Regeneration

Putting Life and the Future of Life at the Center of Every Action

Climate Action Lists from the book Regeneration by Paul Hawken

The following text is extracted from the book by Paul Hawken titled Regeneration- Ending the Climate Crisis in one Generation- p 249

1. CLIMATE CHECK LIST

Where to Start

A climate checklist is informed by straightforward principles. They help you guide your endeavors, from farms to finance, cities to clothing, groceries to grasslands, and are applicable to every level of activity: people, homes, groups, companies, communities, cities -and countries too. The guidelines are yes or no questions. Every action either moves toward a desired outcome or heads away from it. The number one guideline is the fundamental principle of regeneration. The remaining are outcomes of that principle.

  1. Does the action create more life or reduce it?

  2. Does it heal the future or steal the future?

  3. Does it enhance human well-being or diminish it?

  4. Does it prevent disease or profit from it?

  5. Does it create livelihoods or eliminate them?

  6. Does it restore land or degrade it?

  7. Does it increase global warming or decrease it?

  8. Does it serve human needs or manufacture human wants?

  9. Does it reduce poverty or expand it?

  10. Does it promote fundamental human rights or deny them?

  11. Does it provide workers with dignity or demean them?

  12. In short, is the activity regenerative or extractive?

How you apply, score, or evaluate these principles is up to you. Most of what we do does not tick all the boxes. However, like a compass, it shows us the direction and where to go. By employing these guidelines, you pivot and begin, action by action, bit by bit, step by step to create regeneration in one’s life. What am I eating? Why? How am I feeling? What is happening in my community? What am I wearing? What am I buying? What am I making? Etc.

2. CLIMATE PUNCH LIST

A punch list is a personal, group, or institutional checklist. Because of the differences among people, cultures, incomes, and knowledge, there is no one common or correct checklist. The top “ten” solutions to reverse global warming are an abstraction. The true top solutions are what you can, want, and will do. The value of a punch list is that when you commit to something, things can happen. A punch list can be for an individual, family, community, company, or city. It is the list of actions you or your group will undertake and accomplish over a predetermined span of time -one month, one year, five years, or more. You can make different lists for different time periods -this week and this year, for example. If you go to www.regeneration.org/punchlist you will find a kit, a worksheet, and more sample punch lists.

A sample punch list from an individual:

  1. Phase out single use plastics by use case, starting with food and beverage purchases outside the home and moving on to kitchen, bathroom, and lifestyle goods

  2. Purchase renewable energy credits for the energy use in my apartment.

  3. Set a clothing budget for the year of no more than ten new garments, at least 8 of which from vintage stores or smaller sustainable brands.

  4. Engage with a citizen’s climate action group, such as the Citizen’s Climate Lobby, to pressure my state and federal representatives to support climate policy and set ambitious emissions reduction targets.

  5. Support First Nations landback movements with recurring donations or by paying a land tax to the nations whose traditional lands I inhabit.

  6. Engage with my city council and other community groups to advocate for urban green space as well as the protection of open space preserves and local wildlife sanctuaries and/or corridors.

  7. Start or join a monthly climate and environmental justice reading group with friends and family to keep us all learning and in discussion about ways to joyfully hold one another accountable to Just Transition efforts.

If you need help creating your punch list, contact me. I’ll be glad to help.