Sustainable 1000 : Eco Road Trip - Channel 2
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Frequent interviews with sustainability leaders as part of 1000 interview and 48 state series with Shane Snipes.
Join us as we bring together experts, decision-makers, public figures, and executives to discuss the green topic of the day. These…
Frequent interviews with sustainability leaders as part of 1000 interview and 48 state series with Shane Snipes.
Join us as we bring together experts, decision-makers, public figures, and executives to discuss the green topic of the day. These live taping capture the stories of sustainability visionaries around America.
From Wikipedia:
Sustainability is the capacity to endure. In ecology the word describes how biological systems remain diverse and productive over time. For humans it is the potential for long-term maintenance of well being, which in turn depends on the well being of the natural world and the responsible use of natural resources.
Sustainability has become a wide-ranging term that can be applied to almost every facet of life on Earth, from local to a global scale and over various time periods. Long-lived and healthy wetlands and forests are examples of sustainable biological systems. Invisible chemical cycles redistribute water, oxygen, nitrogen and carbon through the world's living and non-living systems, and have sustained life for millions of years. As the earth’s human population has increased, natural ecosystems have declined and changes in the balance of natural cycles has had a negative impact on both humans and other living systems.[1] Paul Hawken has written that "Sustainability is about stabilizing the currently disruptive relationship between earth’s two most complex systems—human culture and the living world.”[2]
There is abundant scientific evidence that humanity is living unsustainably, and returning human use of natural resources to within sustainable limits will require a major collective effort.[1] Ways of living more sustainably can take many forms from reorganising living conditions (e.g., ecovillages, eco-municipalities and sustainable cities), reappraising economic sectors (permaculture, green building, sustainable agriculture), or work practices (sustainable architecture), using science to develop new technologies (green technologies, renewable energy), to adjustments in individual lifestyles that conserve natural resources.
Email us at info@sustainable1000.com, Gtalk at vannshane or call-in your questions on our live shows at www.tinyurl.com/s1000 and send us your comments. We look forward to hearing from you!
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