Today I was unable to secure a vehicle to collect the geographical coordinates of the new water tap stands that will change the lives of around 5,000 individuals in this southwestern location of rural Uganda. I am trying to analyze the number of households that will be positively impacted by this new water infrastructure scheme. On average households were spending between 2 and 4 hours per day collecting the precious water in 20 liter jerry-cans for cooking, drinking and cleaning purposes. Women are usually the ones that do the work, girls and boys also spend hours just fetching water. Imagine the economic/wellbeing impact of reducing this time to 20 minutes... The inauguration was so important that a large commitive including Jeffrey Sachs, the Ugandan minister of water and the Ugandan minister of health were present to do the honors. Of course the CEO of the company that donated the pipes was also there, and the press!
The impact on the livelihoods of the people is being measured with surveys and suffer from self-reporting bias. I am trying to change this by using distance analysis with my GIS tools.
So as I failed to advance the data collection, I read in the news about the 2011 drought in Somalia and Kenya. UNICEF is already considering that 500,000 people might die from starvation. This is a lot (Haiti and the Asian Tsunami accounted each for ~250,000 deaths and are the deadliest natural disasters in recorded history). After 1 year in Columbia University I have learned that attributing the drought to climate change is not politically correct, I know... But, if the past 9 years have been among the 10 hottest years in history, there is probably some links, don't you think?
The World Bank published a video in you tube today, the legend reads: Almost 70 of the world's sharpest minds on climate change got together at the World Bank in Washingtonin July 2011 to find ways to best support the exploding demand from countries for a low-carbon future.
The sky in the center of Mexico city. The reddish tone is due to the pollution that floats in the city. |
Ten years ago this was an impossible shot. Popocateptl seen from the west of the city. |
Iztaccihuatl and Popocateptl. The two lovers in a beautiful sunset. Separated by urbanization. |
So what are these ideas? Is there anything new? A brief summary of what struck me:
We desperately need to turn on the "bulb". Ideas anyone? |
2- The direction of this new industrial revolution is in the green technology arena and energy efficiency.
3- We need to mainstream this agenda, talking green, clean and eco only reaches the 15% of the population that are already actors of change. the 15% that will resist the change will resist it anyway (the skeptics). To achieve change we need to reach the big chunk in the middle. Engaging this chunk will be critical for green growth.
4- We need new technology but also new diplomacy, we need research and development, we need financial capital and framework policy.
5- Smart Policy is key, vehicle fuel efficiency is a good example, we have the technology, it is cost effective. But car makers will not make the change unless regulation accelerates the uptake of these new technologies.
6- Political Support at the highest level, Mexico has put Climate Change as an issue of National Security. 7- People invest in education even if it won't pay for decades, so this is a proof that there is a willingness to pay for a better future.
8- Voluntary changes will not be enough.
9- We need to become more productive in the use of our natural resources.
10- We need leaders that look in the eyes of they grandchildren and do the right thing for them.
11- It is not cheap but it is not expensive (1.3% of global GDP)
12- We don't know everything but we know enough.
Seeds of change? |
But one thing I do know. It is not fair, ethically correct, recommendable or even economically efficient that tropical nations who contribute near to nothing to green house gases to pay for the excess use of energy in high and middle income countries. This is the most unfair of all negative externalities that exist today.
A urban farm in Brooklyn, empire state in the background and that great flag! America wake up, the world needs you! |
La ciudad de la esperanza by night. |