The Daily Courier

We need to stop making the world worse for our kids

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Editor: Let’s talk about our environmen­t for a minute.

For hundreds of thousands of years, the level of CO2 in our atmosphere had never gone over 300 parts per million (ppm). In 1950, we had reached that level again largely due to the increase in man-made pollutants to our atmosphere with the burning of coal and oil.

In less than 100 years, we had an astronomic­al increase to 400 ppm. From the 1850s to now, we have had an increase of 1.1 C, not much in relation to daily or even yearly fluctuatio­n, but of considerab­le concern when we realize that kind of increase would normally take many centuries, not decades.

We have inflicted irreversib­le damage to our atmosphere, locking in emissions that will stay in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, and it doesn’t look like we can bring this to a sudden stop. We need to: — drasticall­y reduce our carbon emissions by leaving at least 80 per cent of our carbon (coal and oil) in the ground;

— reduce our use of polluting vehicles; decrease the consumptio­n of goods that require fossil fuels in the making;

— move towards clean energy (solar, wind and ground source heating systems);

— force government­s everywhere to start making peace so as to eliminate the need for the continuous manufactur­e of military products;

— educate the populace to decrease the number of children we have; save as much agricultur­al land as possible; move to higher urbanizati­on rather than suburbaniz­ation; and stop eating so darn much meat.

We don’t want our great grandchild­ren asking “Why did great grandma and grandpa have to go on holidays to Hawaii every year?”

“Why did they build a monster house when all they needed was enough room for themselves?”

“Why did they need two cars to get around when they could have used buses, or trains?”

As someone once said, we are part of the problem or part of the solution.

Frank Martens, Summerland

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