Author: Grist – the Latest from Grist

  • Prices vs. contracts: Why good CO2 policy needs complex financial markets

    by Sean Casten.

    Economic theory is predicated on the thesis that if supply and demand are allowed to freely set the price for a given item, rational capital allocation (and a host of other social benefits) will follow.  Much of public policy is predicated on the truth of that thsis. But there’s a problem with the thesis: price alone isn’t sufficient.

    A market that provides nothing more than a spot price for a
    given commodity is only a market in name. To have a real market of the kind that brings about all the good things
    that economic theory describes, we need a much richer, more complex suite of
    transactions. In particular—and especially for capital-intensive industries—the length of a contract can be as or more important than the price.  Tell me that widgets are selling for 15 cents
    each 10 minutes from now and the only decision I can make is whether to buy,
    sell or hold my stock of widgets. Tell
    me on the other hand that I can execute a 30 year contract for widgets at 10
    cents each and I might just build a widget factory. Between those two extremes lies a tremendous
    amount of financial sophistication that policy makers too often fail to appreciate.

    Of African food and california power markets

    Perhaps the best evidence that price alone isn’t sufficient
    comes from places where that argument has spectacularly failed. In Roger Thurow and Scott Kilman’s excellent book
    Enough,”
    they outline how the wholesale replacement of government subsidies with
    price-only markets led to the waves of mass starvation in Africa in the
    1980s. Closer to home, the deregulation
    of California power markets begat the California power crisis. In both instances, the creation of a price
    signal was followed shortly thereafter by a shortage
    of supply
    . A spot price is a
    necessary precondition for a functioning market, but clearly it is not
    sufficient. 

    The common cause in Africa and California was the absence of
    liquid, sophisticated capital markets. The
    Chicago Board of Trade did not magically appear, fully formed the first day a
    Wisconsin wheat farmer pulled his barge down Lake Michigan. Similarly, when African farmers suddenly had
    to sell grain at a market rate come harvest time, they didn’t have the benefit
    of futures contracts, swaps and puts to hedge their risk. Rather, they had a commodity to sell at the
    same time that all their competitors had the same commodity to sell. Supply shot up, price collapsed and the next
    season the farmers responded (perfectly rationally) by growing less food. In California, generators realized that they
    earned a lot more for their power on hot days, to the extent that it was in
    their economic interest to hoard fuel and withhold power supplies in advance of
    a heat wave.

    In both cases, the presence of a price signal led to “economically-rational”
    behavior, and yet that behavior ran exactly contrary to the social benefits
    that economically-informed policy makers predicted. The
    common cause was the immaturity of capital markets, which were not deep enough
    to get beyond the immediate short term buy/sell decision. In a more sophisticated market, Africans have
    granaries, silos, and futures contracts, and Californians have short-sellers and
    other financial arbitrageurs to limit the market power of a small number of
    generators. But that sophistication does
    not come overnight. 

    Lessons for the U.S. power market

    When U.S. power markets deregulated in the late 1990s, there
    was a temporary construction boom in natural gas power plants by a number of
    companies who grossly misjudged the pace of further deregulation.  Most of those companies ended up in
    bankruptcy. Since then, virtually no new
    power assets have been built in response to wholesale electricity market
    signals—for the simple reason that wholesale markets haven’t provided a power
    price or contract tenure sufficient to attract capital.

    Some say we shouldn’t doubt market omniscience, and that the
    failure to build new power plants proves that we don’t need them. The problem with that argument is that we
    have seen new generation built during that period external to deregulated markets. Regulated utilities have continued to make investments subject to utility
    commission approval. That approval
    effectively provides (very) long-dated contract for any power they produce at
    prices that are guaranteed to be high enough to recover all operating costs and
    capital. There has been a concurrent
    boom in wind turbine construction, driven by a combination of wind-specific tax
    subsidies and wind-specific RPS contracts, both of which combine to provide
    long-dated contracts for power, provided that it comes from wind. In both cases, these assets are procuring
    long-term contracts at prices that are well above clearing prices in wholesale
    power markets, distorting markets even as they are bypassed.

    Again, Africa offers a parallel. U.S. food aid has depressed prices in African
    food markets, slowing the maturation of the very markets that are required to
    make Africa self-sufficient, and increasing the continent’s dependence on
    further food aid. The deployment of
    extra-market generation in U.S. power markets is comparably slowing the
    maturation of U.S. power markets, making it ever harder to break free of our
    antiquated, top-down regulatory paradigm.

    Lessons for CO2 markets

    So is market efficiency predicated on a 20-year wait for
    sophisticated markets? Not necessarily—and Kyoto-compliant CO2 markets are a noteworthy exception. They are about as old as U.S. electric markets,
    but are vastly more sophisticated. I can
    lock in a 15 year strip for CO2 sales in a CDM-compliant country today that
    gives me price certainty, and even gives me a buyer who is willing to take the
    post-2012 regulatory risk after Kyoto expires. On just about all relevant measures, these markets are deeper, more
    robust and more sophisticated than U.S. electric markets. How come?

    My guess is that it has something to do with the fact that
    these markets were created from whole cloth. There is no equivalent to the commission-sanctioned power plant in Kyoto
    that gets built outside of the market but affects prices within the
    market. Regulated parties have to meet
    in a single market and that single market became the magnet for capital. While far from perfect, good things have
    largely followed.

    Meanwhile in the U.S., we are in the midst of a large and
    understandable backlash against complex financial markets. Without question, there is a need for greater
    regulation and oversight of financial instruments. However, we cross a line when we ban their
    use—and we should be very careful about efforts mooted to do so in current
    CO2 policy proposals. That ban makes for
    a good populist sound-bite, but only amongst those who don’t understand what
    those “complex financial instruments” do. If we want people to invest in capital to reduce CO2, we need to give
    them a way to enter into long-dated contracts for CO2 reduction at firm prices. A spot market for CO2 doesn’t provide that
    financial product—but a vibrant participation in that market by
    financially-sophisticated players will. That means hedges, swaps, collars, puts, and—dare I say it?—derivatives. Some financial institutions
    will make a lot of money on those transactions and others will lose. Such is the nature of a functioning financial
    market that prices and allocates risk through the system. And while we absolutely need a regulator to
    ensure that those booms and busts don’t put the functioning of the market at
    risk, we cannot forget that the purpose of a CO2 market is, first and foremost,
    to reduce CO2 emissions. That in turn
    will require capital investments and the long-dated contracts necessary to
    bring that investment forward. Price
    alone won’t cut it.

    Related Links:

    Michael Pollan chronicles rise of the food movement(s)

    Kerry-Lieberman climate bill: The details

    Cap-and-dividend: the worst possible way to regulate GHG emissions






  • A video smorgasbord of sustainable-food speakers

    by Bonnie Azab Powell

    How we let our biology end up in the hands of Nestlé and Unilever and General Foods, we can leave to cultural historians to figure out, But we know now that in order to take back the ownership and responsibility for our health, and the biological integrity of our oceans and our land, we have to take back our mouths.…and take back our taste buds from those who would use them to accumulate financial capital and return it to those who create biological and social capital—away from people who steal the future and to those who heal the future.
    —Paul Hawken, at the 2010 Sustainable Foods Institute

    Last week the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Sustainable Foods Institute, the invitation-only portion of its annual Cooking For Solutions conference, brought together food and environmental journalists—including Grist’s Tom Philpott—with scientific experts, sustainability-minded chefs, nonfiction authors, and others. In a two-day series of panels, they discussed the Gulf oil spill and the generally pitiable state of the ocean’s health, as well as sustainable aquaculture and agriculture practices and genetically engineered seeds. They also practiced a special kind of conference doublethink: nibbling on giant cookies while decrying the obesity epidemic and snacking on seafood—Green List only, of course—under the accusatory eyes of the aquarium’s denizens.

    Sample the conference’s best soundbites via this Cooking Up a Story highlights reel, which includes speakers Paul Hawken, nutritionist Marion Nestle, chef Rick Bayless, and the event’s most controversial panelist, UC Davis plant pathology professor Pamela Ronald, coauthor of Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetic and the Future of Food:

    Related Links:

    Biochar – probably not going to save the world after all

    Robert Redford and green groups tell Obama to step up on Gulf oil leak

    Whether bikers should wait at red lights and more on transportation ethics






  • BP gears up for ‘top kill’ to plug oil leak, despite doubts

    by Agence France-Presse

    WASHINGTON – British oil giant BP scrambled Tuesday to test the use of a “top kill” to plug up an undersea well spewing oil into the Gulf of Mexico, but admitted it was uncertain the method would work or even be used at all.

    The top-kill method involves pumping heavy drilling mud down the ruptured well at high pressure so that the mud will overcome the flow of oil and gas coming up the well, and ultimately “kill” it. Although top kills have been successfully carried out all over the world, trying to plug a well 5,000 feet below the surface of the sea would be a first, giving rise to doubts it will work.

    BP CEO Tony Hayward downplayed the likelihood that the desperate effort will succeed in actually sealing the pipe, which is spewing hundreds of thousands of gallons of crude into the Gulf each day.  “It has never been done in 5,000 feet of water,” he told reporters on Monday. “If it was on land we would have a very high confidence of success, but because it’s in 5,000 feet of water, we need to be realistic about the issues around operating in a mile of water. We rate the probability of the success somewhere between 60 percent and 70 percent.”

    BP Senior Vice President Kent Wells said the company was uncertain it would go ahead with the procedure at all.

    The make-or-break top kill is supposed to get underway shortly after dawn on Wednesday using robotic submarines on the seabed. BP had hoped to try a top kill earlier, but needed more time to get equipment into place and test it.

    “Over the next day or so, we’ll have ourselves in place to do our diagnostic phase. That could take 12 to 24 hours, although issues could crop up that could further delay that,” Wells told a news conference.

    “When the actual kill might go forward, the earliest might be tomorrow and that could extend on from there.”

    Information gathered in the diagnostics phase will help BP understand the pressure levels on a broken blow-out preventer, and the integrity of the casing, well-bore, and other components of the busted well. If the diagnostics show it is safe to proceed, it would take anywhere from half a day to “a couple of days to do it,” said Wells.

    In an earlier press conference, BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles said the procedure would take place on Wednesday. “Initially we’ll start with just pumping mud and see if we can outrun the well. Can we pump fast enough to ultimately kill the well?” he said. “We want to avoid putting bridging agents in there that would plug up a line we didn’t want to plug up, but we may need to do that,” he said.

    Even as they were keeping their fingers crossed that the top kill will succeed, officials were readying backup plans, although several might not be fully operational for several months, officials said. Suttles said that if the top kill fails, relief wells are being drilled to divert the flow and allow the leaking well to be sealed. These will not be ready until August at the earliest, however, meaning tens of millions more barrels of crude could stream into the Gulf.

