The second-annual conference comes to an end today.
SXSW Eco is an offshoot of the wildly-popular SXSW festival that takes over Austin for a good chunk of March each year, and has since grown from its roots in music and film to encompass technology and education.
SXSW Eco is still a comparatively smaller affair, viewed against the SXSW brings overall. But this year’s festival expanded its focus onto five themes: Scalable, ecological solutions; collaborations between disparate communities on global issues like climate change; advances in technology and design; green economics; and visions for an environmentally sustainable future.
The team with KUT News� has been filing dispatches from Eco, starting with an interview with Michael E. Mann, a Penn State University professor whose work includes the iconic showing a rise in global temperatures since the dawn of the industrial age � work that his made him a target of climate change deniers.
He :
What we are seeing is that things are happening even faster than we had projected. Whether you’re talking about arctic sea ice decline, or whether you’re talking about the record heat and drought and wildfire that we saw here in the U.S. this summer and the previous summer. So while the changes are actually unfolding even faster, in many respects, than we had predicted, and the science has become that much more solid, the gulf continues between what the science says and what one might gather from the public discourse on this issue.
Being in Austin, local, state and border topics peppered SXSW Eco. Renewable energy advisor Scott Storment described at one panel:
After off-roading for a while they got to the turbine. “And the only way they got the tower there was because the gentleman who owned the land was a narco-trafficker,� Storment said. “Typically, he didn’t let people on his land, but he was a big fan of wind. He told us, ‘If you do do this, I want to buy wind energy.’�
SXSW Eco wraps up tonight.
Disclosure: KUT Austin is a sponsor of the SXSW Eco conference