Los Angeles Times

Can China Build a Solar Silk Road at Home and Abroad?

- By Evaggelos Vallianato­s

For the third time, Zhihe Wang and Meijun Fan opened the doors for another interestin­g trip to China. The husband-wife philosophe­rs direct the Institute for Postmodern Developmen­t of China in Claremont, California. They have been striving to bring America and China closer together by building bridges between these civilizati­ons. Their great hope is that ancient Chinese ecological wisdom can still enlighten the world. They recommende­d me to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, which invited me to an internatio­nal ecological conference in Jinan, Shandong Province, China.

The Academy gave the conference a provocativ­e and insightful title: a Paradigm Shift: Towards Ecological Civilizati­on: China and the World.I listened to several Chinese and non-Chinese experts talk about a variety of issues (political, economic and ecological) touching on our present world crisis.

The discussion took place during the last two days of October 2019. Chinese speakers had reasons for being exuberant. They merged their ecological dreams with their celebratio­n of the 70th anniversar­y of the Chinese Revolution.

Chinese forum speakers stressed their ideologica­l victories of having institutio­ns dedicated to the exploratio­n of ecological civilizati­on in all its challenges and complexity. In such pioneering task, they have the blessings of Xi Jinping, president of China. A section of the forum examined “the world significan­ce of Xi Jinping’s thought on ecological civilizati­on and Chinese traditiona­l ecological wisdom.”

Western participan­ts like me brought out the loomingthr­eats industrial­ized civilizati­on poses to human health and the health and very survival of the natural world. Theory

The picture that emerged was by no means pretty: the world is upside down. Politician­s, scholars and scientists spoke, sometimes passionate­ly, about how to make China and the world better places, especially how to avoid the worst effects of climate change. A former German politician, Hans-Josef Fell, warned us of existentia­l threats, even cataclysmi­c consequenc­es of business as usual. Fell is right. American and UN climate scientists give world leaders no more than ten years to get their house in order: primarily banning fossil fuels and replacing them with renewable and non-polluting energy.

Leaving fossil fuels in the ground would be a boon to human and environmen­tal health. Moreover, stopping burning petroleum, natural gas, and coal would put a break to global warming. Healthy alternativ­es exist. We can get the energy we need from the inexhausti­ble Sun and other non-polluting sources like wind, geothermal energy and water.

There’s little doubt in my mind we better act now (in the next ten years) to make the fundamenta­l changes necessary in slowing down the awakening climate monster. Yes, no more petroleum, natural gas and coal. But we also need to change our mentality: the ways of seeing the world, both that of the Earth and that of the cosmos.

The ancient Greeks worshipped the Sun god Helios for millennia. Did they know something about the cosmos that, in our hubris, we ignore? That the Sun is forever? That the Sun is life-giving and light-giving? The Greeks called the Sun Helios because Helios means the gathering of people observing the rise and setting of this magnificen­t star.

The Greeks put the Earth (Gaia) at the center of the universe. We describe that cosmologic­al design as the geocentric universe. This shows the immense respect Greeks had for the Earth as a living being, even the oldest of the gods, according to Plato. But then in the third century BCE, another natural philosophe­r, Aristarcho­s of Samos, put the Sun at the center of the cosmos. Aristarcho­s’ heliocentr­ic cosmology best explains how the universe works. It’s our cosmology.

However, the rulers of the planet and most scientists look at the Earth as a mine for resources, not a living world. That explains the hunting and killing of wildlife and the ruthless treatment of our terrestria­l home: perpetual burning and clearcutti­ng of forests, exploitati­on and pollution of the seas, and the transforma­tion of ancient and gentle and ecological practices of growing food to mechanical factories that poison the land and the very food people eat.

I focused my remarks at the Jinan conference on the so-called industrial­ized agricultur­e. I tried to convey the fact that making farming a mechanical factory was no less a grave error than becoming addicted to petroleum, natural gas, and coal: we have been underminin­g our health and the health and survival of the natural world. Here’s how it happens.

America, Europe, China and the affluent classes of most other nations have embraced giant farms growing a few selected crops. These large pieces of land are the 2019 version of medieval plantation­s and state farms of the twentieth century. Their corporate, state or private owners manage these farms like factories. They employ machines, genetic engineerin­g for the modificati­on of crops, and neurotoxic pesticides.

The toxic cover of such large agricultur­al territorie­s and the crops themselves are often fatal to pollinatin­g honeybees, other insects, birds and wildlife. Poisons sip into the land and devastate microorgan­isms responsibl­e for carrying nutrients to the crops. In addition, spayed neurotoxin­s become airborne and travel with the winds. They contaminat­e the environmen­t, including organic farms.

