Author: Grist – the Latest from Grist

  • Chef Jamie Oliver takes on the American school lunchroom in his new show

    by Tom Laskawy

    In “Chewing the Scenery,” we round up interesting food-related video from around the Web.

    _________

    Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver’s new show Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution takes him to Huntington, West Virginia, “the fattest city in America.” Oliver’s goal: nothing more than to remake residents’ attitude towards food. And it looks like he’s got his hands full.

    In these two latest sneak peaks, we see what happens when he ventures into the local elementary school. It ain’t pretty.

    First, Jamie goes into a first grade classroom to test students’ basic food knowledge. We’re not talking advanced studies here. He asks them to identify by sight tomatoes, cauliflower, beets, eggplant and potatoes. The youngsters successfully identify exactly none of them. Ouch!

    Next comes a visit to the school lunchroom and a rather chilly reception from the lunch workers (all women). Jamie doesn’t exactly come in full of praise, expressing surprise that they served pizza for breakfast to be followed by chicken nuggets for lunch. The workers explain that the menu is established for them using “nutritional analysis.” Jamie is having none of it: “It’s that kind of food that’s killing America.” Their interaction proceeds to go downhill from there. Watch it:

    Food Revolution premieres Friday, March 26 on ABC.

    Related Links:

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    Food as America’s newest religion






  • Hop on the bus, texters

    by Lisa Hymas

    A French lad texting in an appropriate venue.Photo: TopheeNearly two-thirds of Millennials, aged 18 to 29, admit to
    texting while driving, according to a new Pew
    Research Center report
    [PDF].

    Texting while driving is “insanely dangerous,” Clive
    Thompson reminds us in Wired
    . “Studies have found that each
    time you write or read a text message, you take your eyes off the road for
    almost five seconds and increase your risk of collision up to 23 times. The
    hazard is ‘off the charts,’ says David Strayer, a University of Utah professor
    who has studied the practice.”

    While government officials fret about how to get drivers to
    stop texting, Thompson proposes a different solution: Get texters to stop
    driving.

    When we worry about driving and
    texting, we assume that the most important thing the person is doing is
    piloting the car. But what if the most important thing they’re doing is
    texting? How do we free them up so they can text without needing to worry about
    driving?

    The answer, of course, is public
    transit. In many parts of the world where texting has become ingrained in daily
    life—like Japan and Europe—public transit is so plentiful that there hasn’t
    been a major texting-while-driving crisis. You don’t endanger anyone’s life
    while quietly tapping out messages during your train ride to work in Tokyo or
    Berlin.

    Dramatically increasing public
    transit would also decrease our carbon footprint, improve local economies, and
    curtail drunk driving. (Plus, we’d waste less time in spiritually draining
    bumper-to-bumper traffic.)

    Texting while driving is, in
    essence, a wake-up call to America. It illustrates our real, and bigger,
    predicament: The country is currently better suited to cars than to
    communication. This is completely bonkers.

    By all means, we should ban texting
    while driving, or at least try. But we need to work urgently on making driving
    less necessary in the first place. Let’s get our hands off the wheel and onto
    the keypad—where they belong.

    Considering that 37 percent of Millennials are currently unemployed or
    out of the workforce, shedding that car should be all the more appealing. 

    Related Links:

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  • For first time, GM soybeans may be losing favor among farmers

    by Tom Laskawy

    A soybean field in summer. Farmers are getting fed up with Monsanto’s soy seed monopoly. Is it possible that we’ve reached Peak Monsanto?:

    Low commodity soybean prices, attractive premiums, and rising prices
    for genetically modified soybean seed are leading American farmers to
    plant more acres of non-GMO soybeans this year.

    Representatives
    with soybean associations, universities, and grain buyers all say that
    demand for non-GMO soybeans is growing, leading to more non-GMO acres.

    Genetically
    modified Roundup Ready soybeans have taken an increasingly larger
    percentage of U.S. soybean acreage each year since their introduction in
    1996, reaching 92 percent in 2008.

    But this could be the first
    year that the trend reverses. Grover Shannon, a soybean breeder with
    the University of Missouri, Delta Research Center, thinks non-GMO
    acreage could account for 10 percent of total soybean acreage this year.

    This analysis comes from The Organic and Non-GMO Report so it’s fair to be skeptical. But it does quote a rep from a state soybean associations, not generally bastions of sustainable ag proponents:

    “We are seeing more interest in growing non-GMO soybeans,” says Mark
    Albertson, director of marketing, Illinois Soybean Association.

    … Albertson
    has talked to several farmers who haven’t grown non-GMO soybeans in
    eight years, but will this year because of the premiums.

    Grain
    companies large and small are contracting farmers to grow non-GMO. “We
    called all the companies buying non-GMO, and about one-half of them had
    enough acres,” Albertson said.

    The reasons run the gamut from farmer anger at Monsanto’s price increases for its GM seed and its RoundUp pesticide to the recognition that the rise of resistant weeds have reduced the rationale for going GM in the first place to another kind of increasing resistance—among consumers towards GM foods.

    Of course, it’s entirely possible that this is a blip and not a trend—we won’t even know for certain that total planted acres of GM soybeans have declined until later this year. Still, when you combine this news with the Justice Department’s active antitrust investigation into Monsanto, you may legitimately conclude that the tide may be close to turning against the biotechnology giant.

