List   cc Andrew

    This interview is of course not good news;  Dr.  Shiva has a pretty strong 
following in environmental circles.

    I add a few comments here for four reasons

         1.   Because she has said all of the same things about biochar (not 
mentioned in the transcript below) on several occasions.  She wrote a very 
confused forward (as though she hadn't read it) to a major biochar book by 
Albert Bates (at his invitation) - should anyone want to see more on her 
CDR/biochar views.  Albert, a leader in both fields, says that mostly the 
Permaculture movement is behind biochar, not listening to her.  Her views on 
biochar are the same as given below.

        2.   Because I have today read the following in Oliver Morton’s 
excellent book (“Eating the Sun”) on photosynthesis.  He comments on views like 
hers in the last chapter where he reports (pages 389ff) on the views of (former 
“Geo" list member) Peter Read.    
      a.  Oliver wrote p 392:   “What’s more, we are rearranging the world……. 
in a decentralized, slapdash way.  The idea we might do it better should not be 
rejected for an unworkable if understandable desire that we not do it at all.”
       b.  A paragraph later:  “We can’t let a romantic idea that nature should 
be free to carry on regardless dominate our thinking; nature is everywhere 
under our influence already.
     c.  One more paragraph later.   We are on the flight deck, and we are 
alone.   We are at the controls and we have no option but to use them.  And we 
know where we want to go.  The fact that we have only a dim idea of how to fly 
means we must act carefully and thoughtfully, not that we must not act.
        All of Oliver’s book was written before the name “biochar” was selected 
(in 2007 at a biochar conference -  because of Peter).   Dr.  Shiva’s views 
were probably the same then and I feel are refuted nicely above in these three 
excerpts.  

      3.  These sentences apply as well to George Monbiot, whose similar views 
are on p 389.  They were also given 4 days ago even more strongly in an e-mail 
response to Albert Bates, replying to a posting on the recent biochar 
conference by Albert at 
   http://www.resilience.org/stories/2013-10-21/post-modern-moonshots
George wrote to Albert, saying 
     I find this utterly terrifying: one of the worst examples of mindless 
cornucopianism since the untimely demise of Peter Read.
>>  
>> Beware of what you want to believe!
>>  
>> George
     I include this because I think George is even more dangerous to most CDR 
(certainly biochar) than Dr.  Shiva
    
     4.  Lastly,  Dr.  Shiva’s interviewer below wanted her to talk about “the 
map” (produced by a third campaigner against geoengineeering:  ETC).  That map 
can be seen at 


On Oct 25, 2013, at 6:05 PM, Andrew Lockley <andrew.lock...@gmail.com> wrote:

