One Chance Left EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
2
One Chance Left
‘The world now finds itself in serious trouble, needing to make changes fast if we are going to save our habitable planet before it is too late... If the will is there to build a cleaner, healthier home on earth, the ways and means exist for us to do so.’ Professor Peter Stott
3
One Chance Left
Introduction
This collection of poems is a powerful wake-up call, a catalyst, a call to arms. The science alone is not getting the message across. Our leaders do not hear us; we bury our heads in the sand of the expanding desert. The group of leading climate scientists and medical academics represented here have turned to humanities and the arts for help. They have composed poetry that gives life to the climate catastrophe we are in and to which we contribute. There are poems that celebrate our natural world and poems that give glimmers of hope.
4
Some of the scientists involved in this project have written about their science and research at the end of the book; there are solutions on the horizon. Please enjoy these poems, but more importantly, act now and make a change. This is our responsibility. Professor Ian Fussell, Associate Dean of Education, College of Medicine and Health, University of Exeter
One Chance Left
Foreword: a reflection on the ocean in the time of climate change
Many of us are only just now becoming aware of the importance of the seas and Ocean to the health and wellbeing not only of humans, but the planet. Over 70% of this planet is covered by the Ocean, which produces more than 70% of our oxygen. The seas and the oceans regulate our climate, including by absorbing vast amounts of the heat and C02 that we generate from our fossil fuel use on land and in the air. Moreover, 94% of all creatures are aquatic, and we have explored less than 5%. ‘With every drop of water you drink, every breath you take, you’re connected to the sea. No matter where on Earth you live.’ Sylvia Earle Historically and currently the seas and the oceans have provided food, livelihoods, and transport both directly and indirectly for all humanity. There is growing evidence that equitable access to high quality coastal and other marine environments are both protective and curative for our physical health and mental wellbeing.
And, as the poems in this volume often demonstrate, the Ocean has been and continues to be a source of spiritual and creative inspiration, even in the face of ongoing extreme climate and other environmental change. ‘When anxious, uneasy and bad thoughts come, I go to the sea, and the sea drowns them out with its great wide sounds, cleanses me with its noise, and imposes a rhythm upon everything in me that is bewildered and confused.’ Rainer Maria Rilke. For me, the coasts, seas and Ocean, and the people who care, continue to be a source of wonder, inspiration, awe, and hope. To that end, read these poems written by current and future colleagues dedicated to the health of not just humans, but the planet.
Lora E Fleming MD PhD MPH MSc Professor, Chair, Director European Centre for Environment and Human Health College of Medicine and Health University of Exeter
5
One Drop We scan the sagging sky, the curdled clouds, heavy and sodden as sandbags that no longer stem the tide. Hunching homeward against the storm, faces stung, we feared the urgent rain would never stop, and longed for sun. Now, in rinsed air, this one bewitching moment: a single raindrop. A sphere of light and dark, sky and shadow, suspended on a summer leaf, fragile as a planet.
6
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
7
Sudden Heat Cool, clear water still gushes from the tap – I wash hot, dry hands wondering how long I’ll wake to green fields. The faeries of childhood bleach among bluebells, as in my homeland ten thousand miles away. Beyond the window, trees gasp as I breathe in. Ground bakes – my body and blood drawn towards the arteries of the earth.
8
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
9
71 Per Cent Water This sea, these wrasse, that oarweed, this granite, mussels, a crab, sand and salt, this, this floating heaven. A starfish feeds, filters, feels its way. Almost naked I propel forward at one, at peace, in this vast soup, this liquid being.
10
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
11
Once There were Fish Boats lie tethered on parched earth, hulls swollen, paint peeling like the blistered skins of fishermen on the run across a sudden desert, who have no choice but to pray for rain, scavenge a changed landscape, and dream they’ll find at least a trickle of a stream, or underground source that leads to a clean river flowing with more fish than plastic.
12
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
13
In Our Hands Not long ago we played in sunlight, rolled glass across concrete, didn’t worry if it cracked. From space the earth appears a marble, so small it can be blotted out by a man holding up a thumb. It’s an orb absorbing dents, fires, footprints and garbage filled oceans. The ozone’s a shawl, gnawed by maggots, believing they can live on Mars.