    BP engineers also are working on a “junk shot,” which involves injecting assorted debris into the well to clog it up. Another backup plan would entail lowering a new blowout preventer—a backup safety device—on top of one that failed in an earlier attempt shut off the oil flow.

    The company might also remove a riser at the top of the blow-out preventer to create a surface on which to lower a containment dome. The dome would be sealed in place, not to try to encapsulate the oil but to prevent ice-like hydrates from forming when cold sea water mixes with natural gas. Hydrates caused the failure of BP’s first attempt to stop the massive oil leak by lowering a “top hat” onto it.

    How bad is it?

    Asked on Tuesday whether the Gulf spill is America’s worst, Carol Browner, the top White House advisor on energy and environmental matters, told ABC TV, “I don’t think there’s any doubt, unfortunately.”

    Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) has said he would like to build berms or islands that would provide an outer ring of protection to the coastline against oil advancing toward the state’s coastline, but acknowledged that these could not be put in place in less than six to nine months.

    Fresh waves of crude oil continually sweep onto Gulf of Mexico shores, clogging fragile Louisiana wetlands, coating helpless sea birds in a layer of thick crude, and wreaking havoc with the local economy despite on the Gulf for its livelihood.

    Meanwhile, political fallout from the massive oil spill mounted in Washington, with a new round of hearings into the growing disaster.

    There is growing frustration not only at BP’s lack of success in capping the leak, but at the fact that federal officials also have proven powerless in shutting down the oil flow.

    U.S. Coast Guard chief Thad Allen, speaking to reporters at the White House Monday, conceded that the U.S. government lacked the expertise and equipment needed to stop the leak 5,000 feet under water, and defended BP’s efforts so far. “They’re exhausting every technical means possible to deal with that leak,” he insisted.

    BP has intensified its PR offensive, taking out ads in major U.S. newspapers and pledging up to $500 million to study the impact of the spill.

    Meanwhile, Hayward vowed to do everything possible to seal the leak and make residents of the soiled region whole.

    “I feel devastated by that, absolutely gutted. What I can tell you is that we are here for the long haul. We are going to clean every drop of oil off the shore,” the BP executive said.

    Related Links:

    The 7 dumbest things in BP’s spill response plan

    The gulf oil spill in video

    Is the Gulf oil spill spinning out of control?






  • Should we prefer investing in renewable energy to cleaning up the dirty stuff?

    by David Roberts

    A couple weeks ago, Michael Levi at the Council for Foreign Relations (one of the best energy analysts out there; bookmark his blog) wrote a post called “In Defense of CCS.” (For non-nerds: CCS is carbon capture and sequestration.) I’ve done plenty of bashing of CCS, so I read it with interest. It is structured as a fisking of a recent anti-CCS op-ed in the NYT. One of the arguments he debunks, however, deserves a closer look:

    “Carbon dioxide is a worthless waste product, so taxpayers would likely end up shouldering most of the cost. …”

    If you have no interest in dealing with greenhouse gas emissions, then this argument kills CCS. If greenhouse gas emissions are an issue—and that’s the only reason anyone is talking about CCS—then this completely misses the point. It will cost money to reduce emissions. CCS may be too expensive, in which case people will need to focus on other options. It may be relatively cheap, in which case it will be the way to go. The fact that it costs more than zero tells you almost nothing.

    In one sense Levi is obviously right: We’ll have to spend money to reduce emissions, and we’ll probably want to choose the least expensive options, whatever they turn out to be. But I also think he dismisses the argument too quickly. There’s something there, an attempt to capture an important difference between investing in CCS and investing in renewable energy.

    Here’s one way of putting it: Every dollar spent on CCS makes coal power more expensive, while every dollar spent on renewables makes clean power cheaper. A CCS facility is attached to a coal plant as a “parasitic load.” Its net effect is to siphon power away from the plant, reducing its fuel efficiency by about a third. And for what? To comply with environmental regulations, by capturing and disposing of a worthless waste product. That’s deadweight cost.

    That’s been the history of coal in the U.S. since the 1970s (a process the industry has fought tooth and nail): Environmental standards rise and a larger proportion of investment dollars are redirected from generating power to cleaning up mess. Mandates for CCS will accelerate that trend with a vengeance, as will higher upcoming standards for mercury, NOX, and coal ash. As coal reserves become deeper, dirtier, and harder to get to (like we’re seeing with oil), demand rises (particularly in emerging economies), and capital costs like concrete and steel rise, inputs will grow dirtier and more expensive while the outputs get cleaner … and more expensive. Particularly as the old plants of the ‘70s are phased out, coal power is on an inexorable march upward in price.

    Renewable energy faces roughly a mirror-image situation. Right now it’s just beginning to scale up, while dozens of old, dirty, fully amortized coal plants have been cranking harder and harder for decades. But every dollar invested in renewables not only generates power but makes the next dollar go farther through innovation and economies of scale. It puts in place energy infrastructure that will some day be producing free American power. Fuel costs will be zero, forever, and per-mwh costs are marching downward. These are benefits private actors will be eager to claim instead of costs they are eager to externalize.

    So Levi is right: We’re going to have to spend a ton of money to reduce emissions over the next few decades. But all investments in emission reduction are not equal. Some dollars build new industries and jobs—a new future—while some just clean up the messes of the past. It’s not crazy to prefer the former.

    Related Links:

    Disaster in east Tennessee

    Coal’s dirty secret

    Underground Green Economy Employing Millions






  • Is the Gulf oil spill spinning out of control?

    by Randy Rieland

    Photo: The White House

    Top Hat, Top Kill, Junk Shot, Enough Already. I don’t know
    about you but it sure feels like nobody’s going to stop this leak. Even BP CEO
    and chief spinmeister Tony Hayward is lowering expectations. This mess is officially
    out of control.

    “Plug
    the damn hole”

    Presidents don’t do impotence—usually. But while
    BP pipes spew non-stop on webcams, President Obama reduced to sending Cabinet
    members to the scene where they hold daily press briefings to explain what BP
    is (or is not) doing. Should we be surprised then at Obama’s “Plug the damn
    hole” outburst at a recent White House meeting

    In his Washington
    Post
    blog
    Joel Achenbach calls BP the ballerina and the federal government the Stage
    Mom. But here’s an alt analogy: BP is the teen learning to drive and the
    government is the parent in the front seat. Only he doesn’t know how to drive
    either.

    They got nothin’

    The speculation in Washington is that if BP can’t
    pull off its “top kill” gambit tomorrow, the White House will need to do something dramatic, like take over.

    The feds do have the authority. But what would they do if they took charge of
    the unstoppable spill? The government’s
    top man in the field, Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen, flat out concedes that
    the feds are out of their league-technically-when it comes to plugging the
    damn hole
    .

    Got
    any ideas? 

    Andrew Revkin, in his Dot Earth blog in the New York Times, wants a swat team, of
    gung-ho geologists and engineers
    . David Gergen, writing for CNN, wants to rally
    the country’s best and brightest to brainstorm a solution

    Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) wants to send in the troops.
    Let the U.S. military take over the cleanup operation

    Screw
    the army, we want Bruce Willis!

    There is one other option out there, a dark option that
    BP wants nothing to do with. Nuclear weapons. Hey, we’re serious here,
    people! The Soviet Union has used nukes four times in the past to cap leaking
    oil and gas wells. Sure it sounds crazy, but according to Russian writer
    Vladimir Lagovsky
    , the explosion “compresses the
    rock and squeezes the channel shut.”   

    Of course, resorting to nukes could be a tough call
    for a Nobel Peace Prize winner, notes Christopher Brownfield, writing in The Daily Beast.

     … using nuclear weapons, even for peaceful purposes, would be
    problematic for a president who stood in Prague and declared that the world
    should rid itself of such devices. If President Obama were to use a nuke to
    close this well, he would give other states an excuse to seek nuclear weapons
    of their own.

    Oh, and by the way your poll numbers suck

    Surprise, surprise. More than half the
    people surveyed in the latest CNN poll are unhappy with the way Obama is handling the Gulf disaster.

    Mr. President, plug that damn hole.

     

     

    Related Links:

    The 7 dumbest things in BP’s spill response plan

    The gulf oil spill in video

    BP gears up for ‘top kill’ to plug oil leak, despite doubts






  • In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    The New Yorker‘s Elizabeth Kolbert tells
    how
    the 1968 Unocal oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, Calif.,
    spurred public outrage that prompted Congress and President Nixon to pass the National
    Environmental Policy Act and the Clean Air Act-cornerstones of American
    environmental law—and create the EPA.

    “BP’s Deepwater Horizon
    spill makes the Santa Barbara spill look like a puddle,” says Kolbert, yet it
    has not thus far jolted the nation into doing much of anything about its
    dependency on oil. She concludes with a call to action:

    The President needs to set higher standards-for his
    Administration, for Congress, and for the country. Earlier this month, an
    energy bill was finally unveiled in the Senate. It is deeply flawed: for a
    start, it would increase the incentives for offshore drilling, and preëmpt the
    E.P.A.‘s ability to enforce parts of the Clean Air Act. Obama should return to
    the Gulf and, against the backdrop of the grotesque orange slick, explain to
    the public why he wants more ambitious legislation. Then he should spend the
    summer working to get an energy bill passed. He’s not going to get a better
    opportunity-or so, at least, we have to hope.

    Is there any good reason
    why President Obama, Congress, and the nation shouldn’t spend the summer figuring out an energy-reform plan that
    would get us started in replacing oil and coal with clean, sustainable energy
    sources? The Gulf leak could continue gushing all summer.  Cleaning up Gulf marshlands, beaches,
    fisheries, and underwater habitats will certainly continue long past the summer-and
    may
    be impossible to finish completely
    .

    I know the president is
    supposedly worried about “owning” the oil leak-better if it remains BP’s
    problem. I know Congress is expected to spend the summer finishing finance
    reform (let’s hope), arguing about Elena Kagan, and gearing up for the fall
    midterm elections. I know the American people are supposedly too fickle and
    distractible to focus for long on anything this difficult. But I don’t buy it.
    The energy crisis should trump all of this.

     

    Related Links:

    Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism

    U.N. study calls for economic changes to save biodiversity






  • Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    by Ashley Braun

    streetgiantIf you want to do something about the Gulf oil spill and you’re one of those people who likes to wear their heart on their sleeve, try this on for size: a commemorative T-shirt of BP’s legacy in the Gulf of Mexico.

    You’ll be giving the shirt off your back with every purchase, because all of your $25 will be donated to “charities involved in cleaning, preserving, and rescuing the gulf and its animals.” We’re assuming they don’t mean BP.

    Via League of Conservation Voters’ “Really? Seriously?” blog.

    ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

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    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism

    Palin critique latest twist in BP slop






  • Conservation legend Russell Train to Senate: Protect the Clean Air Act

    by David Roberts

    Russell E. TrainThe legendary Russell Train was, among many other things, the second administrator of the EPA, serving from 1973-1977 under Nixon and Ford. He was instrumental in making environmental protection a top-line item on the presidential agenda. Later he went on become president of the World Wildlife Fund and in 1991 was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his work on conservation. Train is now 90 years old, but he’s still involved in current debates and still sharp as a tack.

    Today he sent a letter to the Senate urging it to reject Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s effort to gut the Clean Air Act by overturning its endangerment finding on greenhouse gases. His defense of the EPA and its Clean Air Act authority is one of the most informed and eloquent I’ve read. Here it is:

    ———

    Dear Senators Reid and McConnell:

    I am writing as former EPA Administrator under the Nixon and Ford Administrations to urge the Senate to oppose any legislative proposals that would undermine the Clean Air Act. In particular, I ask the Senate to reject the Resolution of Disapproval offered by Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska (S.J.Res.26), which would prevent the EPA from acting on that agency’s endangerment finding and the cause or contribute findings for greenhouse gases.

    For 40 years, the Clean Air Act has protected the health and welfare of the American people, saving hundreds of thousands of lives while vastly improving the quality of the air we breathe. The economic benefits provided by the Act have exceeded its costs by between 10 to 100 times over.

    Despite the law’s impressive track record, S.J.Res.26 would rollback Clean Air Act protections and prevent the EPA from regulating greenhouse gas emissions, notwithstanding the agency’s scientific determination that these pollutants endanger human health and welfare. If passed, this resolution would fundamentally undermine the Clean Air Act, overturning science in favor of political considerations.

    Supporters of S.J.Res.26 argue that Congress did not mean to regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act. This argument is inconsistent with the history of the law as it has been applied for the past 40 years and misconstrues the original intentions of Congress. Precisely because existing knowledge was so limited at the time, Congress broadly defined the term “air pollutant” and relied on the experts at EPA to evaluate individual pollutants. Congress also clearly established that the sole criterion triggering EPA action was to be a scientific one: whether a pollutant “may reasonably be anticipated to endanger” human health or welfare.

    In my own tenure as EPA Administrator, our most pressing challenge was reducing airborne lead pollution from the burning of leaded gasoline in motor vehicles. Like greenhouse gas pollutants, airborne lead was nowhere specifically addressed in the Clean Air Act. However, the scientific evidence strongly suggested that it was resulting in severe health effects, particularly in children. Under the law, the EPA was compelled to issue an “endangerment finding”, which established a risk to human health or welfare and obligated the agency to begin regulating lead in automobiles.

    In 1973, I adopted health-based standards to reduce airborne lead levels by more than half in five years. I did this in spite of some lingering scientific uncertainty and over the strong objections of industry. In 1975, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld my decision, arguing that the law “would seem to demand that regulatory action precede, and, optimally, prevent, the perceived threat.”

    In 1977, Congress itself explicitly endorsed this reasoning when it amended the Clean Air Act, emphasizing “the Administrator’s duty to assess risks rather than wait for proof of actual harm” and broadening the criteria for action under the law from “will endanger [human health or welfare]” to “may reasonably be anticipated to endanger”. The intention of Congress was clear: to empower the EPA to respond to threats that had not yet arisen or had yet to be perceived. This is precisely what the EPA is doing today in acting to regulate greenhouse gas pollutants.

    In its 2007 ruling, Massachusetts v. EPA, the Supreme Court affirmed the EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gases, declaring that these emissions “fit well within” the Clean Air Act’s definition of an “air pollutant”. The subsequent endangerment finding, based on the conclusions of scientists in both the Obama and George W. Bush Administrations, determined that greenhouse gases endanger human health or welfare and must therefore be regulated under the law.

    In executing her responsibilities, the current Administrator appears to have taken a measured approach and demonstrated a sensitivity to economic concerns, proposing a schedule under which regulations would not kick in until 2011 and then only for the largest and dirtiest polluters. Additional permitting requirements would not come into play before 2016, giving the Senate ample time to address the issue through legislation.

    It was not until 1990 that Congress took legislative action to ban lead in gasoline, nearly 20 years after the EPA first recognized the danger it posed and took steps to begin regulating it. Because of the Clean Air Act, the EPA saved many more lives than would otherwise have been the case. In other words, the Act worked just as Congress had intended. S.J.Res.26 would reject this science-based decision-making process and undermine a law that has successfully protected Americans for four decades.

    The country would be better served if, rather than attempting to fix what is not broken, the Senate instead focused its energies on finalizing legislation to limit greenhouse gas pollutants and move the United States towards cleaner energy sources. As part of these efforts, the Senate should retain the essential tools provided by the Clean Air Act.

    Certainly, the Senate should oppose any proposals to undermine the essential protections that the Clean Air Act provides. Such proposals are driven not by science but by political considerations – to stall action on an emerging threat and shield elected officials from having to make difficult but necessary decisions. But as Congress itself has made clear, the Clean Air Act was not written to protect politicians; it was written to protect the American people.

    I urge the Senate to reject S.J.Res.26 and any other legislation that would weaken the Clean Air Act or curtail the authority of the EPA to implement its provisions.

    Sincerely,

    Russell E. Train
    EPA Administrator, 1973-1977

    Related Links:

    Coal’s dirty secret

    Battle of the carbon titans

    Big Oil’s friends on Capitol Hill block spill liability increase






  • Breaking Through Concrete: Day 1—Seattle to Talent, Ore.

    by David Hanson

    The Breaking Through Concrete bus on the way to Oregon.(Michael Hanson photos)

     

    Breaking Through Concrete team(Michael Hanson)The Breaking Through Concrete team—David Hanson, Michael Hanson, Charles Hoxie, and Edwin Marty—is taking a 21st century road trip to document the
    American urban farm movement. Driving across
    the country and back in a biodiesel-fueled, Internet-enabled short bus they’ve nicknamed Lewis
    Lewis, they’ll
    visit 14 diverse projects that are, in distinct ways,
    transforming our built environments and creating jobs, training
    opportunities, local economies, and healthy food in our nation’s
    biggest cities. Along the way, David will post stories for Grist (and for one of the team’s sponsors, WHYHunger), illustrated by
    his and Michael’s stunning images—material that will ultimately be collected
    into a
    book—and Charles’ short video snippets.

     

    A bottle of Korbel’s christened
    the front right bumper of Lewis Lewis last Tuesday night in Seattle. We rolled
    out Wednesday morning, picked up five pounds of farm-direct Sumatra beans from
    our friends and sponsors at Caffe Vita, and hit I-5.

    Flipped the switch to veggie
    grease south of town and ran on the waste fry-juice for over 370 miles. It
    doesn’t smell nearly as bad as they say, and Lewis Lewis ran smooth as butter.

    Pulled off in Eugene, Oregon, for
    a visit to Huerto de la Familia,
    a community garden project for low-income Latin American families. Sarah Cantril
    and the Huerto project were recently awarded one of WHY Hunger‘s 10 annual Harry Chapin
    Self-Reliance awards, honoring community-based organizations for innovative and
    sustainable approaches to fighting hunger and poverty.

    Norma and Jesús will have a plot for the
    first time this year. They used to farm in their hometown of San Pablo Tecaleo,
    Mexico. They guess that they pulled 80% of their household food from the farm.
    They came to America last year to find a better life. This year they hope to
    grow 70% of their veggies here at the Churchill Community Garden.

    We slept in Lewis Lewis outside Talent,
    OR.

    Look for the white short bus emblazoned Lewis Lewis, and if you see
    us, come and get some coffee. We want to hear where your food comes from.

     

     

     

     

    Related Links:

    Boost your support for urban agriculture with a rice-growing bra

    Rooftop farming and beekeeping boom in New York

    Cuba’s urban-ag revival offers limited lessons






  • Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism

    by Brad Johnson

    Cross-posted from the Wonk Room.

    On Monday, May 17, MSNBC’s Chris Matthews erupted in anger at the oil disaster unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico. Matthews expressed his rage at the profits BP continues to reap as it fails to fix the growing environmental apocalypse. He also criticized the behavior of the Obama administration, which has let the foreign oil giant control much of the disaster response. Matthews wondered why President Obama doesn’t “nationalize that industry and get the job done” and noted that in the “brutal society” of China, “they execute people for this”:

    It is maddening that our government is — everybody says, “Capitalism is great. Unbridled free enterprise is great.” Look at it!

    The moral hazard created by privatized profit and socialized risk has allowed bankers to cripple our economy and energy companies to destroy our planet. Matthews concluded by calling out the “millions of people in the American right” who deny the threats of climate change and other environmental catastrophes from our dependence on fossil fuels:

    Millions of people in the American right who sit around and say there’s no such thing as mankind destroying his environment through climate change or whatever — there’s an example of what we’re doing right now. We can destroy our habitat on this planet, and it’s the only one we got.

    Watch it:

     

     

    Rush Limbaugh fired back, saying Matthews is “basically asking for a dictator” with his “delusional, deranged” commentary. Matthews has repeated his criticism of BP and the administration, telling Jay Leno on May 21 that President Obama is acting like “a Vatican observer here.” On May 19, Matthews asked for “Harry Truman to come back and do the job” — making reference to Truman’s seizure of the steel industry in 1952.

    Transcript:

    I have a hunch that the reason they don’t want to fix this mess down there is because they would admit who did it if they fix it.  Nobody is down — if this was a nuclear bomb ready to go off, we would be down there.  I am so angry — I don’t even want to talk about it.  I get so mad at this oil company.  Why aren’t they fixing it, first of all?

    You know, I have a suspicion — I will go back to it again — I don’t think they’re doing their best.  I don‘t think there’s — the government is doing its best.  Why doesn’t the president go in there and nationalize that industry and get the job done for the people? There’s a national interest in this, not just a BP interest. We’re letting BP fix a national problem.

    In China, it’s a more brutal society, a more brutal society, Kate, but they execute people for this. Major industrial leaders that commit crimes like this. Failure like this.

    This is a serious, serious problem. It is not over. It continues to destroy a part of our planet, basically. Part of our habitat, our American habitat. And everybody just sits and watches television every night and says, “Oh, well, that‘s interesting.” And these guys are still drawing their paychecks, still making their profits.  The oil industry has been ballooning in profits this year, and nobody is doing anything about it, except — what are we, the Vatican observers now?  We just watch?  It is maddening that our government is — everybody says, “Capitalism is great. Unbridled free enterprise is great.”  Look at it!

    Millions of people in the American right who sit around and say there’s no such thing as mankind destroying his environment through climate change or whatever, there’s an example of what we’re doing right now.  We can destroy our habitat on this planet, and it’s the only one we got.

