Bittu Sahgal, Founder/Director of Sanctuary Asia, presenting during the Friday (6 November) WILD9 Plenary "What and Why - The World Wilderness Congress," specifically on "Our Wilderness, Our Congress."
3. The difference between what we do and what we are capable of doing would suffice to solve most of the world’s problems. – M ohandas Karamchand Gandhi
4. Forgive me for I touch your body with my feet/ Algonquin N.P. Canada It’s a wonderful world . Photo: Dr. Anish Andheria/Sanctuary Photolibrary
5. The Himalaya – water source for 25% of humanity Photo: Dhritiman Mukherjee /Sanctuary Photolibrary
6. Ice caps and glaciers are vanishing. It’s a global meltdown. Photo: Bernard Castelein/Sanctuary Photolibrary
7. The snow leopard’s fate is sealed. Conifers are climbing higher up. Junipers are in retreat. Its death by climate. Photo: International Snow Leopard Trust Photo: Milan Trykar.
8. Natural ecosystems are the planet’s climate control infrastructures. It take great ignorance to destroy them. Photo: Gautam Shah/Sanctuary Photolibrary
9. Photo: Gautam Shah/Sanctuary Photolibrary Everything works! Nothing is wasted in nature. carbon is used by different species, recycled, then returned.
10. This Southern Yellow-billed Hornbill in South Africa’s Kruger, is one of several million gardeners of our Eden. Photo: Dr. Anish Andheria/Sanctuary Photolibrary
11. This Greater Blue-eared Starling’s fate is connected to that of Homo sapiens . Climate Change will affect both, democratically. Photo: Dr. Anish Andheria/Sanctuary Photolibrary
12. Across the world wetlands are being filled up, levelled to access more land. But these are vital carbon sinks. Photo: Dr. Anish Andheria/Sanctuary Photolibrary
13. Vast wildernesses do still exist, but are fast vanishing. Photo: N.C. Dhinga/Sanctuary Photolibrary
14. Flamingoes recognise no borders. Will they be represented in Copenhagen? Or are humans the only game in town? Photo: Jayanth Sharma / Sanctuary Photolibrary
15. The same holds true for Olive Ridley turtles. Oceans must cope with 100 million tons of floating waste. The 7 th continent Photo: Dhritiman Mukherjee/ Sanctuary Photolibrary
16. Ocean food webs are at greater risk than terrestrial ecosystems, from climate change and contamination. Photo: SeaWatch
17. The Tiger is a metaphor for all of nature. If we cannot leave space for these magnificent cats, what can we possibly save?
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19. Photo: Sandesh Kadur/Sanctuary Photolibrary India and several other countries have cultures that still revere nature. Should economics trump them all?
20. Species diversity is critical to the ability of forests to help us fight climate change. Photo: Gautam Shah/Sanctuary Photolibrary
21. Deforestation is responsible for around 25% of India’s greenhouse gas emissions. Photo: Bittu Sahgal/Sanctuary Photolibrary
22. Photo: Kalyan Varma/Sanctuary Photolibrary Photo: Kalyan Varma/Sanctuary Photolibrary Its true that the industrial nations are responsible for climate change, but traditional societies too have to change their ways.
23. This are the tragic circumstances that we will increasingly have to deal with as ecosystems vanish and conflicts rise. Photo: Pranab Dhar/Sanctuary Photolibrary
24. A rise in temperature by 2 o C or more will seriously affect global food production. Are we aiming too low? Photo: Dhritiman Mukherjee/Sanctuary Photolibrary
25. Preventing forest fires is not a wildlife issue. It’s a human survival strategy. Every tree is 50% carbon by weight. Photo: Kerala Forest Department
26. Timber is a low cost resources – because economists never calculate the ecosystem services forests deliver. Photo: IFAW
27. Short term mining profits – but what do we do when there is no more water? Who will then feed our children? Photo: Samsul Huda Patgiri/Sanctuary Photolibrary
28. Alternate energy options exist. Yet countries like India Intend to expand coal-based thermal power plant capacities by 300 per cent in the next decade. Photo: M. John Basco / Sanctuary Photolibrary
29. We all want the good life, but for this, we must first have a life! Photo: Dr. Anish Andheria/Sanctuary Photolibrary
30. Photo: M. Aditya Bharadhwaj/Sanctuary Photolibrary Future imperfect!
31. Photo: Indraneil Senguptaj/Sanctuary Photolibrary Not a drop to drink! Our generation is colonising the poor and those yet to be born. This situation is now universal.
45. This is India’s Gaumukh glacier – It’s a place of pilgrimage. There was a furor when a natural ice ‘lingam’ considered holy melted. But no one asked about the glacier itself. Photo: Dr. Anish Andheria/Sanctuary Photolibrary
46. Yes. Let us debate the carbon-energy issue -- not whether it causes climate change, but the strategies needed to wean ourselves away from carbon.
47. Jungle nadi ki maa hai . That is what our ancestors believed. We would do well to heed the wisdom of the ages handed down to us by the Rig Veda. Photo: Manoj Sindagi/Sanctuary Photolibrary
48. It’s crunch time! This stick insect imagines it will live forever. We are no different. Photo: Kalyan Varma/Sanctuary Photolibrary