Those are the words
U of T Geography Professor Danny Harvey used to sum up the state of the environment. Harvey joined Profs Hazir Kherani (Electrical Engineering) and Bryan Kharney (Civil Engineering) at the
Student Sustainable Living Initiative's Power the Future event yesterday evening.

The SSLI, founded by Brandon Gamblen and Ashleigh Ingle (two close friends of mine), is a U of T organization that focuses on practical, personal applications for sustainable technologies. Their current project is a small, low-cost wind turbine that is easy for the average person to build. The event was organized to educate students, professors and Toronto residents about environmental issues and possible solutions.
Harvey's lecture covered the basic facts of global warming and climate change, and included some excellent numbers on the obstacles we face if we hope to stabilize our atmosphere. I find that certain parts of environmental science--like the obvious proof of global warming and its dangers--are in a strange limbo, whereby they are on one hand essentially common knowledge, but on the other hand so stubbornly ignored that they seem to need constant reiteration.
But Harvey's lecture included some new and suprising facts as well. The most moving to me, personally, was a simple comment:
"Really it's probably too late for coral reefs." It made me think of visiting the Caribbean 11 or 12 years ago (the only time I've been back since I was born there). My dad had told us several times about the wonderful reefs off the
Tobago Cays, but when we finally got there they were almost entirely dead. I have always known reefs are delicate ecosystems and certainly in danger, but I had never stopped to think about the fact that saving them may be out of the question. Unfortunately, it does seem a likely assertion. Harvey pointed out that the extra warm "bleaching years" that threaten the reefs--and have been getting closer and closer together--could be occurring as frequently as every other year by the quarter-century, making it impossible for the reefs to sustain enough algae to survive.
Kherani's lecture focused on photoelectric technology, its development and its application. Solar power frustrates me so much, as I'm sure it does millions of scientists--there it is, all the energy we need just pouring over us in abundance, and we can't quite harness it. Most interesting was Kherani's photos of some sustainable colonies around the world, and his observation that such colonies would be much more difficult here, since the average North American uses twice as much energy as the average European or Japanese.

Kharney's lecture put an unexpected spin on the evening. He played half civil engineer, half motivational speaker as he called out the depressed and apathetic among us, who are daunted into inaction by the millions of complex, intertwined problems in the world. Several of my friends commented afterwards that they felt as if he was speaking directly to him at points--something I felt as well.
His goal, clearly, was to help people find motivation in a difficult world the same way he has: by appreciating life and beauty, finding dialectic compromises and reading Calvin and Hobbes. His presentation was full of introspective questions to ponder over, and suggestions on how to deal with the conflicts that arise. He also spend some time discussing dialectics, and his philosophy that life is about a series of overlapping situations in which you have to find the balance between two opposites.
Keep an eye on the
SSLI hompage, for they will have more events in the near future. You can also sign up to learn how to build your own wind turbine!