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    Palin critique latest twist in BP slop






  • U.N. study calls for economic changes to save biodiversity

    by Agence France-Presse

    The Silvereye of Australia. Photo courtesy MichelDignand via FlickrLONDON—A key U.N. report on biodiversity will recommend
    massive economic changes like company fines to help save species and protect
    the natural world, the Guardian reports.

    The study, which
    is due for publication in the summer, will argue that the economic case for
    global action to protect biodiversity is even more powerful than the argument
    for tackling climate change, according to the newspaper.

    The report,
    entitled “The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity” (TEEB), was
    launched by Brussels in 2007 with the support of the U.N. Environment Program,
    after G8 and major emerging economies called for a global study.

    If nature is not
    factored into the global economic system, then the environment will become more
    fragile and exposed to external shocks, placing human lives and the world
    economy in jeopardy, it will argue.

    The TEEB report
    will also recommend that companies are fined and taxed for over-exploitation of
    the natural world, with strict limits imposed on what they can take from the
    environment, according to the paper.

    Alongside
    financial results, businesses and governments should also be asked to provide
    accounts for their use of natural and human resources.

    And communities
    should be paid to preserve natural environments rather than deplete them.

    The Guardian‘s
    report, published on the U.N.‘s International Day for Biological Diversity,
    added that the U.N. will also recommend reforming state subsidies for certain
    industries, like energy, farming, fishing, and transport.

    The TEEB study
    will also warn that one-third of the world’s natural habitats have been damaged
    by humans.

    The total value
    of “natural goods and services” like pollination, medicines, fertile
    soil, clean air, and water will be around 10 and 100 times the cost of saving
    the species and natural habitats which provide them.

    “We need a
    sea change in human thinking and attitudes towards nature,” said Indian
    economist and report author Pavan Sukhdev, cited by the Guardian.

    Sukhdev, head of the U.N. Environment Program’s green economy
    initiative, also appealed for nature to be regarded “not as something to
    be vanquished, conquered, but rather something to be cherished and lived
    within.”

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Electric-car company Tesla gets infusion of cash from Toyota

    10 ways to kick the offshore-oil habit






  • Electric-car company Tesla gets infusion of cash from Toyota

    by Agence France-Presse

    The Tesla Model SNEW YORK—U.S. electric carmaker Tesla Motors is firing
    on all cylinders and gearing up for greater things after partnering with top
    carmaker Toyota.

    On Thursday,
    Toyota announced that it’s taking a $50 million stake in Tesla. Based in Palo Alto, Calif., Tesla has a few
    hundred employees and is expected to go public at some point down the road.

    “The
    announcement is path-breaking and historic,” said University of
    California-Berkley professor Harley Shaiken. “It gives Tesla considerable
    credibility.”

    “Toyota is
    very conservative,” he added, so the announcement is good “for
    investors and Tesla—they can take that to the bank.”

    Toyota’s
    investment in Tesla follows German luxury carmaker Daimler’s stake a year ago
    of “more than 5 percent” in the electric carmaker, a $465 million loan from the U.S. Department of Energy, and
    a $31 million tax break from the state of California.

    Flush with cash,
    Tesla on Thursday announced it bought a closed factory near San Francisco that
    up until last month had housed a joint venture between Toyota and General
    Motors that was churning out Toyota Corolla and Tacoma vehicles, with a
    production potential of 500,000 units per year.

    If Tesla can
    hire the plant’s 4,500 former workers, it would “get their experience, and
    their trouble-shooting capabilities,” in addition to Toyota’s knowhow in
    large volume sales, said Shaiken. The Toyota stake and plant acquisition make
    Tesla’s initial public offering “more likely and significantly more
    valuable,” he added.

    However,
    Edmunds.com auto industry analyst Michelle Krebs warned that Tesla’s eventual
    move to an IPO is still uncertain, especially in such an unpredictable stock
    market that has been falling since the start of the month.

    “They need
    to time [to get the IPO] right with the market,” Krebs said, noting that
    Tesla is not alone in wanting to go public: General Motors and Chrysler came
    back from bankruptcy last year and also intend to sell more of their shares on
    the market.

    According to
    U.S. press reports, Tesla would be the first auto company to go public since
    Ford did so in 1956.

    Founded in 2003
    by South African Elon Musk, a cofounder of online payments giant PayPal, Tesla
    already manufactures the Tesla Roadster, a high-performance sports car that
    sells for more than $100,000 and gets nearly 250 miles on a single charge.

    The company also
    plans to unveil in 2012 a “Model S” five-passenger sedan powered by
    lithium-ion battery packs capable of between 160 and 300 miles per charge, with
    an anticipated base price of around $50,000.

    With Toyota,
    Tesla plans to develop other electric models, hoping to break out of the luxury
    car trade and into mass production.

    In the long
    term, auto industry experts said, the Tesla-Toyota partnership could rival
    other carmakers.

    General Motors
    plans to launch the hybrid Volt, which runs on batteries but also has a
    gasoline motor in case the batteries lose their charge.

    Nissan next year
    hopes to market the all-electric Leaf.

    After
    pioneering hybrid vehicles with the Prius but falling behind in fully electric
    cars, Toyota will now have access to Tesla’s “control system, the
    electronics that control, cool, and manage the battery, and the electric flow
    between the battery and the powertrain,” said Edmunds.com “green
    car” expert John O’Dell. And that’s something Daimler already was after,
    he noted.

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    U.N. study calls for economic changes to save biodiversity

    10 ways to kick the offshore-oil habit






  • Palin critique latest twist in BP slop

    by Randy Rieland

    Photo: WikipediaAlmost five weeks into the BP oil disaster and we’re
    way down the rabbit hole. None other than Sarah “Drill, baby, drill” Palin wondered aloud on Fox News Sunday whether oil company contributions to the Obama
    campaign are to blame for the president “taking so doggone long to get in
    there, dive in there, and grasp the complexity and the potential tragedy that
    we are seeing here in the Gulf of Mexico.” (Obama has definitely enjoyed BP
    cash
    .)
    This whole Gulf mess just makes her long for—wait for it – more on-shore drilling. Like in the Arctic
    National Wildlife Reserve in Alaska
    !

    When
    no means “make me”

    Last
    Thursday, the EPA gave BP 72 hours to quit using that nasty oil dispersant
    Corexit 9500 in favor of other less
    toxic chemicals. Last weekend, BP said no can do. To which the EPA replied: um,
    well, we really need to talk

    I was kidding!

    Remember Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal’s (R) big rail against the
    big government excesses in his official Republican Party response to Obama’s
    first State of the Union address? Yeah, well, that was 18 months ago. Now,
    Jindal is irate that the same big government isn’t moving fast enough to
    stop the brown gunk hitting the Louisiana coast. 

    Ouch

    James Carville, Louisiana native and usually loyal Democratic consultant, blasted the
    “lackadaisical” response from the Obama White House.

    I think they actually believe that
    BP has some kind of a good motivation here. They’re naive! BP is trying to save
    money, save everything they can … Somebody has got to, like, shake them and
    say, ‘These people don’t wish you well! They’re going to take you down!’

    And he didn’t stop there.  

    Seemed like a good idea at the time

    Conservation groups, such as The
    Nature Conservancy and Conservation International, are taking heat for their
    partnerships with BP. In response to questions from Conservancy supporters, Nature
    Conservancy chief exec Mark Tercek posted this on his org’s website:

    Anyone serious about doing conservation in this region must engage these
    companies, so they are not just part of the problem but so they can be part of
    the effort to restore this incredible ecosystem.

    See Joe
    Stephens’ Washington Post story
    .  

    A White House divided

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar vents
    about BP missing “deadline after deadline” with its proposed fixes; White House
    press secretary Robert Gibbs bemoans the oil giant’s “lack of
    transparency
    .” But Coast Guard Commandant Thad
    Allen says that only BP can stop the leak.
    Ultimately, said Allen, “I trust (BP CEO) Tony Hayward.” But should he? Oyl!

     

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism






  • Coal’s dirty secret

    by Sue Sturgis

    The December 2008 impoundment failure at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Kingston plant inundated a nearby community with toxic coal ash.Photo: United Mountain DefenseA special Facing South investigation.

    When a billion gallons of coal ash
    broke loose from a holding pond at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s
    Kingston power plant near Harriman, Tenn. in December 2008, registered
    nurse Penny Dodson was living nearby with her 18-month-old grandson,
    Evyn.

    Like most of her neighbors, Dodson never gave much thought to the
    impoundment until it collapsed, destroying three homes, damaging 42
    others and inundating the nearby Clinch and Emory rivers with the sludgy
    coal waste.

    The Dec. 22 spill blanketed Dodson’s property, but
    TVA assured residents it wasn’t toxic, so she and Evyn stayed put. But a
    week after the disaster, Evyn—who suffers from cerebral palsy—
    became very ill.

    He refused to play or eat, his eyes turned red
    and watery, and he began coughing and wheezing. He eventually landed in
    the hospital, where tests showed his body had high levels of arsenic and
    lead, contaminants in the coal ash. The doctors blamed his troubles on
    airborne ash and advised them to move.

    “I carry guilt because we stayed,”
    Dodson said in
    testimony
    to state lawmakers at a hearing held two months after the
    disaster. “Because I was told that we were going to be safe, and I
    believed them.”

    Evyn Dodson, shown here at the 2009 state hearing on the TVA disaster, suffered serious health problems that doctors blamed on toxic substances in the coal ash that blanketed his family’s property. Still shot from WSMV video of the hearingSince that fateful incident, other energy
    disasters have grabbed headlines: the blast
    at a West Virginia coalmine
    that left 29 miners dead, and an
    explosion on BP’s offshore oil drilling rig
    that killed 11 workers
    and has released millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

    Coal
    ash isn’t receiving as much attention nowadays. But a six-month
    investigation by Facing South finds that it poses a growing threat to
    public health and the environment—even as coal ash remains
    unregulated by the federal government due in large part to political
    pressure from energy companies.

    But the days of coal ash escaping
    the scrutiny of federal regulators are numbered. Earlier this month,
    the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency—after months of delay due to
    maneuvering among the EPA, White House Office of Management and Budget,
    and the politically powerful electric utility industry—took the
    unusual step of releasing
    two different proposals
    for how to regulate coal ash.

    EPA is
    now asking the public to weigh in on the two options during a 90-day
    comment period that will begin once the proposed rules are published in
    the Federal Register. (For a pre-publication version of the rules, click
    here.)
    As EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said when the regulatory options were
    rolled out, “We look forward to the participation and the comments of
    the American people.”

