By Philip Walton on Saturday, 20 April 2024
Category: April

Green websites help to keep your feet dry

Being green to try and lessen global warming has become part of everyday life for some; for others, it's something that doesn't affect them, or so they think. If we are serious about looking after the environment, we should see some serious changes in how we do things. Because it's exactly the way we have gone about our lives that has caused this crisis, it makes sense that to mitigate it our lives must change to a new, more sustainable way of living.

Personal actions need to become corporate and global actions. Some things we do out of habit need to be challenged and assessed. How will we know if it works… my, or future generations' feet will stop getting wet.

Oldest Cast Iron Pier in the World

I live near the river Thames. It's a 7-minute walk down the hill, over the train cutting and through the gardens to the river shore next to the Gravesend Town Pier; the pier is the oldest cast iron pier in the world.

It occupies the same site as the original Town Quay mentioned in the Domesday Book which was written in 1086 - yes, that's 938 years ago, even I don't go back that far! The pier opened on 29th July 1834 and between 1835 and 1842 was used by three and a quarter million passengers.

What's this got to do with global warming, you might ask. Well it was built with clearance and a reasonable height over the high tide in mind.

On the edge of the water is the local rowing club, it boasts its foundation as being 1878, a mere 146 years.

The Regatta committee is over 175 years old and the collective memories talk of great storms and treacherous weather; what they don't talk about is flooding on the local shoreline, clubhouse, and gardens.

Is it Global Warming or Just the Weather?

But with global warming, the seas have expanded, the water has risen, and high tides are higher. The Thames Barrier was built as a defensive barrier for London and became operational in 1982. Closure was rare at the start but has grown over the decades as global warming has increased. Now, I get regular alerts. As a precaution, the 1878 clubhouse was rebuilt on a raised platform to future-proof it against flooding. And then, in the last 10 years, the unheard-of, once-in-a-century event happened: the Thames spilt over and flooded the gardens, the regatta workshops and the clubhouse. A lot of people and things got wet.

A few years later, I got the warnings to watch riverside properties for possible flooding. The alert sounded on my phone, and I went down to see and help out, and the once-in-a-century event happened again.

Now, it starts to stretch things when the once-in-a-century flooding happens a third and fourth time, and recently twice in the same year.

That old pier I mentioned, well, I watched as the water rose to the point that it touched the underside and then started to rise inside the pier!

This is global warming; this is rising seas, and this is devastating for many island nations.

But I'm not affected. I don't need to change

The Maldives, in the Indian Ocean, is the world’s lowest country, with an average ground level of just 1.5 meters above sea level. That's about the same as the rise I have seen in the Thames over where it should be.

Tuvalu: Situated in the Pacific Ocean, is another low-lying island nation facing similar threats from rising. sea levels, with some predictions suggesting it could become uninhabitable within this century.

Kiribati: Also in the Pacific is a collection of 33 atolls and reef islands where rising sea levels are not just a future threat but a current reality, with some areas already experiencing a significant impact.

The Marshall Islands, comprising over 1,000 individual islands and islets in the Pacific, face severe risks from flooding and storm surges exacerbated by climate change.

Ok, but that's just a few exotic islands; we can move those people off their islands, right?

Sure, but it's estimated that approximately 10% of the world’s population lives in coastal areas that are less than 10 meters above sea level. With the global population exceeding 7.8 billion people, this would suggest that over 780 million people live within this vulnerable zone.

And this is some of the most fertile and valuable land on the planet. It's not just my feet that are going to get wet if we don't do everything we can to stop this.

So this is why I am asking us to consider an environmental policy, one to inform our thinking and challenge some of the ways we do things.

If we don't feel challenged, then we are not going to make a difference, we need to feel the pinch and the cost of our fossil fuel addiction and websites believe it or not run on electricity, fossil fuel-powered in many cases.

So please read, comment and perhaps add to this proposed environmental policy. We are one of the last CMSs to do this but being late doesn't mean we cannot make a significant difference for our children and future generations.

Open Source Matters Environmental Policy

1. Sustainable Web Development and Hosting

2. Green Coding Practices

3. Sustainable Community Engagement

4. Communication and Education

5. Eco-Friendly Plugins and Extensions

6. Sustainability in Operations

7. Feedback and Continuous Improvement

By adopting these policies, Open Source Matters can lead by example in the open-source community, demonstrating a commitment to sustainability that helps mitigate the environmental impact of digital products and services. This green policy not only addresses the immediate needs of developers and users to be more environmentally conscious but also sets a long-term vision for sustainability within the Joomla ecosystem.

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