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- 2. c) Attachment
Presentation to Selwyn Council for a Trees Bylaw – February 26, 2019 Jo Hayward-Haines, 127 Shanagarry Drive, Ennismore, K0L 1T0 I will startle no one when I state that we are in the throes of climate disruptions caused by global warming and other factors. The natural world doesn’t function in a linear fashion, as Council meetings do. Everything is inter-connected. How this is so and how this reality demands changes in our habitual ways of thinking becomes more and more obvious in the wake of devastating fires, like the recent one at Fort McMurray, floods like the one over a decade ago in Peterborough and of course the increased unpredictability of weather patterns which affects particularly our local farmers and by extension all of us who rely on these crops for our livelihood in direct and indirect ways. As was summarized recently in a budget proposal to Peterborough Council by 4RGrandchildren, “The October report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change represents the consensus views of hundreds of key scientists researching the effects of climate breakdown. Their statement is that we have eleven years to cut carbon emissions by45 %, reaching 100% reduction by 2050. This requires a 4% reduction in carbon emissions per year, starting now. If this goal is not reached, scientists have stated that runaway climate breakdown may leave the Earth uninhabitable by humans for 10,000 years.” We can give credit to efforts already underway to adapt to this scenario, though, and work to amplify them. The issue in this presentation, one piece in the inter-connectedness of living forms in the web of life, is
- trees. By now we all know about our living, breathing relationship to
- trees. Trees perform a remarkable array of functions in our shared eco-