An Ocean Full of Plastic?

plasticoceans.net
plasticoceans.net

Plastics, they are everywhere –we type on keyboards made from them , we drink and eat out of bottles and plates made from them and we use them for cars and all sorts of things. Gone are the days where people like my grandparents used glass bottles and plates, and where cars were composed mostly of metal.

The use of plastic has increased by twenty times in the last 50 years and is expected to double again in the next 20 years. That is staggering. What saddens me the most is that our oceans, by 2050, will contain more plastic in terms of weight, than fish. Whales, dolphins, seals, and sea-birds end up eating the plastic and then die from intestinal blockages, choking or starvation. I once met a beautiful seal at an animal hospital. Her stomach was so full of plastic things that 22 days went by before all of it was out. Fortunately, she was one of the lucky seals, she was saved before it was too late.

Is there any good news? We can work together to produce less waste and slow climate change. Plus, we can make sure we recycle our plastics. Almost one-third of all plastic never gets collected and ends up in our oceans. We can also change how we manufacture things. Instead of plastic we can use hemp. It can be used to make containers and in car production. As I wrote in an earlier blog, hemp is also biodegradable.

Let’s get together and stop using plastics. Our oceans will thank you and so will the animals in them.

A Great Way to Mitigate Climate Change

Sunrise_in_tropical_rainforest copyYou often hear that we need to reduce our carbon emissions from fossil fuels to fight climate change. While that is true, we have another way to reach our goals. It is easier and less expensive to save and regrow tropical trees. According to Nature Climate Change, tropical forest conservation and restoration could make up half of the global warming solution.

Cutting carbon emissions and pulling carbon out of the atmosphere (courtesy of rainforests) would significantly reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. According to Dr. Paul Salaman, “the potential of rainforest conservation to address global warming should be enough to galvanize massive worldwide rainforest conservation efforts.”

Dr. Salaman also said “rainforest conservation is also incredibly economical. One acre of Amazon rainforest in Peru, which stores up to 180 metric tonnes of CO2, can be protected for just a few dollars; the same is true elsewhere in Latin America and Africa…for the cost of …a coffee – each of us could save an area of forest about the size of four football pitches and safely store about 725 metric tonnes of CO2. To put this in perspective, the annual emissions of a typical passenger vehicle in the United States is less than 4.5 metric tonnes of CO2.”

Another reason to conserve the rainforests is for the animals. They provide homes for orangutans, elephants, tigers, and many other species. It is time to start saving and protecting our rainforests. They are the key to our future.

Check if Your Favorite Celebrity is on This List

CDjayzZWEAA7bk0There are nine celebrities who are advocating for climate action.

They are listed below,  in no particular order.

Robert Redford

Pharrell Williams

Emma Thompson

Mark Ruffalo

Jessica Alba

Don Cheadle

Ian Sommerhalder

Leonard DiCaprio

Arnold Schwartzenegger

http://www.climaterealityproject.org/blog/nine-celebrities-changing-conversation-climate-action

A Poem….

“I am Earth” by Sheryl Lee

I am Earth
and from my body
grow the trees
you chop down
with you careless acts

I am ocean
for from my womb
all beings are birthed

I am desert
my long, voluptuous dunes
now burnt to drought
by August sun

my blood
the dyeing rivers
you pollute
with discarded greed
and selfish denial

my breasts
are sacred mountains
climbed for your egos sake of reaching the top
your summit
my nipple
without soft, tenderness of touch
that is required for such a holy journey

you, who call me home
I am not something to be bought or sold

I am alive
and in the eyes of every living creature
you will find me
their mother
mirrored back to you

do you dare look?
can you hold my gaze?

while you run your fingers through my sunlit hair of wheat at harvest?
that same nourishing grain you paint with poison for your benefit?

and do you care?
when you stain the path of this delicate wrist as you wind your way along my enchanted forest of pine?

you, my child,
who call yourself king
have scratched my skin raw
etching your name across virgin land

dark bruises mark my thighs
as you drill into the deepest marrow of these bones
searching for more gold
more silver
more of my life giving waters
you continue to ask for more
more of my precious milk
more of my cherished stone
you always want more

and I give it
again and again and again
I give

but now, my pets
I have run dry

I crack, I moan and I quake
I break open in pain
I am rain

I burn, I flame, I heat
I erupt with the force of my grief

and then
I cry
for days and days and days
I cry

and you, my dears
still look to my husband’s heavens
asking why