Animating the Environment

Eco
Our Impact. AEE/Bos.
by Departement

This morning I featured a piece of animation from the 1980's that trumpeted the environmental cause, using the best animation techniques of the time. Well, we've come a long way since then, and animation can now do mind blowing and ultra realistic things. Just look at my post from last week for a great example.

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What We Knew in the 80s

Home

Ah, the eighties. I remember it well... wait a second, um, do I? Hardly at all now that I think about it. Not sure if it was the bad hair or the unrequited pre-school crushes, but most of the neon decade seems to have been blocked from my mind.

I especially don't remember whatever social issues we were concerned with at the time. Yet according to this video posted by animation cameraman Robert Lyons, (guess they did things differently back then) even as far back as the 1980's we'd heard of this whole 'precious earth' concept. It seems we've had decades available to mount an assault on the problem.

Hmmm, how are we doing?

More from Robert Lyons
Home is the last independent film directed by animation couple, Howard and Iris Beckerman. It's narrated by a young girl, Shayla Sneldeman, and it's focus is the importance of planet Earth as the only home we have. It is a traditional cel animation shot on 35mm film using my Oxberry animation stand camera and includes some back-lit effects.

David Suzuki's "One Ocean"

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Animations from One Ocean
by Me!

After I posted an article by David Suzuki entitled 'Politicians who reject science are not fit to lead' on the Brad Blogspeed Facebook page(which, if you're not a member of, shame on you) I mentioned to a commenter that I had done some animation on one of his CBC documentaries in the past. That then got me wondering if I had ever posted that work on this blog, so I started looking back through history.

Maybe I did, but I can't find it by searching, so at worst here's a repost of some of my shots from The Nature of Things' One Ocean miniseries.

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The Know/Do Problem

Sign

How to Fly to the Stars, Save our Planet, and Ignore People

I have an embarrassing admission to make. Sometimes, when nobody else is around, I talk to myself.

Or at least I hear voices, and they're not always supportive ones. Usually, they start barking at me right before I post something potentially controversial on this site. See, I'm a huge wuss-bag that abhors confrontation of any sort, so I'm always anticipating the backlash my opinions might engender. The voices I'm talking about offer me a preview of every negative comment one of my posts might provoke, and they frighten me.

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Standing on Shoulders

A Silly Video that Made Me Proud to be Human
(video at bottom)
People
Even if you've never found my scribblings to be tolerable, please at least have a look at the video below.  If it inspires you like it did me, maybe we'll meet again in the next paragraph.

The other night I had dinner with my very first childhood babysitter, also a fellow blogger, and the conversation turned to our sites.  I'll paraphrase a bit.  She told me that she thought I was attempting to challenge conventions with these articles — that by questioning common assumptions I was making an effort to critique society.  I took it as a compliment, which is how I'm sure she meant it, although it did pique my interest somewhat.

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Designing Darkness

On Starlight and Streetlights and Saving Mankind  

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Last night my bride and I woke at 2am, hopped in my topless Jeep, and took a chilly drive out to the Torrance Barrens Dark Sky Preserve.  It was the darkest place we knew of from which to observe the Perseids meteor shower, an event that lit up the night sky with all sorts of pyrotechnics.  My wife, typically uninterested in astronomical pursuits, was on this occasion gung-ho to tag along.  Upon arriving we stumbled our way amongst the stargazers by the light of our cellular phones (our flashlight would have ruined everyone's nightvision), spread out in the pitch-black field and let the heavens entertain us.

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Solemn Summer Vibes

Heat

How awesome is the summertime? Ok, we ain't there yet, but in Toronto this week it certainly feels that way. I mean, 30 degrees in May? Bring it on.

But you have to wonder at what cost this joy is delivered. If science is anything to judge reality by, one has to accept that man-made global warming is part of that reality. And while I'm certainly not someone to take a hot day or two, or even a sampling of a few years, and take it for more than it's statistically worth, one has to at least wonder if those few precious degrees we're all currently enjoying aren't at least small evidence of a trend.

Nothing new, everyone's heard it and thought it themselves. And while this narrow period in time isn't likely to be representative of anything in particular, I'm probably not alone in sensing an odd overall trend in our climate. From a biased and unscientific viewpoint, there seems to be present a tangible effect to go along with all the data.

As I've hinted at before, what scares me isn't the greenhouse effect, but the possibility of a runaway greenhouse effect. For those unaware, that's when a planet hits a certain 'tipping point' beyond which the greenhouse effect begins a sort of feedback loop, continually building up CO2 and water vapour in the atmosphere and turning an Earth-like heaven into a Venus-like hell.

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Who knows how likely such an event is, but we can be sure that even the best efforts to understand where that tipping point is are just educated guesses. Again, the sample size is too small. We've only ever lived on one planet and have no case studies to examine. Could we see into Venus' past we could know more, but alas, it ain't happening.

So what can be done? Are there realistic solutions? Of course there are, in that any plan that includes our survival, as opposed to the alternative, is obviously worth the time. But they're hard choices, be sure. Don't listen to the polarized extremes of any debate, and while I consider myself fairly liberal, those that claim biofuels and farmer's markets as a solution to all that ails the earth are either ignorant of the truth, or selling something.

