Earth is healing as we curtail spread of COVID-19

Earth is healing as we curtail spread of COVID-19
                        

This week environmentalists all over the nation celebrated the 50th anniversary of Earth Day on April 22. The first Earth Day took place in 1970, and it was a wake-up call to the human race.

If we continued to treat our planet carelessly using raw materials as if they were endless and dumping our wastes into the water, air and land, our planet would no longer provide sustenance for us or the thousands of other species that share our planet Earth.

Mankind had for many centuries looked at nature as something to control and to beat into submission. It was hard in 1970 and even harder today to find a place where we have not plowed, logged, mined, developed or depleted. We have driven species into extinction at an alarming rate, and the symbol of America, the bald eagle, was nearly extinct in 1970 from the widespread use of the pesticide, DDT.

Ohio made the front page of national newspapers as the Cuyahoga River, a river that was basically an industrial cesspool, caught fire in 1968. Water pollution was becoming a major threat both locally and globally.

Many of us grew up watching the eight-year-long ABC series, “The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau.” The French author, poet and inventor educated the world about life in the oceans. He also brought to our attention the destruction of that world. His 1971 New York Times article, “Our Oceans Are Dying,” pointed out all pollution ends up in the ocean.

No one can say for sure which event or events of destruction finally galvanized citizens from all over the world to come together in 1970 as they realized this destruction of Earth would be our destruction as well.

Certainly the most famous photograph of all time, the Apollo 8 Earthrise photo taken in 1968, made us all very aware the tiny blue marble we live on was fragile and in danger. Many people became painfully cognizant they were a very big part of the killing of our planet.

The decade of the 1970s was inspiring and informative for many environmentalists. Because of Rachel Carson’s book, “Silent Spring,” we became aware our agricultural system was affecting us and our ecosystems in devastating ways.

We discovered the nitrogen-oxide and sulfur-oxide emissions from coal-burning power plants were creating the acid rain that destroyed ancient buildings, killed plants and ruined soils. A 35-mile-long oil spill along Santa Barbara created a public outcry against offshore drilling platforms. Pressure was put on the Nixon administration, and the environmental movement was born.

The U.S. EPA was created under President Nixon in 1970. Many EPA environmental regulations were then enacted, like the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act. These regulations helped clean up our waterways and our air.

The COVID-19 pandemic has in a way become another wake-up call. It has given us time to revisit our relationships with everything in our lives. Those material things we thought we couldn’t live without are not as important.

No longer drawn to public events, many of us are taking walks in nature. Consumerism has been reduced to a crawl, automobiles are parked in driveways, many jobs are now performed from home and schools are out for the year. We are realizing the stock market is not the correct apparatus to use when measuring happiness or the health of the world.

While the world has been dealing with an epic pandemic, scientists are seeing interesting evidence showing the effects of human activities on the health of the planet might be reversible. While we pause to curtail the spread of this COVID-19 virus, the Earth is healing.

As a result of shelter-in-place, carbon-dioxide emissions have dropped. China has seen a 25 percent decline in greenhouse gases as factories shut down and coal-burning power plants reduce their output.

Scientists from the Global Carbon Project are predicting “global carbon-dioxide emissions may drop by more than 5 percent in 2020, which would be the largest fall since the end of the Second World War.”

Although these drops are small and will not immediately affect climate change, they prove if we can continue to reduce the amount of man-made carbon dioxide in our atmosphere, we can make a difference.

For the first time in decades, people in India can now see the Himalayas Mountains. Even in cities as far as 100 miles away, the peaks of the mountains are now visible. As California’s freeways are nearly empty, the air has become cleaner. In some cases pollution has dropped almost 75 percent.

This is due to lockdowns to address the COVID-19 outbreak. Satellite images from NASA show reductions in pollution all over the world. Scientists warn this phenomenon will only be temporary as the lockdowns over the nation and world are lifted.

The water in certain areas has become cleaner. The once murky water in the canals of Venice, Italy are now much cleaner and fish can be seen just below the surface. This is a result of the shutdown and lack of boat traffic on the canals.

Scientists have even said the planet is quieter since the world has locked down, and all forms of transportation have dropped significantly. This has allowed many seismologists to detect subtle changes in the earth’s seismic activity that were more often than not overshadowed by human activity.

Less noise from cars, buses and trucks also has allowed nature’s sounds to be more obvious, and noise pollution outside has dropped dramatically. Birds are migrating in the northern hemisphere, and people are even asking, “Are they chirping louder?”

For the first time in decades, the Earth is speaking to us at a time when we might actually hear it. We are getting a wake-up call from a microscopic virus, whether we choose to hear that call remains to be seen.

I wish you all a safe journey through this dark time and a healthy return to a normal life, but not necessarily to the same life we were used to, rather to a life I hope has changed for the better.

Author, poet, spoken word artist, speaker, humanitarian and social justice activist, educator, and founder of The Body is Not An Apology movement, Sonya Renee Taylor says it best in her quote, “We will not go back to normal. Normal never was. Our precorona existence was not normal other than we normalized greed, inequity, exhaustion, depletion, extraction, disconnection, confusion, rage, hoarding, hate and lack. We should not long to return, my friends. We are being given the opportunity to stitch a new garment, one that fits all of humanity and nature.”


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