    What happens in the coming months will
    determine whether communities will be protected from the prospect of
    another coal ash disaster like the one that struck eastern Tennessee, as
    well as from less visible but no less dangerous coal ash disasters
    unfolding in communities nationwide.

    Hazards in our midst

    A coal ash spill from another Tennessee Valley Authority plant in Alabama the month after the disaster contaminated Widows Creek.Photo: Hurricane Creekkeeper John WathenWhen coal is burned to produce
    electricity, it leaves behind a variety of wastes—fly ash, bottom
    ash, boiler slag, and more—known collectively by regulators as coal
    combustion waste, or more commonly as coal ash.

    U.S. coal plants
    generate more than 150 million tons of coal ash each year, according to a
    recent Environmental Protection Agency analysis.
    That makes it the second-largest industrial waste stream in the U.S.
    after mining waste.

    Because coal ash is not regulated by the
    federal government, the EPA had never set out to count the number of
    impoundments for disposing of coal ash waste nationwide.

    But
    after the Kingston disaster, the agency launched a search that turned
    up
    a total of 584 impoundments and similar disposal sites at more
    than 200 facilities, mostly power plants.

    Of the more than 580
    impoundments the EPA discovered, it rated the hazard potential of about a
    third of them. Of those, 49 units have been rated as high hazard—
    meaning a failure like the one at Kingston would likely kill people.
    Another 60 units are rated as significant hazards, meaning their failure
    could lead to widespread destruction like the Kingston disaster. Many
    of the communities at greatest risk from hazardous impoundments have higher-than-average
    poverty rates
    .

    These ratings are significant, because
    failures of coal ash impoundments are not rare occurrences:

    In
    July 2002, a
    sinkhole developed
    in an impoundment at the Georgia
    Power/Southern Company’s Plant Bowen
    in Bartow County, Ga., covering
    four acres and reaching 30 feet in depth. The sinkhole released 2.25
    million gallons of a water and coal-ash mix to a tributary of the
    Euharlee Creek; that creek feeds the Etowah River, which provides
    drinking water
    to local communities and habitat
    to imperiled species
    .

    In August 2005, an
    impoundment failed
    at PPL’s Martins Creek power plant in
    Pennsylvania’s Northampton County, sending more than 100 million gallons
    of contaminated water and coal ash into the Delaware River, which provides
    drinking water
    for downstream communities.

    In January 2009
    —less than a month after the catastrophic collapse at the Kingston
    plant—a pipe inside a coal ash impoundment at TVA’s Widows Creek
    plant
    in northeastern Alabama leaked,
    sending as much as 10,000 gallons of coal ash waste into nearby Widows
    Creek, a tributary of the Tennessee River. The intake for Scottsboro,
    Ala.‘s water supply lies
    about 20 miles downstream
    of the spill site.

    Despite the
    clear hazards, many of these coal ash dumps are unregulated not only by
    the federal government—they’re virtually unregulated at the state
    level as well. For example, most states don’t require groundwater
    monitoring and runoff collection at coal ash impoundments, and more than
    half don’t require liners or financial assurances to guarantee the
    owners can pay for cleanup of any contamination that might occur.

    “It’s
    a situation that needs to be fixed,” said attorney Lisa Evans, a former
    EPA official who now works with the environmental law firm
    Earthjustice. “We’re talking about a potential loss of human life.”

    Poisoned
    waters

    Catastrophic collapses like the one
    at the Kingston plant in Tennessee aren’t the only threat posed by
    unregulated coal ash impoundments. Most of the more than 100 known and
    suspected cases of environmental damages caused by coal ash that have
    been documented by the EPA and environmental groups involve contaminants
    from the ash seeping into nearby groundwater and surface water supplies
    from impoundments, which are typically unlined.

    In fact, a
    recent EPA
    risk assessment
    found that people who live near coal ash
    impoundments and drink from wells have as much as a 1 in 50 chance of
    getting cancer due to contamination with arsenic, one of the most common
    and dangerous pollutants in coal ash. The same risk assessment found
    that living near coal ash impoundments also increases the risk of damage
    to the liver, kidneys, lungs and other organs.

    And as a
    consequence of efforts to make burning coal cleaner, new technology to
    collect airborne coal ash from the smokestacks of power plants has
    increased the concentration of toxic contaminants in coal ash,
    heightening its public health and environmental risks.

    The
    dangers of coal ash aren’t just hypothetical—it’s been linked to at
    least 100 cases of toxic contamination across the country. The following
    examples were detailed in a recent
    report
    by Earthjustice and the Environmental Integrity Project:

    At Tampa Electric’s Big Bend Station near Apollo Beach in
    Florida’s Hillsborough County, thallium and manganese leaching from a
    coal ash dump have contaminated off-site groundwater at levels exceeding
    federal drinking water standards, while arsenic has contaminated
    on-site groundwater at levels 11 times above standards.

    At SCE&G’s
    Wateree Station
    in Eastover, S.C., arsenic contaminated groundwater
    at the site at 18 times the federal drinking water standard, according
    to the same report. The contamination has migrated to adjacent property
    and is accumulating in catfish in the nearby Wateree River.

    Selenium discharges from ash impoundments at AEP’s John Amos Plant along the Kanawha River in Winfield, W.Va. have exceeded the facility’s
    permit limits, according to publicly available monitoring data, while
    fish taken from nearby Little Scary Creek have registered selenium
    levels above what the state considers safe for human consumption.
    Exposure to excessive levels of selenium over the short term can cause
    nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, and over time can result in neurological
    effects.

    Arsenic in groundwater beneath Progress Energy’s
    Sutton Steam Plant
    on the Cape Fear River near Wilmington, N.C. has
    been detected at levels as high as 29 times the federal drinking water
    standard and is migrating off-site, according to state monitoring data.
    And Sutton is no exception: An
    independent analysis
    of state data found that every one of 13 coal
    ash impoundments located next to North Carolina power plants owned by
    Progress Energy and Duke Energy that were tested are leaking
    contamination to groundwater.

    Communities can be exposed to the
    hazardous ingredients of coal ash through means other than the water
    supply. At Progress Energy’s Skyland plant near Asheville, N.C.,
    dried-out ash from a poorly managed impoundment blew through the air
    onto a neighboring condominium community, accumulating on residents’
    homes, lawns and cars. A lab
    analysis
    done as part of the state’s investigation into the
    incident found that the material contained highly toxic, cancer-causing
    elements including arsenic, chromium, and radioactive strontium.

    Dry
    coal ash in landfills, as well as the use of coal ash as a substitute
    for fill dirt in construction projects, have also been proven to cause
    environmental damage.

    The health consequences of the public’s
    exposure to coal ash can take years to develop, but in some cases the
    impact has been more acute. For example, leaking coal ash impoundments
    at PPL Montana’s Colstrip power plant in Rosebud County, Mont.
    contaminated a well at a nearby Moose Lodge, where members suffered
    stomach ailments from drinking the water. Fifty-seven Colstrip
    residents, including members of the Moose Lodge, filed a lawsuit against
    the company that was eventually settled
    for $25 million
    .

    “These companies fought every step of the
    way,” plaintiffs attorney Jory Ruggiero said at the time. “You can’t hide the facts when you’re testing wells and
    they’re coming up contaminated.”

    What’s at stake

    These
    growing public health and environmental concerns—along with the
    Kingston disaster in Tennessee—have brought the country to a
    watershed moment in confronting the dangers of coal ash.

    The two
    regulatory alternatives put forward by the EPA this month include stark
    differences. Both proposals would regulate coal ash under the Resource Conservation and
    Recovery Act
    , the primary federal law governing solid waste. But one
    option would regulate it more strictly as a “special waste” under RCRA
    Subtitle C
    , which governs hazardous waste, while the other would
    regulate it less strictly under RCRA
    Subtitle D
    , which applies to ordinary waste. Regulating coal ash
    under RCRA Subtitle C would give EPA clear enforcement authority, while
    placing it under Subtitle D would give EPA the power only to set
    guidelines for managing coal ash, leaving oversight programs to the
    states and enforcement to citizen lawsuits.

    Energy companies have
    lobbied fiercely against treating coal ash as hazardous waste, arguing
    that such an approach would be too costly and would discourage efforts
    to recycle coal ash into other products. Meanwhile, environmental groups
    make the case that coal ash is clearly hazardous and should be treated
    that way under law.

    With the EPA now putting the future of coal
    ash regulation up for public debate, environmental advocates like Scott
    Slesinger, legislative director for the Natural Resources Defense
    Council, say citizens must speak up if they want to avoid another
    tragedy like the one that devastated the lives of Penny and Evyn Dodson
    and their neighbors.

    “The catastrophic failure of the dam in
    Kingston, Tenn. finally got the nation’s attention to regulate toxic
    coal ash,” said Slesinger. “We learned in Kingston, as we recently
    learned in the Gulf, that catastrophic failures associated with dirty
    carbon happen with tragic results.”

    * * *

    TOMORROW:
    Disaster in East Tennessee: It’s been nearly a year and a half since
    the massive TVA coal ash spill. But for communities touched by the spill, it’s an ongoing catastrophe.

    Sue Sturgis is an investigative reporter and
    editorial director of Facing South. This piece is the first installment
    in an in-depth, week-long series on the growing national problem of coal
    ash and the political battle over regulations.

    Related Links:

    Conservation legend Russell Train to Senate: Protect the Clean Air Act

    Love, in the Time of Blasting

    Battle of the carbon titans






  • A taste test of greener milks

    by Lou Bendrick

    Full Circle’s ultra-pasteurized offering, versus small-farm Blue Hill’s raw milk: Which mooved tasters the most?(Photos by Jason Houston)

    Putting aside for a moment
    the dietary arguments against drinking cow’s milk—we’re not calves, it’s
    liquid meat, it’s snot-producing, so hard to digest, etc.—conventional milk
    deserves vilification for many reasons. Conventional dairy’s ethically
    repulsive and planet-reaming process involves more or less torturing cows to
    lactate year-round; pumping their ailing, grain-fed bodies with hormones and
    antibiotics right up until they become hamburger; butchering their anemic
    offspring
    for scallopine and pet food; and, last but not least, polluting our own water
    supplies with both their excrement and agricultural runoff. Oh, wait. That
    wasn’t last. I forgot to mention that conventional milk is trucked hither and
    yon. But don’t take my word for any of this; here’s yet more information on the malevolent
    liquid that complements a slice of chocolate cake so nicely.

    One way that milk lovers
    can sidestep these issues, at least in part, is to buy more sustainable forms
    of milk: certified (or in-spirit) organic and/or local. But if taste is the
    guide, as is so often is the case, is one of these morally better milks more
    delicious than the other? Or are they all just white, taste-neutral beverages?

