EconomicsEthical InvestmentGlobal Warming/Climate ChangeSociety

Making the Case for Earth Repair Work

I put together a brief document for an acquaintance of mine who said she recently met Juergen Voegele, Chairman of the World Bank’s Agriculture and Rural Development Department. She asked me to prepare something for him as it relates to what I had described as earth repair work – a term of course used often by Geoff, Paul Taylor and a number of others.

It was an attempt to make a case for having these efforts adequately funded given the importance of the work. This certainly isn’t an exhaustive, comprehensive reference (it was done with very short notice), but I’d like to think it conveys the basic premise behind the work and why it needs to be done – and, more importantly, deserves real financial backing.

Click to open (152 kb PDF):

Economic Support for Global Earth Repair Work & Ecosystem Restoration: Making The Case

Rhamis Kent

Rhamis Kent is a consultant with formal training in mechanical engineering (University of Delaware, B.S.M.E. '95) and permaculture-based regenerative whole systems design. He has previously worked for the renowned American inventor and entrepreneur Dean Kamen at DEKA Research & Development, with subsequent engineering work ranging from medical device research and development to aerospace oriented mechanical design. After taking an interest in the design science of Permaculture, he sought extended training with permaculture expert and educator Geoff Lawton at the Permaculture Research Institute of Australia. This led to his involvement with design work connected to the development of Masdar City in UAE after Mr. Lawton and his consulting company (Permaculture Sustainable Consultancy Pty. Ltd.) were contracted by AECOM/EDAW to identify solutions which fit the challenging zero emissions/carbon neutral design constraint of the project.

4 Comments

  1. For those who never have come across the name Juergen Voegele – that’s the guy:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BR694Ok6sn0#t=3m47

    The video – “The lessons of the Loess Plateau” – is actually well worth watching. In particular, because it documents how serious misconceptions about economics and ecosystem function gradually got that society into such a situation (watch the old guy claiming that “they want us to plant trees, even in good land, but our children can’t eat trees”).

    This is episode 1:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FYCARwFRN9g

  2. Thomas – thanks for posting the links.

    Now, either people with the money put it up or…remain reticent.

    Rhamis

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