    Related Links:

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  • Ask Umbra’s pearls of wisdom on gardening

    by Umbra Fisk

    Dearest readers,

    Ah, spring is in the air. Well, sort of. We’re still
    technically about three weeks out, but our unusually unwintry weather here at Grist
    HQ seems to be duping buds into bloom and setting off an outbreak of early onset
    spring fever, which has, in turn, caused mulch, seedlings, watering, and
    weeding to infiltrate my thoughts. How I adore digging in the dirt—so much
    so that I dug through the archives for some especially delicious gardening
    advice from Ask Umbra columns past. Enjoy, and let me know what you’ll be
    planting in your spring garden in the comments section below.

    An urbivore’s dilemma.
    For ye urban container gardeners, don’t
    sweat long-term soil buildup of city-dwelling airborne toxins so much as having them land
    on your plants. Three solutions proposed by the Cornell Horticulture program
    (and others) are: Locate your garden away from a heavily trafficked street,
    erect a fence or hedge as a shield, and wash vegetables. But in what, we all
    would like to know? In a 1 percent vinegar solution or a 0.5 percent
    dishwashing liquid solution (regular old vinegar, regular old dishwashing
    liquid). Get the full Ask
    Umbra answer
    .

    Smother them
    with kindness.

    Embrace mulching to suppress weeds, improve
    the soil, and/or make an aesthetic statement around trees, shrubs, and other
    plants. You can mulch with wood chips, compost, bark, newspaper, straw,
    recently weeded plants, all sorts of handy matter. (Note, however, that mulches
    do vary in their nutritive properties.) Get the full Ask Umbra answer.

    Weed out
    the worst ones.

    When it comes to weeds, the best defense is
    a good offense. All plants, including grass, have places where they thrive
    naturally—but lawns made purely of mowable grass are unnatural in most of
    the U.S. Plants growing in compacted soil and in unnatural conditions are
    unhealthy, and unhealthy plants are the first to be attacked by pests and
    weeds. The best prevention is natural lawn care: soil improvement, thatch
    removal, overseeding with locally appropriate grass, and appropriate watering. And
    if the weeds have already moved in, skip the toxic chemical herbicides to get
    rid of them and try this new-fangled technique: weeding! Get the full Ask Umbra answer.

    What’s
    bugging you?

    Got pests? Step one is to figure out what
    kind of pest you’re dealing with. Look closely at the plant—you may actually
    see the pest in action. If not, note where the damage is happening—on all
    leaves, on the oldest leaves, on the stem, etc. Next, onto the web to
    investigate your plant’s condition. Then opt for a series of less-toxic
    interventions. These include habitat modification (killing the host plant,
    removing the places where pests nap, etc.), mechanical control (this includes
    squishing and picking off), barrier techniques (deer fence is an example), and
    less-toxic pest controls (ladybugs, for instance). Last resort would be the
    toxic interventions. Get the full
    Ask Umbra answer
    .

    Psycho grass killer. Qu’est-ce que c’est?
    Live in a dryer climate and/or don’t want to
    deal with the hassle and waste of a large lawn? Kill it! Or more technically,
    xeriscape it. For befuddled readers, a xeriscape is a water-saving garden. Ditch
    the grass by digging it up with a garden fork, patiently waiting for sheet
    mulching to do the trick, or rototilling it like nobody’s business (getting a
    pretty hefty workout in the process). Get the full Ask Umbra
    answer
    .

    Fertilely,
    Umbra

    Related Links:

    Ask Umbra on down comforters, soapy gray water, and canned tomatoes

    Garden Girl TV: indoor gardening, part two

    Garden Girl TV: Indoor gardening, part one






  • Making sense of Wal-Mart’s big green announcement

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    Wal-Mart made big news today with a major commitment to trim its greenhouse-gas emissions.

    Here’s the context: Over the past five years the retail giant has taken big, splashy steps to save energy, reduce waste, and sell cleaner products, like compact-fluorescent light bulbs. It’s given less focus to the impact of the factories that churn all over the world to keep the chain’s shelves and display cases full. Today’s announcement—a goal to cut 20 million metric tons of greenhouse-gas emissions by the end 2015—focuses on those factories.

    Wall Street Journal reporter Miguel Bustillo reads this as a cop-out, which is odd:

    Wal-Mart will make its suppliers do the dirty work of reducing the carbon footprints of their global supply chains.

    But the focus on suppliers is the best part of the new plan, according to Elizabeth Sturcken of Environmental Defense Fund, Wal-Mart’s partner in crafting the plan:

    Wal-Mart’s supply chain is where the action is. It’s the biggest possible lever that Wal-Mart could bring to the table. Wal-Mart will work with suppliers to reduce their emissions—which they otherwise might not do—resulting in positive ripple effects around the globe.

    Two more advantages, says Sturcken:

    It prioritizes the biggest opportunities. Wal-Mart is looking at the products that create the most carbon emissions across their lifecycles—as well as products that are top sellers—and focusing on those first.

    It gets carbon pollution reductions now. There’s no waiting for the United States or the world to act.

    Marc Gunther of GreenBiz.com gives Wal-Mart “two cheers” for the supply-line approach:

    Better, as one of my sources told me, to improve practices at 10,000 factories around the world than simply to make [Wal-Mart’s] operations more efficient.