14
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
15
The Mice Know We’ll miss hump-back whales, murmurations swirling against arctic sky, black swans, swimming, and seaside piers. Waves that lap at a boat’s hull, the crackle of barrier reefs. The Dead Sea. We’ll remember travelling across the globe, driving fast cars, shopping ‘til we dropped. We’ll long for medicines that once saved lives. We’ll grieve for the tap of a wasp on glass, cut grass, leaves, snails, stillness, breaths we took without inhalers, the Gulf Stream, rodents hiding in burrows, creatures who smelt C-O-2 rising, while humans couldn’t.
16
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
17
Planting Ghosts In the clutter and choke the gutters and poke a plan is alive to bring back hives in the city. Flowers will splurge in the hedge and the verge, they will blaze – but the earth is depleted the plant roots defeated. We are phased – the planet is frying species are dying as fast as we act. The beech-wood was needed, built on and weeded. The odds are stacked against. But here come the bees. They hum all around – flying intrepid to where the ghost orchids were found.
18
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
* The Ghost Orchid was classified as extinct - until a single plant was rediscovered in 2009… Reason for decline - loss of beech wood habitat.
19
Axed It’s early, and we’re strolling in lush greenery where crickets tick, and bright parrots chat. Paradise sings as crystal mist drips promise of fresh growth, when a growling sound fills the forest. We freeze – wait for the beast to strike. Metallic teeth crunch through new life. We choke on sawdust. Dead-wood smoke clings to skin. On this desolate path from where we scream, ‘STOP’ there’s no hiding place.
20
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
21
How to Pierce a Heart She’s watching people buzz about tents, find food to cook, try to wash and hang out laundry. Some children stay close to the camp fire. She tugs a necklace of shells; Nana collected them as currency – before the roaring swept every crevice. The waves took homes and hopes. Swallowed them, spat out dregs, Nana and Dada hurricane scum. She and Mama were held, protected by palm trees. But there is no climbing here. Clouds darken, and empty shells no longer lift her heart. She wishes to be in heaven.
22
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
23
In Remembrance
1. An Island, Tuvalu The sea’s rising, land’s disappearing. I’m in a race to pack memories, the Fatele dance moves, the vivid colours of my Sulu, a canoe, church bells, the Maneapa where villagers met. Separated, I make a new home among bigger roads, cars and buildings, hope love for one another survives.
11. An Allotment We found a rusted spade, left-handed glove, netting tangled beneath blossom, soil-encrusted spectacles offered up by self-seeded cleavers, poppy, horsetail, willowherb, dock and nettles – alongside strung bamboo, aquadulce from damp packets, pods growing in the shadow of brambles. In mud a man toppled, was forgotten, overtaken by weeds.
24
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
25
Messages from Space
1. Humanity Calling So this is it. And all of us are on it, an almost perfect sphere floating in a black void. Scale’s impossible to tell as we tip and tilt, cling to hemmed cities and poisoned fields. We’re nearly finished – unless we change.
11. Gaia Calling I was once on fire. My oceans were gas and the C-O-2 you’re all now obsessed with was thick in the searing air. It dwarfed your measly 4-0-9. Watching what you do now, I don’t despair. Even if humanity’s wiped out I’ll celebrate turning my 5 billionth year.
26
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
27
Five Senses, One Chance You still have a chance; so see me. Permafrost rots, forest fires burn, rain pours and temperatures soar. Study my extremes, my rage, and learn. You still have a chance; so feel me. Pause. Tread carefully with bare feet. Be touched by the loss of diversity. Ask who will be left to write your obituary? You still have a chance; so taste me. The waters I filter, the food I supply the bitter tang in your mouth as you reach for my skies, and breathe me. You still have a chance: so smell me. My wounds that won’t heal, my gangrene. Can you catch the scent of danger? Muffled by the blanket in which you’ve clad me. This is a plea from your resource, your host, your ally if you choose. What will be your legacy? Petrified promises and empty boasts? I am listening. You still have a chance.
