Showing posts with label vision. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vision. Show all posts

Mar 13, 2013

A brave conservative

Stockholm this evening, while walking from the parliament to the subway

Tonight I attended a meeting of RIFO (Swedish Society for Members of Parliament and Scientists) that was held in the Swedish Riksdag, the parliament buildings. The theme was "from global intransigence to national solutions" ("Från globala låsningar till nationella lösningar"). It was an excellent program, but tonight I just want to applaud an idea that was voiced by one of the panel members, Johan Hultberg, of the Moderat party (sort of right-of-center, roughly equivalent to the UK's Conservatives). In a discussion of how climate and environment should and could be mainstreamed, he suggested that the ministries of environment and finance could be merged, as a way of making a meaningful move towards a serious transformation in the way that we deal with valuing our world and all it provides us with. Several politicians from other parties, as well as other participants, even said that the idea had possibilities. Why not? they said. Yes, why not? What are we waiting for and waiting for and waiting for . . .

Feb 28, 2013

Vertical horizons: farming matrix




The iconic "Toronto Sky Farm" (design and image copyright, Gordon Graff).


Today on Swedish Radio's science program, "Vetandets värld," you could hear about a Swedish company's efforts to develop urban farming systems. The company, Plantagon, is not only developing innovative designs for vertical agriculture, but it is doing so in partnership with the native American Onandoga Nation. This is worth learning more about. The company was a partner in organizing the recent conference, Urban Agriculture Summit, held at the end of January, 2013, in Linköping, Sweden. You can read about Gordon Graff's iconic design and study for his Toronto Sky Farm, as well as lots, lots more about urban farming, on the Treehugger website. (Let's hope that Swedish Radio's interest lasts longer than one day).

Do you have a company and do you feel moved to develop a climate change consciousness? Read Sarah Cornell's blog on the website, Hagainitiativet (The Haga Initiative), which promotes active, responsible corporate behavior in relation to climate change. (Does this mean that even Coca-Cola has realized that it's hard to have market dominance when you don't have a planet?)

Stay tuned for more vertical thinking from a horizontal position!



Feb 15, 2013

Symbiotic cities



Ravens reclaim parking lot outside our window in Lund

As everybody knows, the human race is going urban. In every single country in the world, more than 50% of the population lives in cities. That is expected to increase to more than 70% in the next 30-40 years. What we do with our cities has a lot to do with climate change, both how we respond to it and how we affect it. Thinking of cities as dynamic ecosystems is not new, but it is increasingly promising, and relevant. A new Swedish national initiative, "SymbioCity: Sustainability by Sweden," was launched at the beginning of 2013. It is a collaboration between the Swedish Government, Business Sweden and the international affiliate of the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions, SKL International. The idea is to create and nurture symbiosis in the design and running of cities, all around the world. Their impressive website is a gold mine of resources, ideas, tool kits, contacts and, above all, inspiration. They are doing things. They are open, inclusive and sharing. Go there and explore the possibilities.





Feb 13, 2013

Ambiguity in real life





Here it is again! Can you believe it? The sign stands at the entrances to the parking lots at the Ingvar Kamprad Design Centre. Ingvar Kamprad's initials are the first two letters in the name of a certain country store called I K_ _, which had its origins in "the deep dark forests of Småland," in southern Sweden. Anyway, the IK Design Centre is on the campus of LTH (Lunds Tekniska Högskola), the Faculty of Engineering at Lund University. The Design Centre is one of the sites of some of the most original thinking on campus, and has the seeds of a lot of intelligent climate change response. But, this sign intrigues me, since it is so marvelously, and maddeningly, ambiguous. It literally reads, "Honk if you like climate change." Well, that's what it "means," but what does that mean? Maybe we can get to the bottom of this enigma. "The truth is out there," sort of.




Feb 12, 2013

What does it all mean?







Do you have any theories about what the meaning of this sign might be? The literal translation of the Swedish is quite obvious, of course (OK, I'm just teasing all you non-Swedish speakers), but what does it really mean? Stay tuned to this station for more clues . . . And, by the way, the dark quality of the photo just reflects the light level on a typical winter overcast mid-morning at southern Swedish latitudes. It's good we have other things to think about, right?


Dec 22, 2012

Mainstreaming is not headline news




Right in the mainstream--coping with winter, nationally and locally, Öresund



There's not much about climate change response in Sweden that's exciting and attention-grabbing these days. I've been thinking a lot about this lately, since it seems that the more headlines there are about climate change at the global level, the fewer there are in the Swedish press, about what's happening in this country. Entire weeks can go by with scarcely a mention in any of the half-dozen or so larger newspapers of any Swedish climate change-related activity. To know if there's anything going on, you've got to do a lot of sleuthing. My theory is that this is because responding to climate change is gradually becoming mainstreamed here. I'm not sure yet if this is the best way to go about it, but it does help to explain the lack of media coverage. Climate change is just part of everyday business . . . maybe.

Believe it or not, but one of the coolest places to see innovative thinking about climate change is deep inside the Swedish bureaucracy, in one of the least trendy-seeming places. It's not at the Swedish EPA (Naturvårdsverket), for instance, nor at the Swedish Met Office (SMHI), nor even at the Ministry of Environment, all of which have admirable programs underway, as you would expect. No, this nest of real solid work on societal aspects of climate change is Boverket, The Swedish National Board of Housing, Building and Planning. I'll be describing some of their activities in the coming weeks, but one of their more recent achievements has been the result of a massive exercise in producing a Vision for Sweden 2025, which the Government commissioned from them. The defining objective for the vision is a society guided by sustainable development, and based on the over hundred goals, from national to local level, that have been defined for the country's physical societal planning. The resulting Vision was released, as a "web app," with a surprising lack of media attention and undeserved modesty, on December 12, barely a week ago. The Vision poses four megatrends, of which climate change is one. Since so far the whole thing is only in Swedish, I'll be telling more about it in coming posts. Stay tuned (and Visionary!)