Well, as someone who is climate change aware and relatively wide-read, I can honestly say I've never heard of George Marshall or his Climate Outreach Information Network, whose aims are...
We aim to create a powerful and vocal community of people working together to move technology, government and business forward to reduce emissions and make real and lasting changes to the way we live’
· The Climate Outreach Information Network (COIN) is a charitable trust formed in 2004 to directly engage the public about climate change.
· Our aim is to facilitate the process by which people: overcome denial about climate change; act collectively to cut greenhouse gas emissions; and offer democratic legitimacy to elected leaders to negotiate successfully for strong regulation at a national and international level.
· COIN is committed to trailing new methods of peer-peer communication and action and reporting on what we learn. We hope, in this way, to assist the wider climate change movement to adopt effective strategies derived from evidence-based research.
'Nuff said I think.
When the nurse arrived yesterday evening at 8pm I said I'd be going out and back some time after 9.45. She said "Oh, are you going out for a meal?" When I said no, I was going to take part in a candlelit vigil, she said "Oh, is that for Earth Hour?" She is from Zambia.
The BBC featured Earth Hour on their TV news.
'Nuff said.
I think sitting at home in the dark alone for an hour is a pretty stupid thing to do! A pointless exercise in hairshirting self-denial. It is a missed opportunity.
Our TT group is just getting started but we were able to use Earth Hour to get a press release, including all our contact and meetings details, in the local paper - our first mention in the local paper. We beat the District Council to the publication deadline -
their press release went out on 25 March and was unreported in the paper (that may however have been tactical on their part) but they did, on their homepage, urge residents to switch off lights.
Our candlelit vigil was attended by only five members, plus one partner, and we handed out flyers to anyone who said they were interested in green issues. Next year we might have 50 people at the vigil. We might even have an event such as the one Biff described and one of our members had suggested for this year (but we were hopelessly unprepared to be able to pull off).
Next year our press release might be along the lines: "Don't sit at home like a lemon with the lights off! Come and join us!"
I'm hippest, no really.