> http://www.nogeoingegneria.com/interviste/terra-futura-2013-interview-with-vandana-shiva-about-geoengineering/
> 
> TRANSCRIPT OF THE INTERVIEW
> 
> NoGeoingegneria: So, first, thank you very much for your time because you’re 
> an incredible woman and you always have so much time for everybody. and it’s 
> great. We wanted to speak a little bit about geoengineering with you. It’s 
> something that embraces everything: food and water and what is happening now 
> in the world in a situation of climate change, and great change, and risk of 
> collapse at every level. I saw the interview you had with Amy Goodman. So, 
> first, what is, for you, at this moment, the role of geoengineering?
> 
> 00:55 Vandana: the role of geo-engineering should, in a world of 
> responsibility, in a world of scientifically enlightened decision making and 
> ecological understanding, it should be zero. There is no role for 
> geo-engeneering. Because what is geoengineering but extending the engineering 
> paradigm? There have been engineered parts of the earth, and aspects of 
> ecosystems and organisms through genetical engineering: the massive dam 
> building, the re-routing of rivers. These were all elements of geoengineering 
> at the level of particular places and we have recognized two things: one, 
> that when you don’t take into account the way ecological systems work, then 
> you do damage. Everyone knows that in effect climate change is a result of 
> that engineering paradigm. We could replace people with fossil fuels, have 
> higher and higher levels of industrialization, of agriculture, of production, 
> without thinking of the green-house gases we were admitting, and climate 
> change is really the pollution of the engineering paradigm, when fossil fuels 
> drove industrialism. To now offer that same mindset as a solution is to not 
> take seriously what Einstein said: that you can’t solve the problems by using 
> the same mindset that caused them. So, the idea of engineering is an idea of 
> mastery. And today the role that we are being asked to play is a role based 
> on informed humanity.
> 
> 2:45 NoGeoingegneria
> In my eyes geoengineering started in the 50s with atomic tests, because in 
> this period they started to make geoengineering of the atmosphere of earth in 
> a global sense, in a bigger sense, and a lot of projects in the 50s started 
> to organize the earth, the planet, in a new way, with a new idea of 
> engineering really the whole planet. With the power of atomic bomb scientists 
> made a shifting in their mind, in my eyes. So in this period, in the 50′s 
> weather modification also started very energically. It is part of geo 
> engineering, and you have here the map of the ETC group, in the whole world, 
> they are doing it, and you cannot do local modifications without changing the 
> whole system. I know in India, in Thailand, and Australia weather 
> modification maybe is more discussed, more open than in Europe. For example 
> in Italy they made weather modification in the 80′s and people don’t know it. 
> What do you think about the role of weather modification in a sense of 
> geoengineering for food, for water, for the whole system?
> 
> 4:21 Vandana
> 
> Weather modification is a very small part of geo engineering. Geoengineering 
> right now is the hubris of saying: “all this climate change, and we’re living 
> in the anthropocene age and now human beings will be the shapers of our 
> future, that totally control the overall functions of not just our planet, 
> but our relationship with other planets, so many of the solutions offered 
> have been putting reflectors in the sky to send the sun back as if the sun 
> was a problem rather than the very basis of life, or to put pollutants into 
> the atmosphere in order to create a layer of pollution that would stop the 
> sun from shining. But the instability of the climate that is the result of 
> the greenhouse effect will just be aggravated by these interventions. Now 
> weather modifications done in a narrow-minded way, to say “we are not getting 
> rain so let us precipitate rain artificially so that agriculture doesn’t 
> fail” is something that for example the Chinese did for the olympics. They 
> made sure there would be no rain during the Olympics. It is a lower level of 
> hubris than the larger project of geoengineering.
> 
> 5:47 you know this map…..?
> 
> 5:49 Vandanayes of course i know Etcetera.
> 
> 5:52 N: and you see that the ETC Group also published only a part, it’s only 
> a part because everyday something else is coming out, in the whole world they 
> are doing it, so if you make in a lot of points.
> 
> 6:07 V: it’s not too much the points
> 
> 6:08 N: what does it mean for weather extremes for example?
> 
> 6:11 V: the first thing is it creates more instability, and we are dealing 
> with instability, therefore we must deal more with actions that create 
> insurance against instability, rather than aggravating the instability. It’s 
> like I’m driving a car and I know there’s a precipice there, I should put the 
> car in reverse and then turn into another direction. What geo engineering is 
> doing is saying “let’s put our foot on the accelerator”. And the precipice is 
> climate instability, climate unpredictability. And at the root of it is the 
> false idea that these silly little actions will be able to control and 
> regulate the weather and climate. But the second most important part of why 
> geo engineering is so so wrong is that is ultimate expression of patriarchal 
> irresponsibility. Patriarchy is based on appropriating rights and leaving 
> responsibility to others. In this case the scientists who are playing these 
> games, the who are investors financing it, are all doing it without having 
> any consent for these experiments, any approval for these experiments, 
> locally or globally, and worse, without thinking of the consequences or what 
