxiety and solastalgia (climate grief) are also high, or often internalized, (and thus to manifest as other disturbances of mood and behaviour).

Since our leaders have access to the best climatological and psychological advice, their bewildering inaction over decades now represents a major crime, not only against humanity but against all life. There are now new categories of crime to consider: Ecocide, Auto-Speciescide, EĆ­docide (killing of an entire species) and Gaicide.

More evidence and analysis in Part 2.

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(AU) The Climate Emergency – A Need For Radical Honesty – Laced With Courage And Compassion: Part 2

Pearls and Irritations - Jonathan Page

The sight of an ice-free Arctic or Siberia on fire is tantamount to the discovery of cancer spreading to the brain. Some mitigation is possible but the prognosis is bad.


Author
Jonathan Page has been a medical oncologist for 40 years, previously working in major teaching hospitals in Sydney, but now focuses on palliative care and important issues of the psycho-spiritual domain. He also has an interest in ecological matters and human rights.
In Part 1, I introduced Joan, a previously well 50-year-old woman, whom I had met in hospital whilst she received second-line antibiotic therapy for a refractory pneumonia. After three weeks an underlying lung cancer was discovered, although, of course, it had been present all along.

This relationship resembles that of COVID 19 to the Climate Emergency, the two intimately related, but the immediate focus on the former, and indeed, radical treatment for both the lung cancer and the Climate Emergency must await a significant improvement in the acute crisis, namely the pneumonia or COVID 19.

As with climate change the lung cancer required further detailed investigation, to define the precise behaviour, rate of progression, prognosis and the possibility of meaningful intervention.

I had promised Joan that I would return to discuss these results as soon as they became available, and would then spend considerable time explaining the implications, openly and honestly. This would then allow a deep, balanced and realistic conversation about possible therapies, their efficacy and side effects, and importantly, a focus on her life ahead, its uncertainty, preciousness, meaning and brevity.

Unfortunately, the results of these various scans confirmed the spread of the cancer to a spinal bone and the brain. I gently conveyed this information to Joan and her daughter, both of whom wept and hugged one another. “Can anything be done to help me?” Joan asked between sobs. I replied with a tremulous voice: “Joan, unfortunately the cancer has spread. This means that it cannot be cured. The lung infection is still very active, so we have to be careful and all work together to try and avoid any complications of the cancer. Your lifespan is now very short. We must ensure that every moment is spent well. This a wonderful time to express and receive love, and likewise to offer and possibly receive forgiveness. It is also a time to consider a legacy, a memory of your invaluable presence on this Earth”.

With the overwhelming impact of COVID 19, not surprisingly, we have thought less about the Climate Emergency, although its manifestations abound, most recently with devastating wild fires in British Columbia and northern California, massive floods in China amongst many others, all with strong scientific attribution.

The further investigation of climate change confirms an advanced malignant process. Despite international commitments, global annual energy-related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions fail to diminish responsibly, and may actually rise back up to 33 Gt CO₂ if COVID 19 control allows industrial production to “bounce back”. Clearly the “Paris targets” were too conservative, did not include all the forcing factors and had little power of execution over myopic and delinquent nations such as Australia.

Whereas nations strive (to some extent) to achieve “zero emissions” by 2050, blindly believing that, thereby, they will achieve a remission from the climate malignancy, they forget that years (and decades) of inaction now requires zero by 2030 to prevent catastrophic temperature rise. This global warming is likely already 2⁰C, but distributed unevenly over the Earth.

With accumulating CO2 (beyond our budgetary control) and the rise in other potent GHGs, with the fall in “cooling” aerosols, and changes in cloud behaviour, there may be a trigger to “hothouse” Earth, exacerbating the ongoing animal extinctions and threatening social viability, particularly in urban environments (with heat islands), and with great stress in poorer countries.

There is now clear Arctic amplification, whereby the rate and extent of climate warming is three times the global average, sea ice is now melting in an accelerating fashion, becoming thinner, with less winter recovery, losing its albedo effect, and soon to disappear entirely during summer months (sea ice-free Arctic by the 2030s), decades before previously anticipated, and representing the crossing of an irreversible tipping point.

This will likely lead to the release of vast quantities of seafloor methane, also arising from melting permafrost (containing as much GHG as all other sources), which in turn has arisen sooner than predicted by climate models, and not even included in recent predictions of global warming. In Greenland, glacial loss is also accelerating, with the expectation that further tipping points will be crossed soon.

