Have you heard of a more futile gesture to come out of the Bali junket? Eco-activists are calling for an “Earth Hour” next March,when we all turn our lights out for an hour. Its supposed to send a signal to let political leaders know we are “worried about global warming and willing to do our part.”
But such a meaningless action merely lets politicians know we couldn’t care less, and they can get away with another decade of inactivity.
Toronto is among a dozen cities worldwide that plan to participate in Earth Hour by turning off lights and appliances for an hour on March 29, from 8 to 9 p.m. EST, to symbolize people’s commitment to tackling global warming. Sponsors of the Toronto event include WWF-Canada, the City of Toronto and the Toronto Star, none of them known for their radical plans to tackle climate change.
Western society has a morbid fear of the dark, so there is little or no hope that Off-Grid’s alternative to Earth Hour will take off, or is there? Let’s turn off all lights and unused appliances every night, starting tonight, spread the word, bug your office manager, your college janitor or your local government executives. Let’s just do the right thing, and turn the lights out at night.
FROM THE PRESS RELEASE
“The public has become increasingly alarmed about climate change. They’re seeing it in their daily lives, faster and worse than scientists predicted even a few years ago, and are increasingly impatient to see something done about it,” Jim Leape, director general of World Wildlife Fund International, said from Bali yesterday.
“People are ready to take action in their own lives and expecting their governments to take action.”
Imagine the CN Tower, the Rogers Centre and the glow of Yonge St. all blackened temporarily, allowing city dwellers a rare glimpse of the stars.
“Every person, every business and every government has a shared duty to fight climate change,” said Toronto Mayor David Miller, urging Torontonians to take part. “Where national governments fail to lead, cities can and must lead.”
“Earth Hour and the Toronto Star share a common purpose, to raise awareness about global climate change,” said Star publisher Jagoda Pike. “This event is an opportunity to show how individuals acting together as a community can have a huge impact.
“Ultimately, we hope it gets people thinking and talking here in Toronto and in cities around the world about real solutions to what is arguably the most important issue of our time.”
Toronto committed to cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 30 per cent by 2020, and by 80 per cent by 2050. Greenhouse gases trap the Earth’s heat and, according to the world’s leading climate scientists, are altering the world’s temperature and weather patterns.
Other cities committed to Earth Hour include Chicago, Auckland, Tel Aviv, Copenhagen, Manila, Suva in Fiji, and Sydney, Australia, where the event started this year.
On March 31st, an estimated 2.2 million residents – and 2,000 businesses – pulled off the grid for an hour by dimming their lights, unplugging their computers or switching off their televisions. For that hour, the city’s electricity use dropped by 10 per cent. The Opera House sails went black, the Harbour Bridge darkened, the fluorescent glare of the city’s skyline dimmed and restaurants served meals by candlelight. The town hall temporarily went to sleep.
By all accounts, it was a huge success – and a show by the Aussies they didn’t approve of then-Prime Minister John Howard’s staunch rejection of the Kyoto Accord, the United Nation’s agreement to cut greenhouse gases. (They’ve since elected a new environmentalist Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.)
“The public is leading on this issue. It’s alarmed and wants to see the right action,” Leape said. “It is a political statement that we are going to join together and make a difference.”
As the 13th annual United Nations conference on climate change wraps up today, Leape and other environmental activists still held on to faint hope delegates could bridge the gap between two sides: Countries, including the European Union, that are committed to deep emissions cuts, and others, including Canada, that won’t accept numbers of any sort.
Yesterday, Canada’s Environment Minister John Baird said Canada won’t agree to emission cuts without the United States – as it would hurt our economy without improving the atmosphere.
“Canada has been consistently obstructionist for the whole two weeks,” said Leape. “So, of course, has the United States. The question is whether the rest can overcome the resistance of those two – and Japan – and do what needs to be done.”
One hour of darkness won’t stop the globe from warming, but the event is designed to get people to stop and think about what is taken for granted – electricity – especially when it’s generated by carbon-belching coal plants, one of the world’s leading causes of climate change.
For more about Earth Hour, go to www.earthhour.org , and watch for special coverage of Earth Hour in the Toronto Star on Jan. 19.
With files from The Canadian Press