There was a mini-project within the conference that I haven’t mentioned yet. On the Friday, MC Dick got the delegates to split into groups of five or so to work on a creative project exploring some aspect of climate change. Over the two days, the groups got together during break times to formulate their… [Read more…]
On Friday morning at TippingPoint, there were two presentations. One I’ve already written up and the other was entitled Climate Change: Where We Stand. It was delivered by Professor Jean Palutikof, Director of Australia’s National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility at Griffith University in Brisbane. The facility is charged by the Federal Government to provide… [Read more…]
Today the open space workshop continued with participants being encouraged to work in a collaborative, action-oriented way, building on the exploration vibe of Friday. Several new topics were suggested and I captured most of them below, including the names of the people who brought them up where I knew who they were. Food sustainability. What… [Read more…]
After lunch on Friday, an open space workshop started. I’d never heard of the format before. First of all, the group identifies topics for discussion and then splits into smaller groups for parallel meetings on each of the chosen topics. The conference MC Dick Robertson asked people to suggest topics that they felt personally connected… [Read more…]
The crux of Dr Stephen Pekar’s presentation first thing yesterday was this: there is no debate among scientists about the authenticity of climate change and whether human activity is causing it. The challenge, he said, appears to be how to effectively communicate this fact to policy makers and a public that continues to mistakenly perceive… [Read more…]
The second presenter at last night’s opening was Natalie Jeremijenko, who Skyped in from Washingon DC. She had been working at The Edge for the last week but had to be in the USA for something this week. Officially, she’s an artist and engineer who has studied both biochemistry and neuroscience and who works in… [Read more…]
According to CSIRO’s Dr Stefan Hajkowicz who is an economist, economics has interesting views on climate change. To explain how to an audience of non-economists, he first explained the concept of the ‘invisible hand of the market’ which was what the father of modern economics, Adam Smith, called the self-regulating nature of the market. He… [Read more…]
Turns out I’m blogging the Tipping Point conference from here. The opening last night kicked off with a presentation from Dr Stefan Hajkowicz from CSIRO. He talked about a whole bunch of topics; went through so many interlocking issues of climate change, food production and agriculture, global poverty and malnutrition, and economics. It was all… [Read more…]
Recently I’ve happened across a couple of blog posts and articles that use the hammer and nail metaphor to explain why different people approach the same issue vastly differently. You know the one: ‘If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail’? As well as having had Simon and Garfunkel’s ‘El Condor… [Read more…]
In mid-November, I’ll be doing another event blogging project, this time for Tipping Point in Brisbane. It’s a two-day, invitation-only forum for artists, scientists and thinkers to explore ways to adapt to and mitigate the effects of climate change, and it’s being hosted by my old workplace, The Edge. This event blogging is pretty interesting. While I… [Read more…]
November 15, 2010
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