These changes, together with progressive Antarctic ice melting will contribute to a more rapid rise in sea level (in addition to oceanic heat expansion), exceeding 1 metre by late century or sooner. A significant rise has already been documented, impacting on coastal communities in the Pacific, on our own Torres Strait islands, Florida and elsewhere, with associated extreme weather events, and causing salination of fresh water estuaries and aquifers, the latter representing the world’s most accessed freshwater reservoir. Such progressive sea level rise will continue for millennia.

Alpine-glaciers in Europe, Asia and South America are also melting rapidly creating a major further threat to water supply and agricultural activity, potentially affecting 3 billion people.

The sight of an ice-free Arctic or Siberia on fire is tantamount to the discovery of cancer spreading to the brain. Some mitigation is possible but the prognosis is bad. An oncologist who truly cares for his or her patients must tell the truth, be radically honest, display some compassion and vow never to abandon them. We should expect and demand nothing less from our leaders, but we should also be wise and realistic enough to know that this is beyond them. Most will be condemned to eternal infamy for not undertaking sound policies with courage and maturity some 30 years ago.

At what level of risk do we start to sacrifice our dangerous and selfish behaviour for the lives of our living offspring (let alone future generations)? The need for planetary palliation has become urgent, and should focus on all species, in addition to our own.

We can still demonstrate our capacity for noble, contrite self-less-ness, by systematically reducing our carbon footprint. Without delay (days to months) we must cease all GHG emitting activity (transport, infra-structure, energy, agriculture, industry), enhance eco-recycling, begin active transport (walking and cycling), insist upon much smaller eco-designed homes, green cities (to counter heat islands), and begin the regeneration of all debilitated ecosystems.

Finally, we must attend to the psycho-spiritual assault upon humanity by the two synchronous crises, particularly the “bad news” that our precious and galactically unique biosphere is morbidly ill, with the knowledge that we are responsible, but with some distant possibility of atonement. There has been much wise reflection in the realm of psycho-spiritual support and the much broader concept of Deep Adaptation. Likewise, with the expectation of universal distress there are many compassion-based strategies (plus here) for specific demographic groups, in various cultures (children, adolescents, parents, the elderly, the chronically ill, the disabled and so on), and new approaches will undoubtedly emerge.

Ultimately, we will have an opportunity, as a species, to seek forgiveness from our fellow Tellurian life forms (from the koalas to elephants to whales to the albatross; all being species imperiled by human contact), and all of whom must wonder, that when presented with the ineffable, effulgent beauty of Gaia, the large-brained, self-described Homo sapiens chose willful Armageddon, strangely and compulsively enacting an ancient eschatology.

Life will continue but we humans (from the Latin “humus”, meaning soil or earth) will have a deservedly minor role.

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(AU) The City Of Sydney Is Opening A Massive Tech Innovation Hub In Salesforce Tower To Help Tackle Climate Change

Startup Daily -


The soaring 56-storey Salesforce Tower at Sydney’s Circular Quay will be home to a new innovation hub focused on tackling climate change.

Named ‘Greenhouse’, the hub spans 3,800sqm on first three floors at 180 George Street and is due to open next year. It will offer affordable office space for climate tech startups and scaleups, to be run by a subsidiary company of seed investment firm Investible for the next 10 years.

City of Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore said creating affordable startup space would help support an important sector of the economy and contribute to the CBD’s post-pandemic recovery.

“Greenhouse is a wonderful opportunity for tech entrepreneurs and the scaleup economy to be located in one of the most advantageous and desirable locations in Australia, and for the City to showcase Sydney’s tech startup ecosystem to the world,” she said.

“By supporting our fastest-growing, sustainability-focused businesses with affordable, premium office space and access to expert-run services and globally competitive talent, we hope to reaffirm Sydney’s reputation as a vibrant and sustainable city and the home of smart, inclusive and green innovation.

“Greenhouse will help to drive the kind of economy our city needs, and I’m delighted that we are one of the key investors.”

The hub aims to directly support more than 100 ventures in creating more than 1,500 new jobs over a decade and creating pathways for early-stage startup to position Sydney as a global leader in climate tech.

Investible co-founder Creel Price will be Greenhouse CEO.

“We’re designing a space that’s optimised for growth; bringing together a diverse group of investors, experts, partners and advisors to provide climate tech businesses with the nutrient capital, talent, programs and community to grow to their fullest potential,” he said.

The City will sublease the hub space to Investible subsidiary, Innovillage Pty Ltd for 10 years and offer a rental subsidy through its Accommodation Grant Program, providing they demonstrate an ongoing community benefit to the tech startup ecosystem.

Greenhouse is expected to open in late 2022.

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