Homes & Gardens

THE SUSTAINABL­E LIFE

Sebastian Cox sets his intentions for the year ahead

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This time of year always has a cyclical feel. Unless you are a person highly attuned to natural rhythms, time throughout the other seasons moves fast enough that we occasional­ly forget the rotation we’re in until it catches us; the blossom in spring or the first leaves falling can draw us sharply back in synchronis­ation. So as 2020 careers towards 2021 we feel the circle starting again, and although this is a human-made structure, we are resonating with the non-human world as it begins to recommence growth (in the Northern Hemisphere, anyway).

Nature’s reliable cycles are fundamenta­l to its function. Aside from seasonal change, closed loops exist in how nature gives and recycles nutrients, carbon, water and – relevant to humans – materials. Wood, my beloved and dearest material, is a wonderfull­y simple example of this; the trees grow by absorbing carbon, turning it into woody material, then they fall or are felled and that carbon is released through decay, becoming both soil and atmospheri­c carbon again. All of the matter during this growth and death is not just dealt with, it is the foundation­s of other interconne­cted life elsewhere, like fungi or microorgan­isms, mammals, insects and birds. It’s such a humblingly sophistica­ted process, we are privileged to be able to use the woody biomass as a material for our homes.

Contrast that system with how we humans extract and process fossil, mineral or even biomass materials and we look like total amateurs, or worse, destructiv­e fools. It still astonishes me that after more than a century of using man-made polymers we still do not have systems in place to correctly recycle them. ‘Not yet recycled’ is still unapologet­ically written on much of our packaging, even in the year two thousand and twenty. If we can extract and refine minerals and polymers, then it’s entirely possible to reform those materials without any further extraction. The post-use systems haven’t been created properly yet, which I find unacceptab­le. We must move from a linear take-make-waste system to a circular one; a friend of mine adds refuse as the starting word of the well-known phrase reduce-reuserecyc­le. And he’s right. The developed world drives the over-consumptio­n of resources, and Christmas sees our peak consumptio­n, so we must restrain by refusing as a first action, opting for recycling last.

Top of my Christmas list this year is a recent book which optimistic­ally tackles this subject – Wasted by Katie Treggiden. It’s a fascinatin­g and thoughtpro­voking topic, one I’ll ponder into the new year.

She profiles designers who are fixing our broken material systems by making waste their primary resource – much as the natural world does.

I always believe Mother Nature holds answers for how we can better live, centre to her operation are cycles which have no waste and we must learn from immediatel­y. No matter how sophistica­ted or modern we think we are, we won’t have reached modernity until we have developed wasteless circular systems, closing loops and acting like we are a part of this planet again. I believe this modernity is in reach, so as we recommence our annual cycle we must make circularit­y our determined priority.

 ??  ?? Seb on one of his many wintry walks
Seb on one of his many wintry walks

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