Christopher Ewing
Christopher Ewing
Taronga Conservation Society Australia Manager, Restoration Programs
Christopher has spent the last decade delivering nature-based solutions across Australia. This includes designing carbon farming and biodiversity offset projects that fit with primary production, as well as setting up funded long-term monitoring programs and working with First Nations People.
Christopher has been heavily involved in the rapid development of environmental markets in Australia. Christopher holds a Bachelor of Science and is an accredited assessor under the NSW Biodiversity Offset Scheme. He is also an accredited expert under the Accounting for Nature Framework, including authoring the first national vegetation condition assessment method accredited under the framework.
Christopher has been heavily involved in the rapid development of environmental markets in Australia. Christopher holds a Bachelor of Science and is an accredited assessor under the NSW Biodiversity Offset Scheme. He is also an accredited expert under the Accounting for Nature Framework, including authoring the first national vegetation condition assessment method accredited under the framework.
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Humanity vs Technology: What Will Save Our Planet?
WED, OCT 18, 2:00 PM
Conference
Our planet is in the midst of a sixth, mass extinction event. This means humanity (yep, that’s us!) and how we live our lives, is killing of species at an unprecedented rate.
The industrial revolution and the rise of technology has led to an increasing dependence on fossil fuels and large-scale habitat destruction. This has meant, in just a few short centuries, we are close to having the same impact to our planet’s biodiversity as an asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs.
Thousands of species are now extinct, gone forever. More than 40,000 species currently sit on the brink of imminent extinction. The UN predicts a million more could vanish within decades.
Over the past decades, the world has woken up to the impact we’ve had, and continue to have, our planet, and the wildlife we share it with.
As a global community, big, bold and desperate steps have been taken to stave off imminent extinction. Some of them have worked, but tragically others have been too little, too late.
Some will argue the solution lies in the future, looking to AI and yet-to-be-developed technologies. Others will say, we are keeping our eyes closed to traditional knowledge and techniques that have nurtured our planet for tens of thousands of years.
So, where to from here? Humanity vs. Technology – what will save our planet?