December 2nd, 2011 | By Glen Hiemstra | Posted in Environment & Energy | Comments Off

6 Global destinations to see before they are gone

Here is our list of six global destinations to see before they likely disappear beneath the waves of climate change. It is probable, say experts, that these places must be seen in the next 50-100 years or it will be too late. Even aggressive action to limit carbon and other emissions is unlikely to change the current momentum of climate change in this century. We’ll not get into whether this is a false alarm, or what the causes for climate change might be. We’ll just say if you have the time and the resources, these are very cool places to visit; if they are still there a hundred years from now, all the better, but if not, you will have seen them when you were able to.

The Arctic ice cap in the summer

Reports are that summer ice in the Arctic Ocean reached either its lowest recorded level or second lowest in 2011. This suggests that predictions of a near ice free Arctic in the late summer by the year 2050 may be more likely. So if you want to stand on the North Pole in August, go now. If you want to kayak over the North Pole wait a few years and you may be able to.

Island nations

Tuvalu – Islands on the frontline of Climate Change from panos pictures on Vimeo.

Low level island nations like Micronesia (great ABC video clip), the Marshall Islands, the Maldives, and Tuvalu are among those threatened by rising sea levels, with effects already visible in all of these places. Some of these nations expect to essentially disappear in this century.

Venice

City of Burano, Islands of Venice in 2011

This is one of my personal favorite places. My wife and have spent many wonderful days over several trips exploring the city and its surrounding environs. On one visit we went down the hotel stairs the first morning into a lobby under 2 feet of water and spent that trip walking raised boardwalks around the city. It was charming and beautiful in its own way. But now these floods happen up to 100 times a year, native Venetians continue to vacate the city (more because of its tourist driven economy than flooding, so far), and there are predictions that the city may be essentially abandoned by 2050.

Glacier Park Glaciers

One of the great visual wonders of the U.S. natural world, Glacier Park is majestic not just because of its glaciers, but also because of the grand scale of its mountains. Still, if the glaciers were gone, it would not be the same. While Glacier is getting more precipitation due to climate change, its glaciers continue to shrink rapidly. The latest forecast have them mostly gone as soon as 2020, so get busy on this one.

Great Barrier Reef

Australia Great Barrier Reef Islands

When we visited the Reef a few years ago and went diving, I was actually most impressed not by the color and or the sea life variety. I was most impressed by how much of the reef that we saw was not colorful at all, but a dusty brown, as it died. Very sensitive to changes in both ocean temperature and acidity as well as other disturbances, the Reef is well known to be threatened. So get there while you can, and join efforts to save the Reef as well. You are warned that you may have 30-50 years to make this visit.

Snows of Kilimanjaro

Climbing Kilimanjaro has long been on the bucket list of things to do for many people, me included, though I’ve not gotten to this one. I’d like to do it before the famous “snows of Kilimanjaro” disappear, and so it looks like I have until 2022.

Here are two similar lists..
From MSNBC
From News.com.au

And a more extensive list…
From 100 Places to Remember Before They Disappear

Glen Hiemstra is a futurist author, speaker, consultant, and Founder of Futurist.com. To arrange for a speech, workshop or consultationcontact Futurist.com.

Continue Reading & Comment »

November 30th, 2011 | By Glen Hiemstra | Posted in Business & Economy, Science & Technology | Comments Off

Flying construction robots

The construction industry is among the slowest to change among all business types. When I have worked with them anticipating longer term trends and possible disruptions to traditional ways of doing business, the topic of construction robots always comes up. Autonomous robots that scale walls and build buildings piece by piece, or even nanoscale robots that enable buildings to essentially build themselves are a feature in many science fiction stories. But given the complexity of construction work, the industry has been skeptical that on-site building processes could be automated.

Flying construction robots at the FRAC Centre, France

Now comes news via GizMag that the FRAC Centre in Orléans, France will host an exhibition entitled “flight assembled architecture. set to run from December 2, 2011 through February 19, 2012. The exhibit will feature a 6-meter tall structure, made of 1500 prefabricated modules, to be constructed by a fleet of small quadrocopters. The flying robots are “programmed to interact, lift, transport and assemble the final tower, all the time receiving commands wirelessly from a local control room.”

