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Bioneers 2006: The Future is Green
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Thousands who can imagine a future of revolutionary, evolutionary, and visionary success will gather this weekend in the San Francisco Bay area. They share a vision that our planet's future is not dead, mechanical, or separate -- but rather alive, evolving, and composed of interdependent systems.
This world view inspires the 17th annual Bioneers conference, taking place this weekend (October 20-22nd) in San Rafael, Calif. and streaming via satellite to more than a dozen sites across the country.
Speakers at this year's conference include Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!; Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma; Lois Gibbs, grassroots champion of environmental justice at Love Canal; and Carl Anthony, founder of Earthjustice's Urban Habitat program, among others.
I had a chance to speak with Bioneers' founder and co-director, Kenny Ausubel. In addition to his work with Bioneers, Ausubel is an award-winning writer, filmmaker, and social entrepreneur specializing in health and the environment. He co-founded Seeds of Change, a biodiversity organic seed company. He authored the books, Seeds of Change; Restoring the Earth: Visionary Solutions from the Bioneers; and When Healing Becomes a Crime.
Terrence McNally: You've done a number of other things besides developing and leading the Bioneers conferences. How did you realize this was your life work and where did the name come from?
Kenny Ausubel: Other work that I'd been doing led me to look to nature for Operating Instructions. The solutions to most of our problems lie in understanding nature's ways as expressed in four billion years of evolution.
Often times nature offers pretty good metaphors for our social systems -- reciprocity, cooperation, kinship, the fact that we're all related, things like that. I realized that people who saw things this way were biological pioneers who had looked to nature as a teacher, mentor and model. That was the origin of the term.
I started Bioneers in 1990, just about a year after I'd started Seeds of Change. My wife and business partner, Nina Simons, and I left the company around 1995 and decided to focus on Bioneers.
TM: What are the aims of the conference and the related activities that are growing out of it?
KA: By the way, if I weren't producing the event I'd be attending it. I just love the Bioneers.
TM: You're obviously not alone. It's one conference where most of the speakers and panelists stay for the whole thing to mix, mingle, and network.
KA: I find the attendees and the work that goes on there fantastically inspiring. I experience a deep sense of possibility and hope -- and it's a very grounded hope. This is real world stuff. Philosophy is all well and good, but at the end of the day what we really want to know is, "Does this stuff work?" It does work, and a lot of people are having great success.
This is the 17th gathering, and I can tell you that in 1990 when we had 200 people -- as opposed to the 3400 that show up in Marin these days -- these kinds of things had about as much credibility as UFO's or something. Now we're witnessing these ideas going mainstream, and in the next five and ten years, I think we're going to see an even bigger shift in that regard.
For a lot of people it's like coming home. We're a flock of black sheep, because so many of us are iconoclasts. But a huge amount of networking that goes on, and we actually know of five marriages between couples that met at Bioneers.
TM: Boy, that's taking the biology part of it to heart.
What are some practical solutions that have been developed over the years by participants?
KA: There's always two sides. There's the technical or technological realm of very functional practices, and there's the sphere of social innovation where we're changing culture and politics.
One of my big inspirations in starting Bioneers was the whole area called biomimicry, essentially imitating nature in our technologies -- using nature to heal nature. A couple of people who are returning are front runners in the field. There's Paul Stamitz, the mushroom man or mycologist. Paul has been able to remediate Sarin DX nerve gas for the Defense Department. Sarin is right up there with plutonium as one of the most deadly substances on the planet, yet two mushrooms actually digested and transformed it into harmlessness. He's done the same thing with oil spills.
He has another mushroom that stuns E Coli bacteria and then gobbles them up. His work has huge implications for farming, where we've got the whole EColi spinach scare going on.
Paul is going to talk about some quite extraordinary new stuff, which I'm not allowed to tell you about yet.
A fellow named Jay Harmon grew up in Australia and was in love with the ocean. He studied the movements of water and discovered something that put him in a long lineage of other great discoverers -- that nature's favorite shape is the spiral. From galaxies to the blood in our veins, the spiral is nature's favorite form. He looked at industry, and realized that it was not being used at all.
He resolved to change that, starting with fans and propellers. Motors which use fans and propellers take up about 60% of the energy in the world, believe it or not. Jay has designed spiral shaped fans and propellers that he is now proving could reduce our energy consumption by about 60% in the next ten or 15 years.
See more stories tagged with: bioneers conference, interviews, science, energy, environment
Interviewer Terrence McNally hosts Free Forum on KPFK 90.7FM, Los Angeles (streaming at kpfk.org).
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