The sacrifices required to affect real change on a system so huge and so fantastically out-of-whack are massive. Neglect can do more damage, and faster, than design can easilly repair.

Nonetheless, it is design that will save us, if anything can. While technology is in many ways the source of the problem, one must admit that it's also the defining characteristic of homo sapiens, and so any effort to preserve our species must also preserve that aspect of our nature. We, from the making of the first stone tool, are compelled to create technology. If we are to survive, we must create the technology to do so.

Now, everything I've said so far could perhaps be seen as alarmist, and I will admit that while there's a scientific consensus that global warming is a real and man-made effect, there's less compelling evidence on what will happen next.  Yes, a runaway effect is a possibility, but so is a slight warming of the atmosphere with nary an ice cap melted.  Many of the horror stories that colour people's perceptions of this topic are somewhat speculative. The evidence tells us that something definitely wacky is going on and that we caused it, but isn't clear on what all of that means.

So here's the thing. I like playing my PS3, and I work in an electronically powered medium. Energy consumption is a big part of my little life, and that's unlikely to change. And while I do what I can when I think of it, and use no more energy than I can comfortably and conscientiously afford to, I'm probably a worse offender than most.

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We know that it will take a huge investment in the research and technology required, and thus far each generation aware of this trend has opted out of dealing with it, and left it to their children to handle.  So I'm curious about how we begin to summon that massive will, and getting change going.  I could never turn on my PS3 again, but all that might do is make me feel better about myself.  For something truly world-changing, we need a plan to motivate the people of earth to spend the coin.

 

Previously, I believed political consciousness raising was the answer, and that a political sea-change could, and even eventually would, bring about the societal paradigm shift required to make a difference. Much of the reason that I am a liberal isn't centered on current civil rights issues, important as I think they are, but rather on concerns for the long term benefit of our species. I thought that the progress of liberalism, since it was traditionally associated with environmental concerns, was linearilly corelated to the progression of those concerns. That a vote for change meant actual change, so to speak. 

But I now realize that politics is too hampered a process, that popular opinion is too easilly distracted by small issues. No matter how much good a man like Barack Obama may want to do in his most private wishes, his efforts to pursue such an agenda must include compromise to such an extent that change can be no more than mind-numbingly slow at the very best.

Politics is a reactionary medium, only a meager reflection of the public will, and it's only when the public will demands action that action is ever taken.

So all I'm left with, beyond the ridiculously optimistic idea that buying organic foods will inspire the emerging Chinese middle class to do the same, is the consciousness raising of reason.

How do I get there, you may ask? What does good thought have to do with saving the whales?

Everything.

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It's only through reason that we can largely disregard the emotion-crafting rhetoric that is political debate. It takes critical thinking to ignore the arguments of the politicized interests on the issue, and actually look at the facts. Ten politicians providing context on the environmental discussion aren't worth one researcher describing his or her findings. Instead of designing solutions mankind is spinning its wheels, embroiled in nonsense talk.

Only once we, as a collective people, get educated and truly understand the gadgetry of how we fucked ourselves, can we begin to develop the stone tools required to meet the challenge. If the debate can shift from a choice between fantasy and reality to a choice between constructive options, we at least have a chance to die trying.

These are the things I hope we can begin to think about, even on a pleasant, but concerningly warm, May evening.

Time to Stop Calling it Alternative Energy

O09_23315377
You know what?  This whole thing just pisses me off.

If people can't motivate our governments to rapidly make a transition to alternative sources of 'go', then we deserve to be extinct.

Thanks to my 'researcher', Steve Blacker, for the share.  Text from the article below.

In the three weeks since the April 20th explosion and sinking of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico, and the start of the subsequent massive (and ongoing) oil leak, many attempts have been made to contain and control the scale of the environmental disaster. Oil dispersants are being sprayed, containment booms erected, protective barriers built, controlled burns undertaken, and devices are being lowered to the sea floor to try and cap the leaks, with little success to date. While tracking the volume of the continued flow of oil is difficult, an estimated 5,000 barrels of oil (possibly much more) continues to pour into the gulf every day. While visible damage to shorelines has been minimal to date as the oil has spread slowly, the scene remains, in the words of President Obama, a "potentially unprecedented environmental disaster."

Rouge Hike #3

Trails
So today I did the last leg of the Rouge Valley trails, although there are many more further north.  Now that I've done them all, the wife's jealous, so we're going to dump the kids on Grandma someday soon and do the whole thing in one shot.

This was another beautiful leg of the trail, and another reminder that greenspace is important to conserve.

'Nuff said.

Oceans on the Internet

Media_httpwwwcbccaone_zzbuc

http://oneocean.cbc.ca/

'One Ocean', David Suzuki's documentary series that I worked on recently for CBC, has a great web resource attached to it.

One Ocean Online is a dynamic and multifaceted website where you can watch the documentaries themselves, as well as additional content. There's lots of interactive things to see and do as well.

If you have kids who are interested in the oceans and the environment, or if you're interested yourself, have a look.

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