    Stacy Mitchell, a researcher at the New Rules Project, author of Big Box Swindle, and long-time critic of Wal-Mart, gives a skeptical take:

    By focusing on suppliers, Wal-Mart continues to deflect attention from the enormous greenhouse gas implications of its own business model. Wal-Mart is rapidly expanding in China, Mexico, and other countries, where it is destroying neighborhood businesses and replacing them with an auto-oriented form of big-box shopping that is highly polluting. [emphasis added]

    Good point. It’s tough to quantify the damage Wal-Mart does to local, centralized businesses, either in the places where it’s well-established  (the U.S.) or the places it’s expanding (China and Mexico).

    Bradford Plumer of The New Republic offers a reminder that while talk is cheap, it’s the follow-through that matters:

    Still, it’s easy to wonder how committed Wal-Mart will be to seeing this effort through. The store’s ongoing green initiatives—from buying up gobs of solar power to rooting out wasteful packaging—have all been impressive. But becoming cleaner or more efficient can sometimes involve hefty upfront costs, and even if it saves money over the long-term, that may prove hard to square with Wal-Mart’s focus on constantly hammering prices downward.

    Whether the issue is Wal-Mart’s promises to reduce its ecological footprint, or Seattle’s promise to erase its footprint, or the international pledge circus, the thing to watch is the execution.

    On a completely related note, here’s a weird video from Wal-Mart on “The Secret Life of Sour Cream”:

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  • The Climate Post: Climate bill + climategate = Bill ‘Climate’ Gates!

    by Eric Roston

    First things first: Recent political
    difficulties for the president and key colleagues in the Senate have
    not removed energy and climate issues from the White House and majority’s agenda. Obama told business executives yesterday that the
    U.S. economy must start “to put a price on carbon pollution.” He touted
    his White House’s activities on energy efficiency, nuclear power,
    solar, and oil drilling, but reiterated his pre-election call for a comprehensive policy: “The only certainty
    of the status quo is that the price and supply of oil will become
    increasingly volatile; that the use of fossil fuels will wreak havoc on
    weather patterns and air quality.” Obama made news about a year ago at
    the Business Roundtable, site of yesterday’s remarks, when he reminded
    everyone that he preferred a market-driven climate policy that
    auctioned “carbon credits” to polluters rather than a policy that gives
    them away.

    The climate leadership troika in the Senate—John Kerry, Lindsey
    Graham, and Joe Lieberman—continues to spar with the conventional
    wisdom that the Senate doesn’t have the momentum to take on climate
    right now, particularly when health care is still unsolved. They
    continue to find a compromise approach to legislation that would put a price on carbon.

    EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson told a hearing of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee that the agency
    will implement its new greenhouse gas regulations slowly, with smaller
    qualifying firms not needing to regulate until 2016. The largest firms
    would comply before 2013. Jackson emphasized these dates in a letter to eight Democrats from coal-producing states
    who expressed concern about the rules. The EPA’s actions are of concern
    to the majority of Republican senators, 35 of them, and three moderate
    Democrats. That’s the size of the group that supports Sen. Lisa
    Murkowski’s (R-Alaska) resolution to turn back the EPA’s rules. The
    agency faces legal challenges elsewhere, most prominently from the U.S.
    Chamber of Commerce and the states of Texas, Virginia, and Alabama.

    EPW ranking member Sen. James Inhofe released a GOP report into the UEA email controversy, and will pursue further investigations
    into whether climate scientists violated any federal laws. The report
    can be accessed here [PDF]. Readers can read around the professional literature to evaluate its conclusions here.

    Best-thing-ever-ism: Nothing will ever
    break your heart like new large-scale energy technology. That’s because
    there’s so much is possible but we haven’t yet been able to either
    close the carbon loophole that would make them economically
    competitive, or scale up the true “game changers.” There’s a messianism
    that accompanies many new technologies. This week saw some seductive
    new ideas that promise to be the energy sector’s latest Best! Thing!
    Ever!

    “Where will the U.S. get its electricity in 2034?” That’s the headline of a Scientific American interview with the head of Black & Veatch, an analysis firm that just
    published a report answering this question in two words: natural gas.
    The head analyst gave this assessment of how surveyed players in the
    power market understand the problem of pricing carbon: “Looking at the
    survey and what’s going on in the industry, regardless of people’s
    personal or political opinions they want to move towards a lower carbon
    footprint for the power sector. A lack of legislation right now in some
    corners creates more concern.”

    “We believe we’ve developed a new type of nuclear reactor that can
    represent a nearly infinite supply of low-cost energy, carbon-free
    energy for the world.” That’s what the head of TerraPower, a firm
    developing an advanced nuclear reactor that uses depleted fuel. The project has the backing of Bill Gates, who gave a recent talk about the technology.

    A start-up clean energy company with a brightening name and marquee backing launched publicly this week. For eight years, Bloom Energy has quietly developed
    and tested its solid oxide fuel cell, which uses natural gas to
    generate electricity for eight to ten cents a kilowatt hour.
    Independent estimate put the price at 13 to 14 cents a kilowatt hour,
    higher than the U.S. average of 11 cents. Google, Wal-Mart, and Bank of
    America are beta-testing units. The company’s founder, KR Sridhar has
    raised $400 million and expects that customers can earn back their
    investment in three to five years. Earth2Tech.com has a useful overview of what’s known about Bloom’s technology, with further links.

    Seething is believing: If you’re reading
    this, it’s likely because you’re inclined to read something like this.
    That’s a glib reduction of research conducted by the Cultural Cognition
    Project, anchored at Yale Law School and recently discussed by NPR’s
    Christopher Joyce and Reason‘s Ronald Bailey.
    This very interesting research observes with precision just how deeply
    people are inclined to accept facts that reinforce what they already
    believe. The report itself can be found here.
    Researchers tracked how individuals’ opinions about global warming and
    other topics change as they are given more and more information about a
    topic. This example is relevant to a central topic in climate policy.