    I assembled a panel of tasters
    to sample six greener whole milks. Why whole, full-fat milk? Because I
    think it tastes better than low-fat and I’m the decider. That’s why. And before
    you ask, Horizon milk—the organic brand owned by Dean Foods that has the
    biggest market share by far—is conspicuously absent from this tasting
    because it isn’t sold in my local stores and didn’t want to burn tons of fossil
    fuel searching for it.

    Notes: The more time the cow spends on pasture, the more likely the flavor of the
    cow’s milk is to change with the seasons. The milk we tasted last week might,
    at least in some cases, taste very different at other times of year. “Ultra
    pasteurized
    ” refers to milk that has been heated at higher temperatures for
    longer, and has a shelf life of two to three months, and is alas often employed
    for organic milk, which is often shipped farther and is more expensive—and thus
    slower-selling—than conventional milk.

    And now, the results …

    The contenders

    Organic
    Valley Organic whole milk

    Price:
    $4.99 per half gallon
    Eco upside:
    Organic Valley is a farmer-owned cooperative. For this Massachusetts
    panel, that meant we drank a regional milk from New
    England pastures
    , one that’s USDA Certified Organic. Organic Valley says
    its cows are “raised humanely and given certified organic feed—never any
    animal by-products—and our pastures are certified organic.” On the downside:
    Although regional, the milk is still trucked a fair distance and, not having
    visited the farms, who the heck knows how happy the cows are? Certified Organic
    mandates access to pasture, not actual time spent on it.
    Feedback: Tasters
    were all over the map on this ultra-pasteurized milk, which was pure white.
    Comments ranged from “funky tasting” to “smooth and buttery.” Someone said it
    tasted like “raw milk,” with a grassy, moldy flavor. Overall, tasters liked the
    texture, which was described as “totally thick” and as having “legs that stick
    to the glass.” Overall rating: “Pretty good.”

    Jersey dairy cows at High Lawn Farm, in MassachusettsHigh Lawn Farm whole milk
    Price:
    $2.99
    per half gallon
    Eco upside:
    This local milk comes from a herd of pretty happy-seeming Jersey cows*
    from a charming, medium-sized dairy 12 miles from my house. This milk is not certified
    organic but  the cows “feed off
    fresh grass in the summer months, and almost all of their winter feed comes
    straight from our corn and hay fields,” according to High Lawn’s website. The
    farm doesn’t use genetically modified seeds, harmful pesticides, or feed with animal
    byproducts or artificial hormones. Downside: The website also says that the
    farm purchases grains from agribiz villain Cargill to augment the corn and
    alfalfa it grows for both silage and hay.
    Feedback:
    Eww.
    That’s what got blurted out at first sniff. After sipping, tasters were a
    little less sour on this all-white milk, but still deemed it “a little
    synthetic and boring.” “Nothing interesting,” said one taster, dismissively
    pushing his glass away. “The milk of my childhood,” yawned another.

    Full Circle organic whole milk
    Price:
    $3.49 per half gallon
    Eco upside:
    This is my local supermarket chain’s in-store, cost-conscious brand,
    which is USDA Organic. Downside: Where did the milk come from? How far was it
    shipped? Were these cows really content or merely greenwashed milk machines? I
    just don’t know.
    Feedback:
    The
    panel got a bit drunk on this white milk, swooning with comments about the
    “clover in its nose” and its “earthy, creamy” and “sweet” texture. “I like this
    one a lot,” said one, while another said it was akin to drinking “light cream.”
    “This one deserves a cookie,” said one lady, who reached for a Newman-O (adding
    “I’m gonna get me some palm oil”).

    The Organic Cow organic whole milk
    Price:
    $3.79
    per half gallon
    Eco upside:
    This USDA Organic regional milk is sourced from “nearly 100 New
    England family farms.” Downside: New England is a fairly big region, so who
    knows how far the milk was trucked. The Organic Cow website offers, via the Fun
    Facts For Kids page, the bovine bit of trivia that a group of 12 or more cows
    is called a flink. Shockingly, the site does not offer the requisite meet-the-farmer-via-cheery-photo
    montage. However, the carton itself features a profile of a Vermont farmer—who
    appears to be a helluva nice guy—taking a relaxed-looking cow for a leisurely
    walk. Most important, the cow was wearing a bell. And as you know, you can
    never get too much cowbell.
    Feedback:
    Swirling
    and sniffing like a wine enthusiast, one taster noted this ultra-pasteurized
    milk’s “nice grassy nose.” Its flavor, though, left panelists wanting. “We’re
    back to processed flavor,” sighed one man. “Super-homogenized!” said another.
    Texture-wise, a kinder taster allowed for “some creaminess,” whereas another
    found it to be “mouth-coating.”

    Blue Hill Farm’s dairy operation

    Blue Hill Farm whole milk
    Price:
    $4 per half gallon (paid in cash at the farm, no records for the gummint to
    find)
    Eco upside:
    This local, unpasteurized (aka “raw”) milk comes from a picturesque farm
    owned by chef Dan Barber’s Blue Hill restaurant and situated a few miles from
    my house. Disclosure: The farmer is a friend of mine. The flink—15 to be
    precise—of Dutch and Normande Belted ladies hang out on the rolling green pastures
    in the sunshine doing that swishy-tail thing. Downside: There’s a lot of
    controversy around the health and safety of raw milk. Advocates say the un-pasteurized stuff
    is healthier for cows, people and the earth; the FDA and even many greens say it’s
    a health hazard
    that could cause dangerous foodborne illnesses. Grist’s take is somewhat
    in the middle, and the
    Ethicurean has a detailed analysis
    of both the health and illness claims.
    Feedback:
    Unlike
    the other “milky” white milks, Blue Hill’s was yellowish, like eggnog with a darker
    yellow ring. “Smells like a barn,” said one taster suspiciously. After tasting,
    someone hooted, “I love raw milk!”, while another gagged, saying “It tastes
    like I’m licking a cow’s ass.” Yet a third closed his eyes, sipped deeply, and
    confirmed cognitive dissonance theory: “It’s like silage, but I could acquire
    this taste.” The queasy taster, meanwhile, had pushed her chair away from the
    table and was eyeing her glass as if it were full of spiders. “I’m not putting
    that in my mouth again,” she wailed, to which another taster testily countered,
    “This is the only milk my kids will drink.” The wailer then crossed her arms
    while one of her “friends” snickered and made lewd milking gestures into her
    glass. Taste summary: “Very grassy.”

    Stonyfield organic whole milk
    Price:
    $4.49
    per gallon
    Eco upside:
    USDA Organic – but Stonyfield is a Big Organic operation, which means
    that its impacts, both good and bad, are magnified. The company gives
    10 percent of its profits
    to green efforts. Downside: Stonyfield’s milk may
    have been sourced from far away, even abroad,  and who knows, despite the warm-and-fuzzy farmer profiles on
    its website, the cows could be lined up like cordwood at some huge, insensitive
    operation. The site does offer farm webcams, at least one
    of which showed cows that were indoors, not frolicking in the sunshine.
    Feedback:
    This milk also earned mixed comments. The raw-milk lovers sipped it with a mix
    of Anna Wintour-ish disdain and disaffection: “It’s a basic milk,” someone
    sighed. Meanwhile, the raw-milk hater sniffled that it was “pure comfort—happy, cool, and sterile.” Most offered
    neutral comments “It makes me think of those little cartons,” and “a lunchroom
    milk.”

    The bottom line

    On taste alone, Full
    Circle’s ultra-pasteurized, in-store brand won this tasting, a result that will
    surely make the raw milk terroirists irate.
    Advice for dairy drinkers: No matter what you do, bag conventional milk. If you
    can, find a local dairy farmer you trust and let taste be your guide. And if
    you must reach for Big Organic, learn more about your potentially greenwashed
    beverage by checking out the Cornocopia Institute’s dairy
    report and scorecard
    . Lastly, consider drinking from the milk of human
    kindness and cutting back on animal foodstuffs altogether. But when it comes to
    dunking cookies, I think that’s easier said than done. 

     

    *Bovine factoid: Jersey
    cows
    ’ milk is not only naturally high in butterfat but also, according to
    High Lawn’s web authors, the rather smallish cows themselves possess the “most
    beautiful, doe-like face of the entire bovine kingdom.”

    Related Links:

    The first law of cow dynamics

    In Court Case, FDA Takes a Strong Stand Against Unabridged Food and Health Rights

    Is raw milk becoming too popular for its own good?






  • 10 ways to kick the offshore-oil habit

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    One of the most depressing aspects of the Gulf of Mexico oil leak is the idea that we’ve got no
    choice but to rely on offshore drilling and the stomach-turning dangers it
    carries. We know all the
    problems
    with importing oil from petro-dictatorships. Electric cars aren’t
    ready to replace fuel-combustion engines. The only option, political leaders
    tell us, is for Americans to choke down the occasional drilling catastrophe and
    deal with the ugly consequences.

    “Accidents happen,”
    said Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.). “You learn from them and you try not to make
    sure they don’t happen again.”

    “I doubt this is the
    first accident that has happened and I doubt it will be the last,” said
    White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.

    “The reality of it is
    that we will be depending on oil and gas as we transition to a new energy
    future,” Ken Salazar, President Obama’s Interior secretary, told a Senate panel
    last week. “You are not going to turn off the lights of this country or the
    economy by shutting it all down.”

    Is it true that we’ve
    got no alternative?

    The last time lawmakers
    truly freaked out about the problem of our oil dependence—when gas prices
    topped $4 a gallon in the summer of 2008—the Senate Energy Committee called in
    Skip Laitner, director of economic analysis at the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).

    The committee asked
    Laitner what efficiency—the famously unglamorous energy strategy—could do to
    relieve gas prices. He gave them an astonishing figure: It could save 46
    billion barrels of oil. If the U.S. made an all-out investment in energy
    efficiency-cutting energy waste out of vehicles, buildings, the electrical
    grid, and elsewhere in the economy—Laitner believes it could save the energy
    equivalent of 46 billion barrels by 2030.

    Domestic offshore
    drilling produced 537 million barrels a year over the last nine years,
    according to the Minerals Management Service. A full-bore efficiency plan would
    save the equivalent of 85 years of offshore drilling.

    Looking at the
    transportation sector alone, Laitner recommended 10 short-term policies that
    would cut the need for oil. Congress eventually passed one of them-the “cash
    for clunkers” program. Even that could be improved upon: the lax fuel-economy
    standards for new cars meant the trade-in program didn’t save nearly as much
    fuel as it could have

    If you’re tired of dead
    sea turtles
    , oil-coated marshlands, destroyed fisheries, disputes over leak
    rates, political cop-outs, terms like tar balls and junk shots (OK, those are funny), these are for you:

    10 solutions to our oil addiction

    1. A better “cash for clunkers.” Last summer’s popular program
    took hundreds of thousands of low-performing autos off the road, but its low
    standards for the fuel economy of eligible new cars made it more of an
    auto-industry bailout than an environmental boon. A two-year version that gave
    credit for only truly efficient new vehicles (35 mpg or better) would save more
    oil. Congress could pay for it by extending the 1978 gas guzzler tax to
    light trucks and SUVs—it currently applies only to passenger cars.