28
One Chance Left
EXTRACTS FROM POEMS CREATED BY CLIMATE SCIENTISTS AND HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
29
One Chance Left
How We Made It Happen
This selection of poems evolved out of a shared belief among the core team that the need to get key climate change messages across is vital and urgent and that poetry, by showing rather than telling, can be a powerful and transformative tool to carry that message. Those working on the front line of the climate crisis and health care are well placed to produce these poems as they are close to and witness first hand what is changing. So, we invited scientists and medical practitioners to join us in online writing workshops to create twelve poems for the twelve days of COP26. In a fast, spontaneous and sometimes furious way, we made the workshops happen to meet an encroaching deadline! The writing process was in turns challenging, serious, thought-provoking, playful, intriguing, exciting. As it progressed, it became apparent that something special was happening, an alchemy. A gallery of images was the springboard and some of these pictures are included alongside the poems. Many lines and phrases stood out and were repeated unknowingly by different participants. One such, One Chance Left, became the title of the collection. The workshops provided the fabric from which these poems are sewn. The editing process, undertaken by author and editor team Sally Flint and Virginia Baily, involved a pulling together and interweaving of all the different, harmonising and overlapping voices. Sound became important, so there is a recording of the poems too. Now, we want to share One Chance Left with as wide an audience as possible. Through these collaborative poems we aim to continue the conversation, open a widening and lengthening corridor of creativity, from the South West to Glasgow and far beyond to help in healing the world.
30
One Chance Left
Core Team University of Exeter and the Met Office Professor Ian Fussell (Academic Project Lead) is the Associate Dean of Education at Exeter Medical School and a Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and continues to work as a GP in the Emergency Department at the Royal Cornwall Hospital in Truro. As well as a successful GP in Cornwall for over 20 years he was also the Deputy Medical Director for Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Primary Care Trust. His interests include the use of IT in Medical Education, Global Health, and Event Medicine. As a previous cabinet member of the Association for Medical Humanities, he is passionate about the use of humanities in medical education and continues to run a special study unit in music on the BMBS programme at Exeter. Professor Reza Zamani is currently Associate Professor of Medical Science Education and Neuroscience at University of Exeter. During his active research period in the UK and the USA, he worked on various aspects of neuronal network changes that occur as a result of memory formation, in both health and dementia states. His interests have evolved more towards health issues and, in particular, health inequality and the environment. He recently published a systematic review of sustainable management of medical waste in African developing countries and has been acting as the academic lead of Planetary Health Grand Challenges events and the college Rep of Environment and Climate Emergency (Sustainability group). Cecilia Mañosa Nyblon, (Project Lead) is the Education and Skills Partnership Development Manager at Exeter Medical School and has a background in anthropology, archaeology, and education. Cecilia’s professional life has grown and developed at the intersection of science and humanities in Uruguay, USA, Panama and UK. It has taught her that we are at our best when we work in collaboration and in an interdisciplinary way to address challenges and develop opportunities. She considers that there is no greater challenge than our planetary health emergency. We have a once-in-a-generation window to act courageously and make change happen. As Nelson Mandela believed: ‘Sometimes it falls upon a generation to be great. You can be that great generation. Let your greatness blossom.’ Professor Peter Stott is Professor in Detection and Attribution at the University of Exeter and a Science Fellow at the Met Office. He has a distinguished research record in the science of climate change and extensive experience in communicating climate science through the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, public engagement events and appearances on radio and TV. His book Hot Air: The Inside Story of the Battle Against Climate Change Denial is the inspiring story of how the science of climate change was developed, how it has been repeatedly sabotaged and why humanity must act now.