    In another experiment, people read a United Nations study about the
    dangers of global warming. Then the researchers told the participants
    that the solution to global warming is to regulate industrial
    pollution. Many in the individualistic group then rejected the climate
    science. But when more nuclear power was offered as the solution, says
    Braman, “they said, you know, it turns out global warming is a serious
    problem.”

    It turns out global warming is a serious problem. After weeks or
    months of public confusion over what IPCC errors and the UEA emails
    mean in the big picture, dispassionate media commentators are beginning
    to step in and do what they are supposed to do: Filter spam out of the
    public discourse. That’s not something mass media are particularly good
    at, given their bent toward “exaggerating denialism.”
    Long gone are the days when a newspaper editorial could sway an
    election. This week a couple of the heavyweights weighed in with some
    clarity on the climate confusion, none more notable than the Washington
    Post’s Monday editorial.
    The paper’s op-ed editor distinguished himself last year by running
    several factually incoherent columns by George Will, including this one on Sunday. In this episode, Will demonstrates his ability to rip
    fragments from elsewhere as a stand-in for science journalism. Bill
    Chameides, dean of Duke’s Nicholas School, handily dismantles the
    problem here.

    This week’s ed board effort is a fine, mature piece analyzing what
    non-experts can hang on to amid activists’ polemics on every side. The
    ed board hit particularly hard Virginia, whose attorney general last
    week challenged the EPA’s current effort to regulate greenhouse gases: “To see Virginia’s newly elected attorney general join in this
    know-nothingism is an embarrassment to the state.” The New York Times ran an editorial relatively upbeat about international climate policy negotiations,
    given the recent exit of chief U.N. negotiator Yvo de Boer. (de Boer
    revealed this week that his new job at accounting giant KPMG was lined
    up before Copenhagen in December.)

    Andrew Revkin, of Pace University and the New York Times’ DotEarth blog, invited readers this week to go “Back to Basics on Climate and Energy,” an attempt to find common ground amid all the bad vibes.

    Ideally, the “climate scandals” of 2009-2010 will result in a
    stronger general understanding of climate science that allows the U.S.
    policy conversation to occur with greater intellectual honesty from
    however many sides you think there are.

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  • James Inhofe, Senate’s top skeptic, explains his climate-hoax theory

    by Amanda Little

    Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) tells reporters in Copenhagen that a climate bill will never pass the U.S. Senate.Photo: Andy RevkinSen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), one
    of the world’s most vociferous climate skeptics, is practically giddy these
    days. He’s argued since 2003 that global
    warming is a massive “hoax” being played on the American people, and now he
    believes he’s got more backing than ever before for his claim, from “Climategate”
    emails
    to errors
    in the latest report
    from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to
    the recent blizzards
    in Washington, D.C.
    (He gleefully
    hyped an igloo
    built by his grandkids as “Al Gore’s new home.”)

    Inhofe didn’t get as much
    attention as he might have hoped for during his December
    visit to Copenhagen
    to denounce climate treaty negotiations, but he tried
    to reclaim the stage this week during a Senate hearing that addressed EPA’s efforts to regulate greenhouse gases. He argued that “the science of the IPCC …
    has been totally discredited” and unveiled an 84-page report titled ‘Consensus’
    Exposed: The CRU Controversy
    .
    “It’s a report on the scandal that has become known as Climategate,” he
    explained. “Many of [the world’s leading climate] scientists have manipulated
    data to fit preconceived conclusions … They cooked the science.” Inhofe’s
    report even suggested that some climate scientists “may
    have violated federal laws
    .” (Watch his hearing statement below.)

    I spoke with Inhofe by phone
    right after the hearing about who’s perpetrating the climate hoax, who’s being
    hoodwinked by it, and why he doesn’t believe clean energy creates jobs.

    ———-

    Q. Sen. Inhofe, hi,
    how are you?

    A. I’m cold, of
    course, but I’m good.

    Q. You got your snow boots on?

    A. I do. [Laughs.]

    Q. You reasserted in today’s hearing your
    belief that global warming is a hoax. Can you clarify specifically who is perpetrating the hoax? Who are the dupers and who are the victims of the
    climate hoax?

    A. Who are the victims? It
    would be the United States.
    It would be the economy, what would happen to this country according to MIT* and others who have made analyses as to the economic
    destruction that would come with something like cap-and-trade or [regulating
    greenhouse-gas emissions] through the Clean Air Act.

    Q. Who are the perpetrators of the hoax?

    A. That’s the United Nations
    and the IPCC, clearly.

    Q. Major energy companies have said they
    believe the scientific consensus on climate change. ExxonMobil
    said
    the appropriate debate isn’t on whether the climate is changing, but
    what we should do about it. NASA, NOAA, the Pentagon, the Pope, evangelical
    leaders, top executives in all industries, and governments all over the world
    including China and India—they’ve all acknowledged climate change. Do you
    believe that all of these entities have been scammed by the U.N. and a handful
    of scientists in the IPCC?

    A. What you’ve just said is not
    true. There’s not unanimity at all even though you want to believe it.  

    NOAA and NASA and all these
    organizations, these people are all tied in to the IPCC. There are a lot of
    companies, oil companies and all that, who would like to have cap-and-trade.
    That’s where they can make money.

