Produce less. Distribute it fairly. Create a greener world for all.

Give Me Ecoliteracy School (and quit schools that promote Earth-ravaging capitalism and AI)

Regenerative farmer Richard Daley recently defined ecological literacy as understanding how living systems work, how they break down and how they can be restored.

Written by

Katie Singer

in

Originally Published in

Substack

Regenerative farmer Richard Daley recently defined ecological literacy as understanding how living systems work, how they break down and how they can be restored. To get there, Daley suggests learning the names of local plants, tracing the flow of water through a watershed, observing seasonal shifts, knowing where your food comes from and understanding who holds power over land and the Earth’s life-giving systems. He calls ecoliteracy practical, place-based and rooted in observation and responsibility. With it, we focus on material change—compost food waste, protect local wildlife, build mutual aid networks, plant gardens, reimagine governance and work toward a truly regenerative future.

Then, pollinator-gardener Hart Hagan wrote that when we have “a cooperative, supportive relationship with the natural world, we learn how life works and how life supports our climate.”

Daley and Hagan inspired me to spell out ecoliterate thinking and skills—and to realize that in many cases, I am not (yet) literate. Here’s the list. Please add to it!

ECOLITERATE THINKING AND ACTIONS

  • Recognize that all life depends on nature. Nature is our teacher.
  • Consider that unless you’re aware that you are part of the problem, you cannot be part of the solution.
  • Acknowledge that the fossil fuels and ores our technosphere requires took billions of years to form—and they cannot be regenerated.
  • Aim to live within your bioregion’s offerings—your watershed’s food, water, energy and ores. (The U.S. has six main watersheds and about 2100 smaller ones.)
  • Reduce dependence on international supply chains.
  • Ask questions. Welcome not-knowing. Build relationships with people (not screens) who welcome questions.
  • Learn how to do daily activities—cooking, drying clothes, communicating with family—with less digital interface and less electricity.
  • Recognize the Jevons Paradox: efficiency increases consumption of energy, water and extractions.

FOOD

WATER

SOIL

HEALTH

  • Rest. Rest well.
  • Study self-help health care with people you like.
  • Avoid toxins (in cleaning materials, nearby industries, pharmaceuticals, medical procedures, etc.); pesticides, herbicides, fungicides (in food, nearby lawns, golf courses, farms); man-made radiation (emitted by mobile devices, cell towers, utility meters, switch-mode power supplies, e-vehicles, gas-powered vehicles, etc.); PFAs (in dental floss, Teflon pans, waterproof raincoats, solar panels, plastics); lead (in paint, cast iron-enamel pans); addictive substances (opioids, alcohol, sugar) or behaviors (screen-time).
  • Know people who support sobriety—i.e., 12-step programs. Acquire techniques for making peace between your ears.
  • Keep menstrual cycles healthy. Use contraception that does not harm your body or waterways.
  • Before conceiving, consider whether or not your community has sufficient ecological health to welcome a baby.
  • If you decide to try to conceive, enhance your fertility without harming your body or waterways.
  • If you have a child, connect with parents who work to give children smartphone-free childhoods.
  • Annually update your will with a health-care directive, a pre-need obituary and an affordable green burial option. (This will save your survivors a lot of energy.)

UTILITIES, INCLUDING TELECOMMUNICATIONS

  • Learn a basic understanding of our power grid.
  • Trace the cradle-to-grave ecological and public health impacts (from manufacturing, operation and discard) of air conditioners, solar PVs, industrial wind turbines, smartphone or laptop batteries, battery energy storage systems (BESS), natural gas-powered plants, coal-powered plants, nuclear power plants, hydro-electric dams, geo-thermal energy, biomass power plants.
  • Know how much electricity and water the data centers near you consume.
  • Live where you are not exposed to toxins in your water or air—or to ambient radiation (including chopped current on electric wires).
  • Elect legislators committed to local authority over food, forest health and utilities (water, electricity and telecommunications).

TELECOMMUNICATIONS

TRANSPORTATION

  • Trace cradle-to-grave ecological impacts of a gas-powered car, an e-bicycle, an e-vehicle, EV chargers (including their impact to nearby transformers).

THE RULES THAT FRAME US

COMMUNITY

  • Recognize that our community’s web of life includes insects, birds, lizards, trees, plants, clouds, oceans, rivers, lakes, fish, whales, sharks, volcanoes, rocks, mountains, goats, chickens, monkeys, giraffes, micro-organisms in soil—and all of this life decomposes to regenerate. (Our electronics do not biodegrade.)
  • Ecoliteracy can’t happen alone; it requires community. Build relationships with neighbors to exchange fresh food, health care remedies, home repair, child care, transportation, computer help, etcetera. Over laundry lines or monthly potlucks, discuss ways to reduce overall consumption by three percent per month.
  • Build book and tool-lending libraries.
  • Walk or bike to your grocery store.
  • Elect legislators committed to local authority over utilities, including water, electricity, telecommunications.
  • Support the new generation of Luddites.
  • Ask the youth in your neighborhood what they need to become ecoliterate.

Katie Singer aspires to Herman Daly’s principles: Don’t take from the Earth faster than it can replenish; and don’t waste faster than it can absorb. She writes about the energy, extractions, water use and toxic waste involved in manufacturing, operating and discarding the Internet, solar PVs, industrial wind and EVs; and she reports on ways to reduce the technosphere’s ecological harms.Her books include An Electronic Silent Spring, The Garden of Fertility, Honoring Our Cycles and The Wholeness of a Broken Heart (a novel). She aims to complete Mapping Our Technosphere to Reduce Harms to Nature, soon. Visit www.katiesinger.substack.com, www.OurWeb.tech and www.ElectronicSilentSpring.com.