Archive for February, 2006 Page 2 of 2



Perspective on the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment

From Vancouver’s Tyee.ca article World Might Yet Be Saved:

While it may not be a verifiable fact that the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) is the world’s most underappreciated eco-study, it’s definitely the most unevenly appreciated one. When the huge report first emerged last spring after four years, $24 million and the efforts of more than 1,300 scientists in 95 countries, it made headlines elsewhere. In December, it was awarded a Zayed Prize, something like an environmentalist Nobel. Here in North America, though, the media barely registered its existence.

What a dirty shame. The U.N.-backed Millennium Assessment is the most thorough survey of global ecosystems ever undertaken. It’s also the first report of its kind to link ecosystem health to human well-being, and in so doing, strikes the rich, rich vein of human self-interest. Showing people what’s in it for them is a great way to get something done.

Climate change fiction - news and interviews

Book reviewer Rick Kleffel has an audio report on US National Public Radio (NPR) on how science fiction writers, such as Kim Stanley Robinson and Michael Crichton, address global warming.

Kleffel also has an interview will Bill McKibben (author of the End of Nature) about science fiction and climate change.

There is another recent podcast interview with Kim Stanley Robinson on his climate change books and science on IT converations.

Also see earlier Art of Climate Change: telling stories to understand the future.