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Created an Opportunity in ISLANDS
Created a Post in ISLANDS
What is the Blue Tech for Waste Challenge? It is a great opportunity for companies or individuals to propose innovative solutions to reduce environmental pollution. The Inter-American Development Bank (one of the Implementing Agencies of the ISLANDS project in the Caribbean) has thrown down the challenge and fifty proposals were submitted, 6 of which have been chosen for further financing and development. Read more about these exciting initiatives in the link.
Everybody knows we are facing environmental problems left right and centre. That is bad but it is also mobilizing people and organisations to action in innovative ways. I like the animated initiatives that are springing up around the world, like this one – ‘Keepers of the Land: The Curious Case of the Contaminated River’ authored by UNEP. Would love to other ideas like this posted here.
Can plastics in the Pacific be considered waste colonialism?
Yes, according to a group of researchers from the University of Newcastle. Personally, I tend to agree, considering that Pacific island are import-dependent countries and have to deal with a huge amount of plastics although as little as 1.3 percent of it originates there.
In fact, due to their location, pacific islands have been excessively and unfairly impacted by plastic waste. Waste colonialism has had an adverse impact on the spiritual, cultural, social and economic connection the pacific people have with their ocean homeland.
Making the rights and needs of Indigenous people a priority, rather than the interests of settler-colonizers and commercial corporations, is essential to turning the tide of plastic pollution and putting a stop to plastic dumping.
“Pacific peoples have the solution, and they have the science, they have managed and protected their ocean for thousands of years.”
Thank you Brittany King for sharing!
LEARNING WITH ISLANDS 1
The ‘Small Islands Voice’ initiative, (SIV) started in 2002 and was focused on small island developing states and islands with other affiliations in the Caribbean, Indian Ocean and Pacific regions. The aims were to combine new information and communication technologies with print, radio, television and other media for LEARNING WITH ISLANDS’ (LWI)’. The objective was to develop and implement a global circular 2030 economy incorporating the behavioral topics of placemaking, belonging and sustainability, which define biocultural nativeness (Daniel Lewis).
Educational self-organisation was promoted by SIV for the effective participation of the general public in the local processes of sustainable development. The term self-organization refers to the ways in which individuals organize their communal behavior to create global order by interactions amongst themselves rather than through external intervention or instruction. In a rapidly changing world people learn with islands not about islands. Now, the rapid transition towards a global circular economy (CE) entails transformative and system-wide changes, implying involvement, alignment, and cooperation between all stakeholders in all places at all levels. The practical theme is ‘MAKE YOURSELF AT HOME’ (MYAH) where the local environment is interrogated to highlight the good things and improve those that are bad.
A ‘SMALL ISLAND PEDAGOGY’ (SIP), for LWI, which integrates SIV, and MAYAH with CE, is key because it imparts a way of knowing which affects what we come to know and apply in our day to day lives.
Pacific Youth Turning the Tide on Plastics and Marine Litter
Have you ever taken part in a Coastal Clean-up Day? Do you know what the tide Turners movement is? Read the press release below to see how ISLANDS Pacific is supporting youth to take action against plastic pollution.
Would you like to participate in future Tide Turners activities? Feel free to contact me or Dave Chung!
COP27 - Tuvalu first to call for fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty
What are we ready to give-up in order to save the planet and our societies from disastrous global heating? Halting the consumption of fossil fuel would have a huge impact on our lives, but what is the cost if not-action? The projections do not look good.
Kausea Natano, the prime minister of Tuvalu, said that “the warming seas are starting to swallow our lands, inch by inch. But the world’s addiction to oil, gas and coal can’t sink our dreams under the waves. We, therefore, unite with a hundred Nobel peace prize laureates and thousands of scientists worldwide and urge world leaders to join the fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty to manage a just transition away from fossil fuels.”
However, the idea of explicitly agreeing to wind down fossil fuel use is not a priority for governments in Sharm el-Sheikh.