    Q. What do you believe is the motive of
    the U.N.? What is the motive of the scientists who are perpetrating the hoax?
    How do you think they stand to benefit?

    A. They stand to benefit [from]
    government grants and private sector grants [from places] like the Heinz Foundation.

    We have scientists who are
    really sincere, and they’ve watched what’s going on and they have a hard time
    believing it. Those are the ones who started going to me probably seven or
    eight years ago, saying they’re cooking the science on this, someone’s got to
    say it, and I said it. And then more of
    them came. I listed
    them on my website
    . I’ve been very clear all along who the perpetrators
    were, what the motives were.

    Q. So you believe that the U.N. and the
    scientists on the IPCC are perpetrating the hoax in order to get grant money?

    A. No, no, no. We’ve already
    covered this, Amanda. You guys always ask the same question over and over again
    looking for a different answer. What is it you want that I didn’t already tell
    you?

    Q. I’m trying to clarify the motivation
    behind the hoax. Why would these scientists want to deceive the global public?

    A. It’s very clear that when
    you have the U.N. behind it, and you have all the Hollywood
    people moving in, you have the Heinz Foundation, that’s John Kerry’s wife—a
    lot of very wealthy people.

    Many of [the scientists] know
    that if they were recipients of grants in the past, that could well be cut
    off. Or if they haven’t had them, they
    would want them. The complaints I had
    brought to me were from scientists who said that many scientists had been
    intimidated into saying things that weren’t true because of that leverage that
    has been used. 

    Q. So you believe the scientists and the
    U.N. are in it for the money?

    A. Well, that enters into it,
    yes.

    Q. The Pentagon has identified climate
    change as one of the biggest threats to our national security. Why shouldn’t we
    trust the American military to judge security threats?

    A. The Pentagon does not say
    that. Barbara Boxer wants to believe that the Pentagon says that. And also you
    mentioned evangelicals. Not true at all. Some of the very liberal churches have
    taken a position. Most of them have either not taken a position or have said
    this thing is not real and we should not be allowing government to do this.

    The overriding factor is that
    even if we did all of this unilaterally, it’s not going to reduce CO2.

    Q. The Pentagon just produced the Quadrennial
    Defense Review
    , which said
    climate change will accelerate conflict around the globe
    .

    A. Keep in mind that the
    Quadrennial Review and all that comes out of the White House. That’s part of
    the administration. In the Pentagon, they’re good soldiers—they’ll do pretty
    much what will ingratiate the commander in chief. That’s what they’re supposed
    to do.  

    Q. More than 280 evangelical leaders,
    including Rick Warren, signed the Evangelical Climate Initiative supporting action on this issue. Are these leaders also duped? Are they part of
    the hoax?

    A. If you can’t find 300
    evangelical or religious leaders, or people who identify themselves as
    religious leaders, that can pursue almost anything, then you’re not really
    doing your job. It’s kind of funny because I don’t recall any of the people
    that I run into who are evangelical leaders who really buy in to this thing.
    But that’s fine, there are some who do, I’m sure.

    Q. Do you believe that investing in clean
    energy is going to create jobs in the U.S.?

    A. Oh, absolutely not.

    Q. Oklahoma
    has huge wind resources. My understanding is that wind and natural gas are among
    the biggest and fastest-growing sectors of your state’s economy.

    A. That’s correct.

    Q. So the wind industry is not creating
    jobs in your state?

    A. Yeah, it is. A few jobs. We
    always look at net jobs, and we have had hearings on this and shown very
    clearly that the number of jobs that are lost exceed any new jobs that come in,
    and that’s the reason for my answer to your question.

    Q. I’ve heard that the Chesapeake Energy Corporation,
    a big job provider in Oklahoma, favors
    cap-and-trade, saying it would actually benefit the natural gas industry. To me
    that says it would create jobs in your state. Why oppose policies that would
    create jobs in Oklahoma?

    A. There are a lot of people in
    the natural gas business who feel that perhaps they can benefit [from
    cap-and-trade] in the short term, but they also recognize in the long term that
    it would be destructive. If you don’t believe that, talk to the CEO of [Oklahoma
    City-based] Devon Energy, Larry Nichols.

    Q. How do you respond to major industry
    leaders who say climate legislation is going to create jobs, not kill
    them, net total?

    A. I don’t agree with
    that.  Always look at the motives people
    have. There are a lot of companies that would do very well [if greenhouse-gas
    regulations were enacted]. General Electric. I better not start naming them.
    But we had a hearing on USCAP, [a
    coalition of] corporations that were embracing some variation of cap-and-trade.
    We checked and found out that all 15 or so of them had stood to make huge
    amounts of money if they could get cap-and-trade. So that’s my comment about
    that.

    Q. So you believe these companies
    and their leaders are going along with a massive fraud that will destroy the
    economy in order to make money themselves?

    A. It would be very damaging to
    the economy. I think that most of the people who don’t have a dog in this
    fight, people who are just looking at it, economists looking to see how
    destructive it would be, come to the conclusion that it would be destructive.

    Q. Are there clean tech innovations that
    you’re interested in?

    A. I’m interested in wind
    energy, I’m interested in geothermal. It’s all of the above. I think you can’t
    just say you’re for one thing or another.

    In order for us to be
    independent, [we need to] develop our own resources. We have the largest
    recoverable reserves of oil, gas, and coal of any country in the world.** And yet the problem is, politically, we’re not able to
    drill in the different places and develop our own resources. No other countries are in that situation. 