31
One Chance Left
Continued
Professor Rosa Barciela is a Principal Consultant in Applied Science and the Strategic Head of Health Science Integration at the Met Office. Under the UK–South Africa Newton Fund partnership, Professor Barciela leads a team of scientists responsible for the Weather and Climate Science for Services Partnership (WCSSP) South Africa project. She also works with international experts in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and World Health Organization (WHO) on research related to the UN Sustainable Development Goals and Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction. Dr Sally Flint (Creative Writing Lead) is a poet and editor who lectures in Creative Writing and Publishing. She is co-founder of Riptide Journal, and has designed/ facilitated many successful creative and community projects. For several years she has been working with scientists, academics and medical professionals investigating how stories and poetry can help raise awareness of the devastation that climate change is causing around the world. She aims to forge more science/arts collaborations using language, images and other art forms to show and encourage ways to heal, protect and connect nature and people. Sarah Campbell is the Associate Director for Arts and Culture at the U of E. She has built her career designing and delivering learning programmes in galleries and museums and has worked in large national collections (National Galleries of Scotland, Victoria and Albert Museum) to regional institutions (The New Art Gallery, Walsall), and University-based collections (Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge). In 2016, Sarah was awarded a Winston Churchill Memorial Trust Travelling Fellowship. She is fascinated by creative thinking and the creative process, interests that have been put to good use at Exeter where Arts and Culture aim to ‘activate creativity’. She finds it a frightening privilege to work with researchers who know just how urgent the climate crisis is. What gives her hope is that our species can find incredible solutions to complex problems – scientists and storytellers, artists and makers help drive awareness and culture change. Dom Jinks is a cultural professional with over 20 years of experience. He has founded his own theatre company (The British Touring Shakespeare Company), worked at the Globe Theatre, held a range of roles at Arts Council England, developed a new arts & culture service at the University of Exeter, led Plymouth Culture for 4 years and is currently Head of Creative Places for the University of Exeter. This role involves supporting and shaping the cultural plan, leading Exeter Culture and overseeing Exeter UNESCO City of Literature.
32
One Chance Left
Acknowledgements and thanks: Associate Editor, Virginia Baily is the author of three novels. She is also the co-editor of Riptide short story journal and an occasional lecturer at the University of Exeter. The novel she is working on now is set in Exeter. www.virginiabaily.com Special thanks to the University of Exeter MultiMedia Design Studio Front cover/ Holding slide: Bubble – Louis Maniquet - Unsplash Other Images Droplet on Leaf – Nur Agustiningsih - Unsplash Washing Hands – mrjn Photography - Unsplash Starfish – Linus Nyland - Unsplash Sandwich Harbour Namibia – Ryan Cheng - Unsplash Space Elevator – Green Mars – FlyingSinger – licensed under CC BY 2.0 A Murmation of Starlings – Nick Fewings - Unsplash Bee – Bandyopadhyay - Unsplash Springbrook – Justin Clark - Unsplash Conch Shells - Davey6585 - licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 ‘Peace River Dam’ 2021. Corinna Wagner, Associate Professor in Literature & Visual Culture at U of E. https://profcmwagner.wixsite.com/mysite Fish Eye Photo of City – Joshua Rawson - Unsplash Diver – Jeremy Bishop – Unsplash
33
One Chance Left
Continued Project Writing Workshop Participants Rebecca Abbott – Health Researcher Sarah Baker – Geologist Flossie Brown – Climate Scientist Jo Browse – Geographer / Climate Scientist John T Bruun – Mathematics (Climate Dynamics) Sarah Chadburn – Climate Scientist Jess Collins – Climate Change Communication Consultant Nat Craig – Sustainability Researcher / Geographer Donald P. Cummins – Climate Scientist Amy Doherty – Climate Scientist Bernd Eggen – Climate Scientist Ian Fussell – Project Leader and Doctor Amina Ghezal – Social Scientist Nicola Golding – Climate Services at Met Office Mathilda Hancock –Vegetation Modelling / Geographer Nell Hartney – Mathematics U of E Heather Hind – Humanities Sarah Holmes – Climate Scientist Musarrat Maisha Reza – Medical Scientist Tim Malone – Movement Disorders Research / Medical Doctor Kathryn Moore – Geology and Mining Carolyn Murray – Medical Academic / Doctor Rosie Oakes – Climate Scientist Becks Parfitt – International Climate Services Scientist Morwenna Rogers – Information Scientist Sarah Scaife – Medical Humanities / Artist Su Smith – Healthcare Leadership / Geneticist Emily Taylor – PhD Student, Medical School Inika Taylor – Climate Scientist Philipp Thies – Engineer Jo Thompson Coon – Health Services Research Wondwossen Abate Woldie – Immunologist Reza Zamani – Neurologist
Thanks to all our sponsors and supporters whose logos appear on the front cover and: Dept. of English – University of Exeter, for funding the printing of the One Chance Left book.
