
Earlier today, I enjoyed taking a Willy Wonka esque tour of a climate tech R&D lab pioneering low cost means of synthesizing methane from the air. More than just the name of a company and a super intriguing tech tree, terraforming offers a different framing for climate action. California will have a governor's race next year and it should be noted the world is losing "world war zero" right now. We need bold fresh pioneering ideas!
The terraforming of Earth is already happening. Not by astronauts or grand science fiction style design, but by the slow and relentless churn of our own making. The air chemistry changes, the seas rise, the seasons slip from rhythm. We have become a geological force without a guiding story. The question now is not whether the Earth will be reshaped, but whether it will remain a home fit for human life.
California, perched at the edge of a continent and a civilization, has always been a laboratory for what comes next. Here, the human imagination has a habit of leaping ahead of the world and then spending the next few decades trying to catch up. The Gold Rush. The motion picture. The semiconductor. Each began as a speculative frontier before settling into the soil of everyday life. Now the great frontier before us is planetary. The work of terraforming must turn inward, toward repairing the very ground we stand on.
We already have the tools. The price of sunlight has fallen so low that it has become the cheapest form of energy in human history. The desert sun could power the entire world if we let it. And hydrocarbons, so long cast as the villain, still have their place. The problem has never been in their use, but in their origin. When we mine carbon from the geological vault and burn it into the air, we collide the biosphere with forces that normally operate on geologic time scale. Pulling methane from the air avoids that foundational problem.
Moreover California’s share of global emissions is roughly two percent. On its own, the state cannot reverse global warming. The only way to make a difference is to live in such a way that others want to follow. To pioneer a path that others choose freely, not because they are forced to but because it makes economic sense and feels right. That is the art of leadership California must relearn.
And yet, even as technology races ahead, the spirit of possibility slows in the sludge of forms, permits, and rules. To connect a solar panel, to build a house, to restore a stream, one must first wade through an administrative bog. What was meant to protect has ossified into paralysis. The institutions of the nineteenth century remain largely intact, overlaid with layers of good intentions that now weigh down the living. It is a strange thing to be a land of dreamers and yet so bound in paperwork.
The real work of terraforming is not only ecological but civic. It is the call to channel California’s pioneering energy into the design of new protocols for how we decide where, what, when and how to build. Hollywood, Silicon Valley, and the clean tech revolution each arose from fresh ways of organizing human creativity. Our next revolution must do the same for public life. California’s private imagination has long outpaced its public machinery because the latter still runs on brittle hierarchies and paperwork rather than living protocols of collaboration.
California's institutions were built for a sparsely populated agrarian state of less than a million, and have barely evolved since the nineteenth century. The Constitutional Revision Commission of the 1990s warned that California still operates through a maze of 7,000 local governments, 15,000 elected officials, and countless single-purpose agencies. What was once a frontier has become a fence. We have a right to be frustrated but not really surprised that our permitting and too many other mission critical processes for decarbonization have turned into kafka-esque farces.
To heal that divide, we must craft civic processes that evolve as quickly as our tools, ones that invite participation, distribute trust, and learn from feedback. The frontier now lies not in a single invention but in the invisible agreements that let invention flourish. Institutions, like ecosystems, thrive when their protocols are alive.
California’s calling is not to withdraw from the world but to prototype its renewal. To show that abundance and restraint can coexist, that a society can use energy without burning its future. The path forward will not be paved by decree or mapped in a report. It will grow from thousands of local experiments, from builders and farmers and dreamers who refuse to give up on this place.
The old terraforming was accidental, extractive, blind. The new must be deliberate, regenerative, full of care. We have altered the face of the Earth. Now we must (re)learn how to tend it. Before its too late.
The cover photo is from the movie Gattaca. Not saving anything for the swim back feels like an increasingly apropos framing as I ponder the world I want my kids to grow up in.
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Exploring the urgent need for California to reimagine its climate actions, @patwater takes readers through cutting-edge research into synthesizing methane from air—a vital step toward eco-progression. Highlighting California’s entrepreneurial spirit, the discussion emphasizes the collaborative overhaul of civic processes to design an eco-aware future, blending tech innovation with situational identity. It's a powerful reminder: new methods for solar energy and carbon use can inspire broader resilience, echoing the call to protect our planet with intention and care.