    Q. On a personal level, why are you so
    passionate about climate change? I know you’ve been committed to this issue for
    a long time.

    A. I was first made chairman of
    the Environment and Public Works Clean Air Subcommittee back in ‘97. That’s
    when I believed that anthropogenic gases were causing global warming because
    everyone said it was. Until the Wharton
    [Econometric Forecasting Associates] came along
    and said what it would cost
    us if we were to go through with this. And of course it was just huge
    amounts, so we thought we’d check the science. When we started checking
    the science, many of the scientists came to me—once they had a place to come—and showed how they’d been shut out of the process of the IPCC. And I
    thought, somebody’s got to take this thing on, and so that’s why I did it.

    Q. How do you think that history will view
    your efforts on climate change? 

    A. It depends on who’s writing the history.

    Q. Assuming someone you like is writing the history.

    A. I think they’ll say that
    they’re glad there’s one person who was willing to tell the truth.

     

    Watch Inhofe at the Feb. 23 hearing:

     

    * Professor John Reilly of MIT
    last year said Republicans had been misrepresenting
    his research on the potential costs of climate legislation
    .

    ** In fact, the U.S. ranks 12th in proven reserves of oil and 5th in proven reserves of natural gas, according to the CIA. It does have the world’s largest reserves of
    coal.

     

    Related Links:

    Gore’s climate remedy must match diagnosis

    Lindsey Graham’s dilemma, part one: How ACES got dealt a poor hand

    Sen. Inhofe’s latest attack is on climate scientists, not just science






  • World’s biggest solar-powered boat unveiled

    by Agence France-Presse

    The PlanetSolar boat. KIEL, Germany—A skipper hoping to become the first to sail round the world using solar power said his catamaran could carve a wake for pollution-free shipping as he unveiled the record-breaking yacht Thursday.

    “This is a unique feeling to see in front of me today a boat which I so often dreamed about,” said Raphael Domjan as the covers came off the $24 million boat, the world’s biggest solar-powered vessel.

    PlanetSolar, a 100-by-50-foot white catamaran, has been designed to reach a top speed of around 15 knots, equivalent to 15 miles per hour, and can hold up to 50 passengers. It is topped by 5,380 square feet of black solar panels, with a bright white cockpit sticking up in the center.

    Constructed at the Knierim Yacht Club in Kiel in northern Germany, its state-of-the-art design also means it will be able to slice smoothly through the waves even in choppy waters.

    Domjan will launch PlanetSolar in late March before starring at Hamburg port’s 821st anniversary celebrations in May and undergoing testing between June and September. The world tour will then start in April 2011.

    Silent and clean circumnavigations of the planet were achieved centuries ago using sail power, and the team behind PlanetSolar’s construction acknowledge that solar power is not about to become the main power source on modern cargo ships.

    They say they want to use the voyage primarily to promote solar power and other non-polluting sources of energy, and to demonstrate what can be done.

    “The aim is really to show that we have the technology today, not tomorrow. It’s not in a laboratory or DIY, it is a technology that is reliable, able to perform and economically interesting,” Domjan, 38, told AFP.

    “We’re not saying that all the world’s boats could be solar-powered … But along the equator there are lots of fishing boats, lots of boats that only sail for a few hours, and it would be perfect for these to be solar-powered.”

    The two-person crew on the 60-ton PlanetSolar plan to stick as close as possible to the equator in order to maximize the amount of sunlight to power the vessel.

    Dozens of other passengers, including journalists and environmental campaigners, are expected to join the voyage at various stages.

    The roughly 25,000-mile journey is expected to last around 140 days, with organizers assuming the boat can keep up an average speed of around eight knots.

    The planned route foresees the boat crossing the Atlantic Ocean, slipping through the Panama Canal, crossing the Pacific and then the Indian Ocean, before passing through the Suez Canal into the Mediterranean. With the boat scheduled to go round the pirate-infested waters off the Horn of Africa on its approach towards the Suez Canal, however, organizers said they might send it around the Cape of Good Hope instead.

    Stopovers are planned along the route including in New York, San Francisco, Darwin in Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Abu Dhabi, and Marseille in southern France.

    Related Links:

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    Making sense of Wal-Mart’s big green announcement






  • British Airways plans to get wasted on future flights

    by Ashley Braun

    Being a good stewardess of resources

    Next time the state of the planet has you down in the dumps, remember you’ve got a reason to look up. By 2014 British Airways will be filling up with 10% waste to keep landfilling down. Sure, they have airways to go in green, but it’s plane to see why one person’s trash should be another person’s travel.

    Top: Francois Roche Bottom: D’arcy Norman (Flickr)

    Related Links:

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    What climate scientists aren’t telling us

    Coffee hit by global warming, growers say






  • Are you a farmer at heart? Start a ‘Crop Mob’

    by Tom Philpott

    Carbon sequestration: Crop Mob stalwarts Rob Jones, left, and Chris Rumbley create a hügelkultur bed at “the Bog” co-housing community in Carrboro, N.C., summer 2009. Photo: Tom PhilpottA growing number of young people are finishing college and resisting the pressure to plunk down in a cube behind a computer. Others skip college altogether—given the spiraling costs involved, it’s hard to blame them—and yearn for meaningful, hands-on work.

    Community-scale organic farming has emerged as an attractive profession for such talented, energetic youth. But there are problems with this choice. Hours are long, the pay too often stinks, and land prices remain crushingly high. To top it off, our nation lacks universal health coverage.