34
One Chance Left
Appendix: Some Reflections by Contributors Rebecca Abbott, Health Researcher, University of Exeter: In my role as a health services researcher I am surrounded by evidence – and the evidence on climate change is clear. For our planet and our health we need to walk more & drive less, plant more & build less, live local & buy local. Recycle, reuse and regenerate. Climate change needs people to change and the time to act is now. Sarah Baker wildFIRE Lab Global Systems Institute, University of Exeter: The future is not set in stone. We have the power and knowledge to steer our future climate and mitigate its current course. Where wildfires rage, not all is lost. New growth and opportunities can arise from the nutrient rich ashes left behind. John T Bruun, Lecturer in Mathematics: We live in a time of happening and, through hope, each of our ideas can help and make a lasting improvement to our climate futures. Jess Collins, Postdoctoral Researcher/Climate Change Engagement Consultant: My research, as an archaeologist and teacher, has been about helping people to understand the climate crisis by using objects from the past. Museum collections are fantastic resources for connecting ‘difficult’ science with human stories. Archaeological objects and information can link narratives of climate change past, present and yet to come, offering an accessible introduction to the current climate emergency. Working creatively with people’s innate curiosity about the past is a great way of getting them engaged with the challenges of the future. Donald Cummins, Postdoctoral Researcher: In the workshop I wanted to express how, after we industrialized, people have significantly disturbed the Earth’s radiation balance, which has led to the planet heating up. I wanted to create an analogy between radiation balance, which is outside of our normal sensory experience, and physical balance (slipping, acceleration etc.) with which we have a visceral familiarity. Bernd Eggen, Climate Science Advisor: The current and previous years have seen a number of ‘black swan’ events, i.e. extreme weather events that were so far from the historical records that they were nearly impossible without climate change. My hope is that we are starting to make positive and urgent steps to slow down climate change and associated global heating and extreme events. I also hope that these black swans stay rare and won’t become the new normal for future generations. Amina Ghezal, Dept of Politics and International Studies: Climate change is happening, and it is an inevitable reality that will continue to inflict the planet and our existence on it. What matters is our actions and reactions to it. So let’s be responsible citizens of the earth before it’s too late.
35
One Chance Left
Continued Nicola Golding, Manager of International Climate Services, Met Office: Climate change is a unique challenge to the world, but it is also a unique opportunity for the global community. If we know where to look the responses we are seeing from individuals, communities, industries, people working together across boundaries, regions, across opposite sides of the world are inspiring. There is hope and so much potential in what we are seeing, which needs to be nurtured, supported, grown and celebrated. Nell Hartney, PhD student, Dept of Mathematics: Don’t lose confidence in the idea that one person can make a difference. A few hundred people can make a country. A few hundred countries can make a world. What difference can a world make? A world of difference. Heather Hind, Impact and Partnership Development Officer, University of Exeter: Since I got an allotment last year, I’ve felt more excitement than ever about green spaces, seasonal produce, community, and making personal changes for the good of the planet. Tim Malone, Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital / University of Exeter Medical School: There’s no health without planetary health. Kathryn Moore, Senior Lecturer in Critical and Green Technology Metals, Camborne School of Mines, University of Exeter, Penryn: I act to secure sustainable access to the Earth resources for modern societies and to change the relationships between industry, society and resources. I am acutely aware of how far and how unequally consumption has moved beyond a need for sustenance; how communities suffer the climatic and ecological effects of consumption patterns in which they do not necessarily participate. If every consumer participates in the demand for resource production and every consumer behaviour counts, then there is no ‘them’ in mining, there is ‘us’. Maisha Musarrat Reza, Lecturer in Biomedical Sciences, College of Medicine and Health, University of Exeter: As a young academic and youth activist, I have taken every opportunity to speak about the climate crisis we are facing and urge world leaders and international organizations to prioritize climate change on their agendas. I had the privilege to speak with BBC World in 2018 at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting and more recently share the youth perspective on climate education for children and young people on a high-level panel co-organized by OECD – Education International – UNESCO. There are countless other youth and student activists across the world echoing the importance of tackling the climate crisis and children are joining in the movement as well. I see hope for a better future. I see a future where our planet becomes sustainable and healthy. I see a future where all individuals care about our planet’s health.
