| Contact
Name: |
Steve Ewings
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| Contact
Telephone: |
+61 2 62 851945
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| Address: |
Curtin,
Canberra, ACT, Australia
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E-Mail:
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steve-at-steveewings.com
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My name is Steve Ewings and I was born and raised on the edge of the Great Victoria Desert in Western Australia,
where my parents were missionaries in a remote Indigenous outstation. As a result of growing up amongst Aboriginals
I gained an intimate knowledge of the Australian bush, Aboriginal language skills, and I’m very familiar with their
cultures.
After the missionary stint my parents took up a 365,000 acre lease on some arid land next door to the mission.
We ran about 2,000 sheep and around 200 cattle in a very subsistent fashion. Our bathroom had a dirt floor, no
walls in the kitchen, and we used kerosene lights for many years. These outback beginnings means I’m no stranger to
isolation and hardships. At an early age I learnt to shear sheep and worked as a professional shearer for some 10
years, shearing in most States of Australia.
I left the outback of Australia and got a job in the film industry working as a location scout and unit manager.
After leaving the desert I also did a lot of bushwalking (hiking) and went through Army Reserve Officer training.
I’ve
toured extensively throughout Australia , by motorcycle, 4WD and horseback. I began mustering sheep on
horseback when I was 9 years old, have mustered in cattle camps and have explored many areas with pack horses.
In 2005 I began building the web site
Global Greenhouse Warming. The science of this site draws on the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
reports and leans towards renewable or at least very low emissions technology in seeking to answer the
anthropogenic causes of climate change. Since early childhood and growing up in the Great Victoria Desert of
Australia I have had an interest in what is now often referred to as ‘sustainability’. This fascination continued
in my undergraduate degree in archaeology and palaeoanthropology, gravitating towards exploring Indigenous
colonisation patterns of Australia’s arid inland. This study provided insight into how humans have repeatedly
overexploited our natural resources and how we are now running out of ecological niches to move into.
The idea that people sustained themselves for tens of thousands of years in an arid country leads me to believe
that a particular philosophy underpins sustainable living. As a manager at
Uluru Kata National Park for three years I had the pleasure of working with Anangu, (the traditional Indigenous
land owners) and the same Pitjantjatjara speaking people I grew up amongst in the desert. This provided an
opportunity to have a hands-on role in managing one of Australia’s iconic landscapes and learning from the
Traditional Owners.
For the past five years I have managed renewable energy development programs for the Australian government
and my journey continues both in providing opportunities to learn from, and to apply past lessons in looking for
solutions to climate change. As an advisor to Terra
Endeavours I am also involved with rural communities in developing regions of the
world to assist in overcoming their severe economic & environmental challenges.
I believe the wise management of biomass for gasification, and as means of generating useful
energy is sustainable and renewable.
Teaching
Online, Universal Class - Climate Change
Online, Universal Class - Introduction To Australian Archaeology
Education
BA Archaeology/Palaeanthropology, University of New England, Australia
Professional Membership
Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand
Australian Institute of Emergency Services
Australian Institute of Energy
Australian Institute of Project Management
Outstanding Academic Achievement – 2003 Golden Key International Honour Society
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