    Yet youthful zeal to farm abides, and hasn’t let up, as far as I can tell. This is a major asset to the sustainable food movement. As our nation’s million or so active farmers nears retirement age, an emerging generation of landless farmers is rising.

    One of the main challenges of the movement will be to help find them land and create the infrastructure needed to make farming a viable profession.

    Meanwhile, all over the country, the kids are organizing themselves, teaming together, harnessing their energy and keeping the vision of a just and sustainable food system alive and moving forward.

    One of the most vital such projects I know of is the Crop Mob in the North Carolina Triangle (Durham, Raleigh, Chapel Hill). I know many of the Mobbers—two of them were my neighbors in Carrboro when my girlfriend was working on a PhD at UNC.

    So I was thrilled to see them featured in the coming Sunday’s New York Times Magazine, in a well-written article by Christine Muhlke.

    The Mob is essentially a group of young people of all ages (at the ripe age of 44, I have participated) who alight upon an area farm once a month and do a whole bunch of work together: weeding, moving compost, digging up fresh beds, harvesting ready-at-once crops like sweet potatoes. In short, the kind of work that seems crushing when one or two people set out to do it, but that’s downright fun with a crowd. When the work is done, everyone sits down for a meal.

    In one of Wendell Berry’s books, he relays the old farm saying, “many hands make light work.” The Mob illustrates that principle.

    Sweet-potato harvest: Piedmont Bio-Farm in Pittsboro, N.C., gets mobbed, December, 2009.Photo: Tom PhilpottThe group is open and informal; anyone can attend its monthly work sessions. Typical attendees include young farmers, low-paid but well-fed farmhands who would like to have their own farms, college students, and citizens who just want to get their hands in the dirt and pitch in for their foodshed.

    Do any of those categories fit you? If so, start your own Crop Mob! As my friend and former neighbor Rob Jones told Muhlke, a Mob can break out anywhere:

    The idea is catching on, Jones said. Requests for advice on starting mini-Mobs have come in from around the state. Two Crop Mobbers are traveling to Spain to talk to farmers. In cities, Jones added, there’s no reason that backyard and community gardeners can’t mob, too. Because anywhere there’s dirt, a community can grow.

    I was also thrilled to see another friend, the wonderful chef Andrea Ruesing of Chapel Hill’s Lantern restuarant, get some love from the Times Magazine. The coming issue features two recipes from Andrea (here and here), plus another from Lantern’s talented pastry chef Monica Segovia-Welsh.

    Triangle, represent!

     

    Related Links:

    Old Olympic village for rent: cheap!

    Pom-Pom club: Just how ‘Wonderful’ are pomegranates?

    USDA’s Deputy Secretary discusses local, organic farming






  • Chinese pollution concerns dash Hummer deal, analysts say

    by Agence France-Presse

    SHANGHAI—China’s environmental concerns have dashed Tengzhong’s dream of buying the iconic Hummer brand from General Motors, but the once little-known firm has now made a name for itself, analysts said Thursday.

    Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery, based in southwest China, raised eyebrows when it announced in June last year that it would buy General Motors’ world-famous brand of gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles.

    Nearly nine months later, when Tengzhong announced Thursday it had withdrawn its offer to acquire Hummer after it failed to get approval from Chinese authorities, analysts expressed little surprise.

    “Hummer is a fuel-gobbling vehicle,” said Liu Feng, a Beijing-based auto analyst with Southwest Securities. “The government rejected the deal to indicate a direction—China wants economical and environmentally friendly vehicles, rather than ones with large emissions and high fuel consumption.”

    Hummer, modelled after the U.S. military’s Humvee, has become a global symbol of wasteful pollution, and China is already suffering from serious environmental degradation resulting from decades of breakneck economic growth.

    Chinese commerce ministry spokesperson Yao Jian hinted Thursday that concerns about the image the deal would present of Beijing’s environmental priorities had led to its demise. “China’s overall policy is certainly similar to the global trend—we’ll further encourage a sustainable economic development model and a green economy,” Yao said.

    Beijing has ambitious plans to build a world-class automotive industry by 2020, and as such tightly controls all activity in the sector.

    But from the start, analysts had doubted that the privately owned Tengzhong—which until now had made machines for road and bridge construction and the energy industry—had enough expertise in global trade or auto production.

    “The government has shown it doesn’t approve of companies with no experience in car production or operations to start a business in the sector,” said Liu.

    Commerce ministry spokesperson Yao hinted the experience issue had been a factor, saying Tengzhong had never offered government regulators a “complete acquisition plan” and should have consulted attorneys and accountants.

    Klaus Paur, North Asia director for market research company TNS, said of all the recent proposed auto tie-ups between Chinese and foreign firms, such as Geely’s bid to acquire Volvo, this was the least likely. “This was probably the most vulnerable because there is absolutely no experience at the moment coming from Tengzhong,” he said. “At the same time the brand proposition of Hummer itself is against the strategic outline of the Chinese government, which is mainly that they want to produce energy-efficient vehicles.”

    Chen Liang, a Nanjing-based analyst with Huatai Securities, added that China’s history of overseas acquisitions was littered with examples of domestic firms failing to digest foreign entities they bought. SAIC, China’s largest automaker in terms of sales, bought South Korea’s Ssangyong in 2004 and has failed to make a success of the brand, even blaming it for a huge profit drop in 2008. Chen also pointed to Chinese IT giant Lenovo, which he said had still not fully incorporated all the IBM operations it bought in 2005 to much global fanfare.