Assuming that the actual build process is successful, here is what the tower is to look like.

6-meter tall tower to be built by flying robots

The video of the robots in action, as designed by Raffaello D’Andrea, is pretty impressive to watch.



Continue Reading & Comment »

November 30th, 2011 | By Glen Hiemstra | Posted in Business & Economy | Comments Off

Top 10 Reasons to (not) Avoid Social Media

Tongue in cheek, Allegis Group Services recently posted the top 10 reasons that HR and other professionals in companies should avoid social media. Read the whole piece, but here are the 10 reasons…

1. You’re a Global Company That Does Not Want to Maintain a Uniform, Worldwide Corporate Culture.

2. You Want to Ensure That Leadership Has no Casual Interaction With Staff to Preserve an Unblemished (& Uncomfortable) Hierarchy.

3. You are Strongly Opposed to Employer Branding.

4. You Want to Ignore the Fact That Your Employees & Clients Are Already Talking About You on Social Media.

5. You Are Actively Trying to Attract Talent That is Social Media Un-Savvy.

6. HR Reps Don’t Have the Time to Research Candidates.

7. You Don’t Care to Learn About Other Emerging Technologies That Can Help You Streamline Your Business and Save You Time and Money.

8. Your Corporate Culture Strictly Prohibits Recruiters From Using Social Media.

9. You Have no Time to Develop a Content Marketing Strategy.

10. Search Engine Optimization is for the Birds.

If you visit the Allegis site, you will find explanations for each reason, and some useful examples.

Continue Reading & Comment »

November 28th, 2011 | By Glen Hiemstra | Posted in Science & Technology | Comments Off

Autonomous Vehicles Could be the Future

It is possible that autonomous vehicles could be the flying car of the 2030′s – I am forever answering the question “what ever happened to the flying car envisioned in the 1960′s?”. But this concept car, imagined by Charles Rattray, captures many of the concepts I first heard about when working with the U.S. Federal Highway Administration on a project to identify advanced research topics. The experts they gathered in 2006 indeed foresaw intelligent highways, vehicles that communicate with each other as well as with the infrastructure, some roadways at least that could transmit energy to the vehicle, and computing intelligence smart enough to navigate cars without driver involvement. Mr. Rattray incorporates all of these ideas, and more, into his proposed vehicle. Check out his video below and also a description of the car in Gizmag.



Continue Reading & Comment »

November 23rd, 2011 | By Glen Hiemstra | Posted in Current Choices for a Better Future | Comments Off

A Thanksgiving Dream for the Future

Tomorrow is the traditional Thanksgiving holiday here in the U.S. As always the day has me thinking of things to be thankful for, as well as how I’ve contributed in the past year. And, being a futurist, I consider things I’d like to be thankful for in the future.

Yesterday there appeared in the Financial Times a special article by Hassan Haikel, CEO of EFG Hermes, entitled “A tweet from Tahrir Square…” It really struck me as a proposal that, were it to come to pass in the near future, would cause the whole world to join in thanksgiving.

Mr. Haikel reveals that he is one of the 1%, really more like the .0001%, individuals in the world with net worth of more than $10 million, of which there are 1 per 10,000 in the global population. Concerned both with the plague of global debt, and the prospect for major social unrest and economic disaster if the debt problem is not fixed wisely, Mr. Haikel makes a startling proposal. He calls it the “Tahrir Square Tax.” He explains it as a one-time 10% tax levy on all those in the .0001% wealth bracket, whose total net worth is about $50 trillion, thus raising $5 trillion.

Were the proceeds then applied to public debt in Europe, the U.S., and Africa for example, public debt to GDP ratios could be cut to 50% in Europe and 80% in the U.S, while enabling significant infrastructure investment in Africa. The global economy would be off the hook, and in a good position to rebound.

Too simple, too elegant, too preposterous to be imagined, much less implemented. Or is it? The world would be grateful and with a restored economy I suspect the .0001% would rebuild their wealth in time to give thanks for their bounty by the time the next Thanksgiving rolled around.

Read the whole rather amazing article, free registration required.

Happy Thanksgiving to all.

Continue Reading & Comment »

Page 29 of 95« First...1020...2728293031...405060...Last »