Last week, Lorna and I joined a local group, here in Prince Edward Island, on a tour of a wonderful facility at the neighbouring community of St. Peters. It is the School of Climate Change and Adaptation of the University of Prince Edward Island. The group meets regularly at the Fortune Community Centre near our cottage. This was the first time we had joined this group after arriving at our cottage for the summer and it was a great way to get our feet firmly planted in the red soil of P.E.I.
The school is situated in a new
facility which can be seen perched on the hill side above the highway going
through St. Peters. I must admit I was not overly impressed viewing it
from the road driving by the last couple of years. To me it had the
appearance of something which had been plunked down on a hillside having a box
like appearance. However, this is definitely a case of not judging a book
by its cover or, to use a science (fiction) analogy, like the TARDIS, of Dr.
Who fame – there was much more on the inside that appeared on the
outside.
The school offers undergraduate and
graduate programs at the masters, and PhD level in Environmental Sciences with
impressive facilities including residents for the Masters and PhD
students. They wisely, in my view, decided not to offer resident
facilities for undergraduates probably wanting to maintain a peaceful
environment.
The programs include such areas as
food security and sustainability, a Climate Smart Lab, a Drone Lab, Coastal
Monitoring and Mapping, GIS and Modelling, and Climate Policy. Here are a
couple of examples of what they are doing to give you an idea of the range of
activities. The drones are used to map the entire coastline of
P.E.I. and track the erosion that is occurring because of climate
change. This is caused primarily not by rising sea level but by storm
damage with the increasing storm surges due to increased frequency of storms
caused by climate change. We have experienced hurricanes in the last two
Septembers on the Island and this year is forecast to have a lot of hurricane
activity. We were advised that some people who own property on the coast
try to put up sea walls to stop the erosion with rocks and concrete or other
material. However, this only diverts storm water to the neighbouring
coastline and makes the effect worse. Robert Frost was definitely right
when he wrote that good fences make good neighbours – or in this case, no
shore-line walls make good neighbours.
Another great example of what the
schools are doing is a fully automated machine developed by the students which
can be used to identify specific weeds in a field of potatoes (a very important
crop on P.E.I.) and treat it with the right substance limiting the amount of
chemicals used. It can also identify where fertiliser is needed on a
field, again limiting the amount used.
The University of P.E.I. is a small
educational facility with about 5,500 students. However, with this
facility they are leading but it shows that size is not an impediment to
innovation and excellence. Climate change is a reality and there will
need to be innovative in developing ways to deal with this reality which is
exactly what is being done at the school. Of course this does not let
governments, or businesses or each of us off the hook from doing all we can to
fight and mitigate the extent of climate change.
We are called to be stewards of the
world that God created and declared to be good. May we be blessed to do
that on our journey.
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