Our last few blog posts detailed how art can be used to leverage change. One area where change is desperately needed is in our approach to the climate crisis. The headline of a recent Time article proclaimed, 2020 is Our Last, Best Chance to Save the Planet. While Covid-19 may have given Mother Earth a brief respite, the climate crisis continues to grow in severity.
Here are just a few startling facts:
-800 million people, or 11% of the world’s population is currently vulnerable to climate change impacts such as droughts, floods, heat waves, extreme weather events and sea-level rise. (1)
-A 2015 study showed that vertebrate species—animals with backbones, like fish, birds, mammals, amphibians, and reptiles—are disappearing 114 times faster than they should be, a phenomenon that has been linked to climate change, pollution, and deforestation. (2)
-In 2019- Indonesia announced its plans to move the capital city away from Jakarta. Home to over ten million people, some parts of Jakarta are sinking as much as 25cm per year. In the Pacific, at least eight islands were swallowed by the sea in the last century, with Tuvalu, Kiribati and the Marshall Islands feared to be the next low-lying nations to be wiped off the map.
Keeping these facts in mind, it’s important that we all use our skills and talents to contribute to this critical conversation. We love seeing art in action as a way to grow awareness around climate change.
One artist we’d like to highlight created a virtual reality app called “Unmoored...that places the phenomenon of rising sea levels within our electronic devices. Users can “experience an incoming flotilla of boats of all kinds...[It’s a work] designed to engender a moment of awe, one that offers a glimpse into the future, witnessed through the technology of the present.”
If you’re ready to make a tangible difference in this fight, here are three ways you can make a difference right now.
Donate to an organization actively involved in the climate fight. NOW, 8 Billion Trees, and Extinction Rebellion are all great options.
Purchase eco-friendly paper products like Who Gives a Crap or invest in a bidet!
Purchase your clothes second-hand from ThredUp or other second hand retailers.
How are you making a positive impact on sustainability? Share your story, and leave a comment below!
(1) https://www.conservation.org/stories/11-climate-change-facts-you-need-to-know
(2) https://www.nrdc.org/stories/are-effects-global-warming-really-bad