By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org
News staff
Bill McKibben urged civil disobedience to combat climate change during his 'Do The Math' tour stop at Brown University. (Tim Faulkner/ecoRI News) |
PROVIDENCE — The
environmental movement's most recognized activist used humor and fun to deliver
his message to combat climate change, but his call to action was serious.
Bill McKibben, author,
activist and college professor, received a standing ovation when he took the
stage Monday night at a packed auditorium at Brown University. He urged the
audience of college students and local environmentalists of all ages to take on
the fossil-fuel industry through protests and an active campaign of divestment.
"As of tonight,
we're going after the fossil-fuel industry," he said.
Bill McKibben pedals a bike-powered smoothy machine before speaking at Brown University on Nov. 26. (Tim Faulkner/ecoRI News) |
The success of the
mass protest outside the White House in 2011, he said, suggested that getting
arrested for peaceful protest sends a powerful message. McKibben recruited the
energized crowd to attend another mass protest in Washington, D.C., on
Presidents’ Day in February.
The Nov. 26 Brown
University event was one of more than 20 McKibben is presenting around the
country to mostly college-age audiences on his “Do The Math” tour. Using a few props such as bottles of
beer and video messages from environmentalists such as Van Jones, McKibben
highlights the fact that coal, oil and gas reserves must stay in the ground in
order to prevent the planet’s temperature from rising 2 degrees Celsius.
“It’s going to be
burned unless we change the story,” he said. “Either Exxon gives in, or physics
gives in.”
Hurricane Sandy, the
melting of the polar ice cap, drought and flooding are signs of what’s ahead if
the planet gets warmer, he said.
But McKibben said
there are ways to avert global climate change. The solution: a quick leap to
renewable energy coupled with ending the “outlaw” business practices of the
fossil-fuel industry.
“It’s still a trickle,
it’s not the flood we need,” he said of the growth of wind and solar energy in
the United States.
The Brown University
event was organized by the student-run Brown
Divest Coal Campaign.
The group has asked the university to divest its investments in coal companies
with the worst environmental records. The group is holding a campus rally Nov. 29.
Senior Keally Cieslik said after McKibben’s
talk that she would likely attend Thursday's rally. “It’s a moral
responsibility to take action,” she said.