    2. Emergency funding for endangered mass transit. A chilling 59
    percent
    of public transit networks have cut service or raised fares (or
    both) since January 2009, pushing more commuters into cars. Congress could save
    both oil and jobs by preserving existing bus and rail lines with emergency
    funding.

    3. A national telecommuting and videoconferencing initiative. Encouraging
    employees to work from home and cut back on business travel would cut fuel
    usage, save them money and commuting time, and probably make a lot of them
    happier. Congress could direct federal workers to telecommute and
    videoconference as much as possible. For everyone else, a campaign would help
    make these things more normative and socially acceptable.

    4. Smarter freight movement. Congress could commission a study to
    explore a grab-bag of methods to lighten the impact of trucking and rail and
    jet shipping. “Heavy trucks might save 32 percent of energy use through a
    combination of improved fuel efficiencies, and better coordination to reduce
    empty backhauls and unnecessary travel,” Laitner writes in a journal
    article
    [PDF] Train design that reduces aerodynamic drag and collects
    energy from braking (as a Prius does) could produce more savings.

    5. Smarter land use. Congress could direct (and help fund) local
    government efforts to update zoning and land-use regulations in ways that encourage compact development compatible
    with transit service and friendly to walkers and bikers. (Obama’s Partnership
    for Sustainable Communities
    is already taking steps in this direction.)

    6. Smarter travel through IT. By equipping its trucks with directional
    software that helps drivers avoid left-hand turns, UPS
    saved
    3 million gallons of fuel in a year. If the nation’s 270,000-some traffic-light
    systems all used technology that anticipated traffic patterns and reduced stop times,
    according to Laitner, they could cut transportation petroleum use by 5 to 10
    percent. A national study into attacking fuel waste through information
    technology could yield more such gains.

    7. Educating drivers. Teaching energy-efficient driving practices (such as
    slower acceleration
    ) and maintenance (keeping tires inflated) would lead to
    fuel-saving behavioral changes. Studying why people don’t take money-saving
    steps like checking tire pressure could yield even more. Fuel-economy basics
    could also become a central part of driver’s ed programs.

    8. A resolution saying efficiency is a new national priority. A
    “statement”—big deal, right? Well, it could be: An “efficiency is king”
    resolution from Congress would send a clear signal to businesses, consumers,
    and energy markets that would encourage them to make their own changes.
    Congress could also tell government agencies to move immediately on efficiency
    measures that would pay for themselves-and make funding contingent on that
    action.

    9. Prizes for tech breakthroughs. The privately run Automotive X Prize offers $10 million to the first team of engineers that can invent a commercially
    viable 100 mpg car. Congress could consider similar incentives to encourage
    entrepreneurs to focus on efficiency. (The Obama administration is already
    funding potential high-payoff cleantech
    research
    ventures.)

    10. Efficiency “visibility.” Efficiency is a largely invisible energy
    source. To correct that, writes Laitner, “Congress should direct and fund the
    Department of Commerce, Department of Energy and Environmental Protection
    Agency (among others) to collaborate in the development of a National Energy
    Efficiency Data Center (NEEDC).” We’re learning more than we ever wanted to
    know about oil dispersants, blowout preventers, and other offshore rig
    hardware. Why not learn instead about constructive technologies?

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism






  • Ask Umbra on eco-fiction and hair donations for the oil spill

    by Umbra Fisk

    Send your question to Umbra!

    Q. Dear Umbra,

    I hate to bother
    you, but I tried doing a Grist search to answer my question and nothing really
    turned up.

    I was hoping you
    could recommend some environmentally aware fiction writers or books. I love Barbara
    Kingsolver, but have read everything of hers twice already. 🙂 (I’d especially
    appreciate a recommendation for some female writers.)

    Thank you!

    lilacwine
    Evanston, Ill.

    A. Dearest
    lilacwine,

    Photo: timetrax23 via FlickrReaders
    are never a bother. Well, not usually. It is occasionally tedious to read about
    so many people beating themselves up over the teeniest of eco-conundrums—or
    beating me up for actually bothering to answer them. But yours is to wonder why,
    mine is to answer. Or try, as I always say.

    Thusly,
    your question is a bit of fresh air—a nice momentary breather from heavy,
    albeit very important, environmental issues such as the massive Gulf oil spill
    (see the last question in this week’s column). I did a little searching through
    the Grist archives as well and came
    up with this piece from
    February
    ,
    which reviews the novels Far North by Marcel Theroux and Primitive by Mark Nykanen—both are worth a look, for
    sure.

    Additionally,
    with a little help from my fellow Gristians, I’ve compiled a list—by no means
    comprehensive—of some environmentally tinged fiction by both female and male
    authors to whet your eco-literary appetite.

    Margaret
    Atwood’s Oryx and Crake and its companion novel The
    Year of the Flood
    ,
    both dystopian-future tales with genetic and biotech experiments gone awry and
    a massive eco and health catastrophe threatening humankind

    Jane Smiley’s A Thousand Acres, a modern
    retelling of King Lear and a devastating
    but beautifully written account of industrial farming

    Ian
    McEwan’s Solar, in which a Nobel prize-winning physicist
    struggles with his fifth failing marriage and attempts to save the planet from
    environmental disaster

    Vapor Trails by R.P. Siegel and Roger Saillant, about
    an oil exec who is unable to reconcile his financial success with the
    destruction he’s caused (hmm…)

    Edward
    Abbey’s The Monkey Wrench Gang, about a former
    Green Beret who returns from war to find his much-loved desert threatened by
    industrial development

    Ishmael by Daniel Quinn,
    which is about an extraordinary teacher—a gorilla—with a story to tell about
    how humans came to treat the earth the way they do and the possibility of a
    still-salvageable future

    If
    you’re looking to simply wade rather than dive into the world of environmental
    fiction, I’d recommend a short story. A few that are worth a gander: A
    Sound of Thunder
    by Ray Bradbury, A
    White Heron
    by Sarah Orne Jewett, and It’s
    Such a Beautiful Day
    by Isaac Asimov.

    And
    then there are always the much-loved classics The
    Little Prince
    by Antoine de de Saint-Exupéry and The
    Lorax
    by Dr. Seuss. Never underestimate the power of a quality children’s book:
    “Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get
    better. It’s not.”

    Bibliophile-ly,
    Umbra

    Q. Dear Umbra,

    You might check out
    a funny novel by Cordelia Strube entitled
    Planet Reese, all about what happens to an environmentalist who
    short-circuits.

    Barry H.
    Toronto, Ontario

    A. Dearest
    Barry,

    Thanks for
    the suggestion. We’ll tack it onto lilacwine’s list above. Readers, here’s the
    skinny on this tome, per Powell’s Books:

    “Reese Larkin is
    desperate to find the perfect mattress. His job is in jeopardy and he’s been
    forced to separate from his wife and children, but he believes that if he can
    find the ultimate sleep system his life will begin anew.

    In her seventh novel,
    Cordelia Strube grabs readers by the neuroses with a dark but wickedly fun
    story about a former Greenpeace activist forced to turn marketeer who battles
    against a world in which he is confronted by shift mattress sales clerks, a
    Fred and Ginger-obsessed strip-bar waitress, derisive colleagues, and a wife
    who has mysteriously turned cold and is keeping his children from him. Alone in
    his damp basement apartment with his daughter’s hamster, he longs for a good
    night’s sleep and, though faced with despair, begins each day hopefully as he
    grips tighter to the edges of his life.”

    Sounds intriguing!

    Witherspoonly,
    Umbra

    Q. Dear Umbra,

    I’ve heard that
    people are donating their hair to help the oil cleanup of the Gulf Coast. I’m
    an old-school hair farmer, and I want to know if it’s harvest time for a good
    cause. What do you think?

    If it’s a good
    idea, then to whom do I send my bountiful harvest?

    Hair Today, Gone
    Tomorrow (to a good cause)
    Seattle

    A. Dearest
    HTGT,

    UPDATE: Since I wrote the answer below, Matter of Trust has posted the following to its website: “After a few days of mixed messages to the press,  Ronald D. Rybarczyk,
    BP government and public affairs,  contacted us at Matter of Trust
    tonight. Rybarcyzk informed us that they have a plentiful supply of
    ideal boom for their needs and will not be in want of donated boom or
    renewable fiber.” Alas, the search for a solution continues.

    Props to
    you for your willingness to donate your locks for this hairy situation. And
    have I got the organization for you: Matter of Trust.

    The
    organization, known for its oil spill hair mats, is collecting
    nylons, human hair, and animal fur to create hair booms to place in the water
    to collect oil. Here’s a great article from The Washington Post explaining the
    effort and its progress.

    It’s
    important to note, though, that the oil spill has gotten way too massive to think
    that this approach can necessarily fix everything, but the grassroots effort
    has finally gotten BP’s notice—the company contacted Matter of Trust last week.

    You can
    donate your own hair, animal fur, and nylons by signing up for Matter of
    Trust’s Excess Access database and then
    following the instructions for sending in
    your hair harvest.

    Thanks
    again, HTGT. Every little bit helps.

    Shornly,
    Umbra

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism






  • Palin accuses Obama of being in bed with Big Oil

    by Agence France-Presse

    WASHINGTON
    – Right-wing darling Sarah Palin accused President Barack Obama on Sunday of
    being lax in his response to the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster and suggested this
    was because he is too close to Big Oil.

    The
    former vice presidential candidate and Alaska governor, who champions offshore
    drilling, criticized the media for not drawing the link between Obama and Big
    Oil and said if this spill had happened under former President George W. Bush
    the scrutiny would have been far tougher.

    “I
    don’t know why the question isn’t asked by the mainstream media and by others
    if there’s any connection with the contributions made to President Obama and
    his administration and the support by the oil companies to the
    administration,” she told Fox News Sunday.

    More
    than $3.5 million has been given to candidates by BP over the last 20 years,
    with the largest single donation, $77,051, going to Obama, according to the
    Center for Responsive Politics.

    Palin
    suggested this close relationship explained why Obama was “taking so
    doggone long to get in there, to dive in there, and grasp the complexity and
    the potential tragedy that we are seeing here in the Gulf of Mexico.”

    The
    BP-leased Deepwater Horizon rig exploded on April 20, killing 11 workers, and
    sank two days later. Ever since, hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil,
    perhaps even millions, have been spewing each day into the sea.