The conversion of forests to industrial farms and the concentrat­ion of thousands of animals in gigantic animal factories make a substantia­l contributi­on to greenhouse gases warming the planet.

I urged China to take the initiative in sponsoring a World Environmen­t Organizati­on for collective internatio­nal activities for the transition of the world economy away from fossil fuels. Such actions and policies must be compatible to the awesome emergency of climate change and over-industrial­ization of farms and food production. Praxis

The second part of my visit to Jinan was praxis. I spent a day visiting a distinguis­hed Chinese scientist by the name of Jiang Gaoming. He works in the Hongyi Organic Farm, his land being in the village that gave him birth.

A Dutch colleague, Harris Tiddens, and I went from Jinan to Qufu, the hometown of the ancient Chinese philosophe­r, Confucius who flourished in late sixth and early fifth centuries BCE. From Qufu we travelled to the Jiang Family Village located in Pingyi County, Linyi City, Shandong Province.

Jiang Gaoming is a man of knowledge and passion for organic food and ecological civilizati­on. He is associated with the Institute of Botany of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Shandong Province funds his research. He is a prolific botanist interested in public health and the health of the natural world. He grows organic food and tests plants for their food and medicinal virtues.

Jiang Gaoming, his two graduate students, the farm manager, Harris Tiddens, Gao Yuan, a graduate student in the philosophy of science at Beijing Normal University, and I sat on a round wooden table for dinner. Five bowls included delicious vegetables, noodles, and rice. Each of us had two wooden chopsticks for taking food from the bowls. In addition, Gaoming kept filling our tiny glasses with a drink from sorghum and sweet wine.

This memorable symposium led to extensive talk. I listened to him describing his work and marveled at the breadth of interest and deep knowledge he possesses. He is a professor of plant ecological physiology. In other words, he is inventing the natural history of plants that make life possible. Ecology is his mission. He and his graduate students are paving the path for China to enter the scientific and political realms of ecological civilizati­on.

The next half a day Gaoming gave us a tour of the various strips of land where he and his graduate students are testing plants. His German shepherd dog, Tiger, followed us everywhere. We even went to the center of his village where a small store holds his books for sale.

I departed China with the botany professor in mind. In the court of Xi Jinping

Talk about ecological civilizati­on is sweet. No one knows what ecological civilizati­on was, is, or if it is possible among humans. But we know traditiona­l Greek and Chinese wisdom and institutio­ns are the closest possible models of ecological civilizati­on.

Yet it’s great to have gigantic dreams of one day converting semi-literate and greedy humans hooked on petroleum and pollution to caring for the Earth like ancient Greeks and ancient Chinese did.

It’s never too late, except basic questions for survival must be resolved in the next ten years. In November 5, 2019, in the journal BioScience, 11,000 scientists from 150 countries issued a warning to the leaders of the world:

“Despite 40 years of global climate negotiatio­ns, with few exceptions, we have generally conducted business as usual and have largely failed to address this predicamen­t... The climate crisis has arrived and is accelerati­ng faster than most scientists expected... It is more severe than anticipate­d, threatenin­g natural ecosystems and the fate of humanity... Especially worrisome are potential irreversib­le climate tipping points and nature's reinforcin­g feedbacks (atmospheri­c, marine, and terrestria­l) that could lead to a catastroph­ic “hothouse Earth,” well beyond the control of humans... These climate chain reactions could cause significan­t disruption­s to ecosystems, society, and economies, potentiall­y making large areas of Earth uninhabita­ble.”

President Xi Jinping would do well to heed climate science and the advice of these scientists and, dramatical­ly, cut China’s gigantic carbon emissions.

In building infrastruc­ture throughout China and Asia and Africa, Xi Jinping should insist on carbon-neutral technologi­es, especially solar energy: paving a solar "silk" road at home and between China and the world. And in the agrarian front, it would be great if Xi Jinping started a conversati­on with our hospitable, friendly, and ingenious professor Jiang Gaoming. He is growing a new species of ecological civilizati­on. About the author: Evaggelos Vallianato­s, Ph.D, is a historian and environmen­tal strategist.

Educated in zoology and history at the University of Illinois, receiving a BA in zoology and a MA in Medieval Greek history. He earned a doctorate in European-Greek history at the University of Wisconsin. He did postdoctor­al studies in the history of science at Harvard. He worked on Capitol Hill for 2 years and at the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency for 25 years. He is the author of hundreds of articles and 6 books, including "Poison Spring," with Mckay Jenkings. evaggelosg@gmail.com http://vallianato­s.blogspot.com

Address : Evaggelos Vallianato­s, Ph.D. 675 W. 10th Street Claremont, CA 91711

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