Listen "Ep 185 Simon Mustoe - Surviving The Next 100 Years by Valuing A Whale At $3 Million Dollars"
Episode Synopsis
“We’ve lived fantastic lives because we’ve taken for granted the ecological damage we’ve done. Now we owe a debt"Well respected ecologist Simon Mustoe has written a new book How to Survive the Next 100 Years: Lessons from Nature. In its pages there's a definite sense of encouragement because ultimately Simon believes we are already seeing indicators of monumentally important shifts in our relationship with earth. In todays conversation we tackle the dichotomy between wisdom & knowledge, deciding that “It doesn't necessarily mean how much you know - if you don't have the wisdom to interpret it & you can’t do anything worthwhile with it.We discover the economic value of a whale when we really unpack what it does for the world & we conclude that the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy is one of the most important conservation books of all time.“Ecosystem complexity makes it abundantly clear that we will NEVER understand everything completely.”Loved this, try another: Digby Hall or Satyajit DasPod Partners Rock: Australian Medicinal HerbsSupport the ShowCasual Support - Buy Me A CoffeeRegular Support - PatreonBuy the Book - Futuresteading - live like tomorrow matters, Huddle - creating a tomorrow of togethernessWe talked about:The wider impact of saving wildlife in our own backyards Government enabling communities to act as custodians & not corporations How animals make ecosystems work & the impact on our daily lives “We’re not in control of anything & we lack a comprehensive understanding of what it is we now need to do.”How 700 koalas were killed by a unilateral decision made behind closed doors.Valuing the human response to damaged nature.11 x increase in the amount of funding available in the last decade for nature based solutionsThe localised opportunities for people to contribute to the livelihood that they belong toBringing the voices of many for co-designed outcomes that leave legacy’sEnvironmental accounting; a transitionary solution to us becoming more connected to the ecosystem“The decline in our loss of species has had a greater economic impact than all the other climate issues combined”.Community led planning can unlock potential from nature based solutions.Being in relationship with ourselves, with our landscapes would take us back to the thing we know how to do well and become PART OF the functioning environmentSupport the show