> it can lead to, and without ever ever being bound to responsibility. 
> Therefore it is the ultimate expression of all the destructive tendencies of 
> patriarchy.
> 
> 7:50 N: Yeah, and you see you can take one name Edward Teller. He comes from 
> the atomic bomb. He had the idea of controlling the weather by atomic bomb. 
> He proposed the shield for sun radiation management, so the same persons, the 
> same power structure is organizing this type of management of the planet and 
> of space. So, you know about the intention of control ….?
> 
> 8:22 V: Well for some people the intention is really one of making others 
> suffer. And therefore aspects of geo- engineering are about links with 
> military warfare. How do you alter the climate so that you can just make rain 
> fall or fail in a particular area and let agriculture suffer. But in other 
> cases, even if there isn’t that military intention of harm to the other there 
> is an ignorance…..
> 
> 8:56 N: There is also economic interest ……
> 
> 8:58 V: Not all, the reason that there is such a battalion of scientists 
> behind it…..
> 
> 9:00 N: You know oil and not soil, the food and water …….
> 
> 9:05 V: The people are pushing it have a money interest. The people who are 
> pushing it have a military interest. , people are pushing to have a military 
> interest. The players merely have the arrogance that ” I have the solution”. 
> And it’s the combination of stupidity combined with the arrogance of the 
> little players, and the evil projects of the ones who control it, that 
> combination is what makes it toxic. Because if the scientific community could 
> only recognize its responsibility to society and the planet and say “I will 
> not be part of your games”, which is how Scientists for Social Responsibility 
> was created, which is how the group that started to monitor the whole nuclear 
> issue, those were all scientists. This is a marriage of stupid scientists 
> with evil minds, and we need scientists with responsibility to be the 
> counterforce to say this is not science, just as we need in genetic 
> engineering. And it is as the community of scientists who really know the 
> science start to speak more and organize better, that the stupid scientists 
> of the biotech industry will quieten down. And biotech and geo engineering 
> have the same mindset, of engineering, of power, of control, of mastery of 
> nature
> 
> 10:30 N: you spoke also of the dams. It’s big geoengineering also in India 
> and in the whole world and there are now the big interests of water and here, 
> the last time we had an interview with Pat Mooney he said that big dams, 
> energy production, water control, and weather control, it’s one thing. So 
> it’s not only a small intervention to have crops. It’s something more.
> 
> 11:06 V: No as I said it’s the ultimate hubris, that’s what it is! Hubris on 
> a planetary scale!
> 
> 11:19 N: Uh….. what do you think about the fact they will spray nano 
> particles? That’s the program!
> 
> 11:29 V: Each of these issues has a particular aspect thats different but i 
> think those particular aspects are very small compared to the overall damage 
> and the overall irresponsibility. For me the first issue is, how dare you do 
> this. How dare you. That has to be humanity’s response. Then the rest of the 
> little thing of how nano particles can harm or have too much sulphur in the 
> atmosphere can harm, those are specific details but this is a civilizational 
> issue. And in civilizational issues you don’t look at the tiny details as the 
> debate. You have to look at the big picture!
> 
> Transcript by lukinski&trishy
> Vandana Shiva –
> 
> Biography:Vandana Shiva, a world-renowned environmental thinker, activist, 
> physicist, feminist, philosopher of science, writer and science policy 
> advocate, is the Director of The Research Foundation for Science, Technology 
> and Natural Resource Policy. She serves as an ecology advisor to several 
> organizations including the Third World Network and the Asia Pacific People’s 
> Environment Network. In 1993 she was the recipient of the Right Livelihood 
> Award, commonly known as the “Alternative Nobel Prize”. A contributing editor 
> to People-Centered Development Forum, she has also written several works 
> include, “Staying Alive,” “The Violence of the Green Revolution,” “Biopiracy: 
> The Plunder of Nature and Knowledge,” “Monoculutures of the Mind” and “Water 
> Wars: Privatization, Pollution, and Profit,” as well as over 300 papers in 
> leading scientific and technical journals. Shiva participated in the 
> nonviolent Chipko movement during the 1970s, whose main participants were 
> women. She is one of the leaders of the International Forum on Globalization, 
> and a figure of the global solidarity movement known as the 
> anti-globalization movement. She has argued for the wisdom of many 
> traditional practices, as is evident from her book “Vedic Ecology” that draws 
> upon India’s Vedic heritage. Shiva has fought for changes in the practice and 
> paradigms of agriculture and food. Intellectual property rights, 
> biodiversity, biotechnology, bioethics, genetic engineering are among the 
> fields where Shiva has contributed intellectually and through activist 
> campaigns. She has assisted grassroots organizations of the Green movement in 
> Africa, Asia, Latin America, Ireland, Switzerland and Austria with campaigns 
> against genetic engineering. In 1982, she founded the Research Foundation for 
> Science, Technology and Ecology. Her book, “Staying Alive” helped redefine 
> perceptions of third world women. Shiva has also served as an adviser to 
> governments in India and abroad as well as non governmental organisations, 
> including the International Forum on Globalisation, the Women’s Environment & 
> Development Organization and the Third World Network
> 
> 
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