    The
    resulting slick, now the size of a small country, threatens to leave Louisiana’s
    fishing and coastal tourism industries in tatters, ruin pristine nature
    reserves, and cause decades of harm to the ecology of fragile marshes that are
    a haven for rare wildlife and migratory birds.

    The
    Obama administration has been forced to defend its response to the disaster as
    some Republicans have sought to portray it as its Katrina, an allusion to
    Bush’s mishandling of the response to the hurricane that devastated Louisiana
    in 2005.

    White
    House spokesman Robert Gibbs mocked Palin’s suggestions that Obama was somehow
    in bed with the big oil companies because of 2008 presidential campaign
    contributions.

    “Sarah
    Palin was involved in that election, but I don’t think, apparently, was paying
    a whole lot of attention,” Gibbs said on CBS’s “Face the Nation”
    program. “I’m almost sure that the oil companies don’t consider the Obama
    administration a huge ally. We proposed a windfall profits tax when they jacked
    their oil prices up to charge for gasoline. My suggestion to Sarah Palin would
    be to get slightly more informed as to what’s going on in and around oil
    drilling in this country.”

    Earlier
    this month, Obama ratcheted up criticism of BP over the spills, betraying
    frustration with the company’s failure to stop the leak, and more recently
    announced a bipartisan presidential commission to probe the huge oil spill.

    Obama
    has also accused oil companies of enjoying a “cozy relationship” with
    the Minerals Management Service, the federal agency set up to monitor the
    energy sector, which was later broken up into three separate agencies. He
    ordered “top to bottom” reform of the agency after it was accused of
    allowing BP and other oil companies to drill in the Gulf without first
    obtaining required permits.

    “BP
    will pay for every bit of this,” Gibbs said Sunday. “We have to
    figure out and make sure that the relationship that is had with government and
    oil companies is not a cozy relationship as the president said.”

    He
    also dismissed analogies with Katrina, which still haunts U.S. politics and
    provides an easy comparison for the media when considering the longer-term
    fallout that may plague Obama’s energy agenda for months or even years.

    “If
    you look back at what happened in Katrina, the government wasn’t there to
    respond to what was happening,” said Gibbs. “That quite frankly was
    the problem. I think the difference in this case is we were there immediately.
    We have been there ever since.”

    Palin,
    who quit the Alaska governorship after serving less than half of one term,
    famously promoted the slogan “Drill, baby, drill!” that rallied
    supporters while dismissing possible environmental impact of offshore drilling.
    Her detractors switched the line to “Spill, baby, spill!”

    Related Links:

    In wake of Gulf spill, should this be the summer of energy reform?

    Show how much you—and BP—care with a commemorative oil spill T-shirt

    Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism






  • Underground green economy employing millions

    by Glenn Hurowitz.

    There’s a new economy springing up around the country—but it’s operating almost entirely in secret. It’s called “the restoration economy” and it’s remaking America’s landscape while putting millions of people to work.

    This economy is devoted to restoring what’s been lost: degraded forests, watersheds, oceans, cities, communities, buildings, transit—and it’s the product of a major turning point in our history that’s been almost entirely missed by the press and politicians.

    I recently had the opportunity to learn about this stealth green economy when I participated in a panel at the Good Jobs, Green Jobs conference about land and water-based jobs. In a telling sign, this panel (organized by The Wilderness Society’s relentless JP Leous, one of the brightest rising stars in the environmental movement) was apparently the first in the history of the conference to focus on forest, land, and water based jobs (or as I like to think of them, the ultimate green jobs).

    One of my co-panelists was Storm Cunningham, who in his seminal book, The Restoration Economy, revealed this major shift for the first time:

    …But then, in the late 90’s, I began noticing a miraculous new trend: a number of places—both ecosystems and communities—were actually getting better, some spectacularly so. Rivers that had been devoid of fish were teeming with them. Blighted industrial waterfronts were becoming gorgeous, lively, economically thriving public areas. Devastated, clear-cut hills were becoming forests again—real forests, not just the typical tree farms that are devoid of wildlife. …

    During the last two decades of the twentieth century, we failed to notice a turning point of immense significance. New development—the development mode that has dominated the past three centuries—lost significant “market share” to another mode: restorative development.

    Despite the fact that restorative development will dominate the twenty-first century, its phenomenal rate of growth has gone largely undocumented. This is hardly an unimportant transition: economic growth based primarily on the exploitation of new resources and territories is giving way to economic growth based on expanding our resources and improving our existing assets..

    Why is it happening? Primarily, it’s because we’ve now developed most of the world that can be developed without destroying some other inherent value or vital function of that property. The major driver of economic growth in the the twenty-first century will thus be redeveloping our nations, revitalizing our cities, and rehabilitating and expanding our ecosystems. We’ll be adding health and wealth in a way that doesn’t cause a corresponding loss of wealth elsewhere.

    To put it in other words, today’s economic potential isn’t in the exploitation of untapped resources, but rather in the restoration of wealth (natural, infrastructural, community and otherwise).

    For that reason and others, the restoration economy is dollar-for-dollar by far the best job creator of any economic activity. As I discussed in this post at Grist, investments in forest, wetland, and other land and water restoration creates 74 percent more jobs than ANY other economic activity—more even that energy wind or solar, and more than five and a half times as much as investments in dirty energy sources like oil, coal, and nuclear. These are the ultimate shovel-ready jobs: for many of them, you really don’t need much more than a shovel to get to work. Mother Nature provides all the capital you need.

    You can see this restoration economy at work across America and around the world: in the
    Gifford Pinchot National Forest in Washington State, people are finding
    work tearing down dams and restoring streams, in the Chesapeake Bay, out-of-work watermen are restoring oyster beds to clean the water, and in Indonesia, people are returning destroyed rainforest to orangutan habitat.

    At the panel, we delved into the politics of the restoration economy—you can watch highlights from the discussion in this excellent brief video:

    In summary, politicians are making a huge electoral blunder when they perpetuate low jobs creating activities
    like oil drilling and coal mining. One of the most important determinants of an incumbent politician’s success is the health of the economy and
    the availability of jobs (others include whether a politician is
    perceived as being a strong leader and having integrity). Weakening a cap on carbon or diverting funds away from wildland restoration may please a few lobbyists, but as incumbents like Bob Bennett, Arlen Specter, and Blanche Lincoln learned recently, even establishment campaign donations will be far outweighed by voter anger fueled by a poor economy and a lack of jobs. 

    Of course the inverse is true too: because the restoration economy provides such a huge jobs bang for the buck, it’s a Godsend for politicians.  The more they invest in restoring forests, streams, and oceans, the better the economy will be and the more likely they are to get reelected.

    In other words, green is the new electoral gold. 

    Related Links:

    A chat with energy analyst Trevor Houser about how to assess climate legislation

    Should we prefer investing in renewable energy to cleaning up the dirty stuff?

    Big companies help do something right in Canadian forest deal






  • Worried about falling birthrates? Then drop that sexist attitude

    by Lisa Hymas

    Photo: streunna4 via FlickrI’ve been happy to see my recent posts on childfree living and population
    growth
    spark discussion on topics too often avoided.  We’ve had spirited conversations in the
    comment threads on Grist and Grist’s Facebook
    page
    , and that’s percolated out to Andrew Sullivan’s blog and the Guardian website,
    among other spots.  The latest
    outlet to join the conversation is AOL
    News
    , where reporter Dave Thier does a better job than most of putting the
    issues into context.  (Compare to MSNBC’s
    Dylan Ratigan Show
    , which erroneously boiled down my message to
    “Kids are killing the planet.” Never look to cable TV for
    nuance.) 

    And the conversation has spread beyond the English-speaking
    world via articles published in Italy and Brazil.  My Italian and Portuguese language
    skills are rusty, but from what Google
    Translate
    tells me, these authors seem to understand “the advantages of a life led
    without putting the light of little children.” (Or something like that. I welcome
    further insight from our cosmopolitan readership.)

    It shouldn’t come as a surprise that Italians are receptive
    to the GINK
    message
    .  Italy has one of the
    lowest fertility rates in the world—1.32
    births per woman
    .  There’s lots
    of hand-wringing over the graying populace in Italy and some other European
    countries (see, for example, this article in today’s New York Times), and that’s an issue I’ll delve into in a later post. 

    For now, I want to point out one interesting factor that
    contributes to low Italian birthrates, as described by Fred Pearce in his new
    book The
    Coming Population Crash—And Our Planet’s Surprising Future
    ; Italy’s baby bust can be blamed in part on “the dysfunctional roles of the
    state and church,” he writes.  The
    Vatican has tried hard to keep birth control out of women’s hands (Frances
    Kissling reports on its efforts in a recent Mother
    Jones
    article
    )—but even in Italy, the cradle of Catholicism,
    that campaign is backfiring. 
    Pearce explains:

    [The Catholic church and the
    Italian government] both promote an old patriarchal ideal of large families in
    which the wife stays at home.  The
    state denies any responsibility for child care or helping mothers into
    work.  The church, despite losing
    its influence in the bedroom, retains power over the political climate and
    public services.  This, the demographers said, turns out to be a lethal
    combination for baby making.  Where
    women are grabbing their new rights but men are not taking their new
    responsibilities, the result is ultralow fertility.
      [Emphasis mine.]

    Pearce compares this to the situation in more egalitarian Sweden, where the
    fertility rate is 1.67
    children per woman
    —“not at replacement levels, but not set to
    demographic meltdown either.” He describes the situation of a woman named
    Astrid who lives in Stockholm:

    She got a year’s maternity leave
    when each of her [two] children was born. She works a flexible thirty-hour week
    and can put her children in a nursery at the office when she needs to. Her
    partner, Sven, is adept at changing diapers and takes turns with the four a.m.
    feeding.  …

    The Swedish lesson is that [in
    European countries] where employers, the state, and men are more flexible,
    national fertility rates are higher. …

    A lot of this comes down to power,
    says Scandinavia’s top demographer, Gosta Epsing-Andersen. These days, most
    couples have a “bargaining process in order to reconcile employment and
    child care.” Women who work, especially those with good jobs, can drive a
    better bargain. They also have the pick of available men—choosing those who
    will change a diaper as well as be good in bed. In Scandinavia, 85 percent of
    the best-educated women have children, compared with only 60 percent in more
    conservative and patriarchal Germany.

    In short: You want more kids in your country? End entrenched
    chauvinism and start supporting working moms. 

    This is, of course, just one piece of a complicated puzzle.  In the developing world, it’s been demonstrated time and again that more rights and opportunities for women lead to lower fertility rates.  More to come in future posts about how all of these pieces fit together.

    Related Links:

    How green are the ‘childless by choice’?

    Birth-control opponents greenwash their message

    50 years after the Pill and this is the best we can do?