36
One Chance Left
Morwenna Rogers, Information Specialist, Evidence Synthesis Team, University of Exeter: As an information specialist, I love evidence and facts. I found out recently that to offset my own personal carbon footprint I need to plant 72 trees a year. That’s a lot of trees for one person! The Woodland Trust have pledged 50 million trees over five years so as a member I shall remove 20 from my tally. Next, I plan to reduce my carbon footprint by walking more, switching things off, buying more locally. Failing that, I shall find a way to plant 52 trees! Don’t despair. Individually we can only do small things, but together we’ll make a difference! Sarah Scaife, The South, West and Wales Doctoral Training Partnership AHRC funded PhD Researcher. University of Exeter, Department of Drama, University of Bristol, Department of English: I’m lucky enough to have travelled widely and heard many voices calling for new ways of being. These days I live in Devon, UK. Our neighbourhood is centred on the flourishing ecosystem of a river, which flows through my life and academic research. As a walking artist with lived experience of cancer, my enquiry values the medicine of uncommodified restorative places in the living world. Susanne Smith, Lecturer in Healthcare Leadership & Management, St. Luke’s Campus, University of Exeter: We must as the precious water be: a million droplets that carve through the hardest rock of man-made bastions. It is possible for us to change our destructive course to one of positive creation, provided we channel the raging rivers now… Emily Taylor, PhD Student, Medical School, University of Exeter: My love of nature was passed down to me from my grandfather and I cannot think of a greater gift to inherit. I know that there is work to be done if I am to bestow the same treasure, intact, on generations to come. I am prepared, I am committed and I am hopeful. Inika Taylor, Climate Scientist, Met Office: Climate change is real, it is happening now, and it will affect everyone and everything that we love. As a climate scientist, I seek to understand the impacts of climate change around the world, including droughts and wildfires and how they could change as the world gets hotter. Our science is clear, acting now to prevent further climate change and plan for the changes we cannot avoid, can limit the impacts that we will experience. It is a big task, change can be overwhelming and climate change, like COVID, is what we call a “threat multiplier”. But when we are our best selves, working together, informed by the best available evidence, there is no telling what we can do. Jo Thompson Coon, Professor of Evidence Synthesis & Health Policy, University of Exeter: The future is not decided yet. We still have time to make a difference. Rather than climate change we need to talk about lifestyle change and the everyday steps we can all take to reduce, adjust and adapt for the benefit of our future.
37
This collection of twelve poems is unique – they are created by a team of scientists and health professionals working on the frontline of climate change who want to communicate the complex links between environment and human health. Inspired by themes of COP 26 the team joined in creative writing workshops to find powerful words that link facts, findings and feelings in a climate crisis. As the writing was being edited into a poetry sequence, and this printed book, the project grew into other forms; these include an e-book, podcast, pendant poem displays in Exeter and Cornwall and music tracks. Go to the University of Exeter Green Futures website: greenfutures.exeter.ac.uk/one-chance-left where you can discover more about the power of linking climate science and the arts to get key climate science messages across. As in a medical emergency, we have ONE CHANCE LEFT to mend and save what’s left of our wonderful world.
Want to know more? Scan the QR code #greenfutures
© Copyright LEGAL NOTICE All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means, without prior permission from the editors or the copyright holders. www.riptidejournal.co.uk
2021UEMS027
ISBN: 978-0-9575512-9-9