    “In the case of Tengzhong, it would be even more difficult to digest what it acquired as it has no experience in the auto industry,” he said.

    However, Paur defended the Sichuan-based company, saying it had seen a business opportunity, had the capital, and made a serious business proposal. “We are currently in a situation where all these brands—Volvo, Saab, Hummer … —can be acquired for a relatively low price,” he said. “Yes, they had no experience, but they could move into this one, develop the brand further, and have one additional strategic direction.”

    Analysts also say Tengzhong had correctly pinpointed the rapidly growing market for sport utility vehicles in urban China as a way for Hummer to revive its global fortunes. “Tengzhong had a purpose,” said Liu. “Before the deal, who knew the company? It became famous because of the deal, and now everyone knows it is a firm with quite a few assets.”

    Related Links:

    Coffee hit by global warming, growers say

    Making sense of Wal-Mart’s big green announcement

    The Climate Post: Climate bill + climategate = Bill ‘Climate’ Gates!






  • The attack on climate science is the O.J. moment of the 21st century

    by Bill McKibben

    This essay was originally published on TomDispatch and is republished here with Tom’s kind permission.

    —-

    Twenty-one years ago, in 1989, I wrote what many have
    called the first book for a general audience on global warming. One of
    the more interesting reviews came from The Wall Street Journal. It
    was a mixed and judicious appraisal. “The subject,” the reviewer said,
    “is important, the notion is arresting, and Mr. McKibben argues
    convincingly.” And that was not an outlier: around the same time, the
    first president Bush announced that he planned to “fight the greenhouse
    effect with the White House effect.”

    I doubt that’s what the Journal will
    say about my next book when it comes out in a few weeks, and I know
    that no GOP presidential contender would now dream of acknowledging
    that human beings are warming the planet. Sarah Palin is currently
    calling climate science “snake oil,” and last week the Utah
    legislature, in a move straight out of the King Canute playbook, passed
    a resolution condemning “a well organized and ongoing effort to
    manipulate global temperature data in order to produce a global warming
    outcome” on a nearly party-line vote.

    And here’s what’s odd. In 1989, I could fit just about every
    scientific study on climate change on top of my desk. The science was
    still thin. If my reporting made me think it was nonetheless
    convincing, many scientists were not yet prepared to agree.

    Now, you could fill the Superdome with climate-change research data.
    (You might not want to, though, since Hurricane Katrina demonstrated
    just how easy it was to rip holes in its roof.) Every major scientific
    body in the world has produced reports confirming the peril. All 15 of
    the warmest years on record have come in the two decades that have
    passed since 1989. In the meantime, the Earth’s major natural systems
    have all shown undeniable signs of rapid flux: melting Arctic and
    glacial ice, rapidly acidifying seawater, and so on.

    Somehow, though, the onslaught against the science of climate change
    has never been stronger, and its effects, at least in the U.S., never
    more obvious: Fewer Americans believe humans are warming the planet. At least partly as a result, Congress feels little need to consider
    global-warming legislation, no less pass it; and as a result of that failure, progress toward any kind of international agreement on climate change has essentially ground to a halt.

    Climate-change denial as an O.J. moment

    The campaign against climate science has been enormously clever, and
    enormously effective. It’s worth trying to understand how they’ve done
    it. The best analogy, I think, is to the O.J. Simpson trial, an event
    that’s begun to recede into our collective memory. For those who were
    conscious in 1995, however, I imagine that just a few names will make
    it come back to life. Kato Kaelin, anyone? Lance Ito?

    The Dream Team of lawyers assembled for Simpson’s defense had a
    problem: It was pretty clear their guy was guilty. Nicole Brown’s blood
    was all over his socks, and that was just the beginning.  So Johnnie
    Cochran, Robert Shapiro, Alan Dershowitz, F. Lee Bailey, Robert
    Kardashian et al. decided to attack the process, arguing that
    it put Simpson’s guilt in doubt, and doubt, of course, was all they
    needed. Hence, those days of cross-examination about exactly how Dennis
    Fung had transported blood samples, or the fact that Los Angeles
    detective Mark Fuhrman had used racial slurs when talking to a
    screenwriter in 1986.

    If anything, they were actually helped by the mountain of
    evidence. If a haystack gets big enough, the odds only increase that
    there will be a few needles hidden inside. Whatever they managed to
    find, they made the most of: In closing arguments, for instance,
    Cochran compared Fuhrman to Adolf Hitler and called him “a genocidal
    racist, a perjurer, America’s worst nightmare, and the personification
    of evil.” His only real audience was the jury, many of whom had good
    reason to dislike the Los Angeles Police Department, but the team
    managed to instill considerable doubt in lots of Americans tuning in on
    TV as well. That’s what happens when you spend week after week dwelling
    on the cracks in a case, no matter how small they may be.

    Similarly, the immense pile of evidence now proving the science of
    global warming beyond any reasonable doubt is in some ways a great boon
    for those who would like, for a variety of reasons, to deny that the
    biggest problem we’ve ever faced is actually a problem at all. If you
    have a three-page report, it won’t be overwhelming and it’s unlikely to
    have many mistakes. Three thousand pages (the length of the latest
    report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)? That pretty
    much guarantees you’ll get something wrong.

    Indeed, the IPCC managed to include, among other glitches, a
    spurious date for the day when Himalayan glaciers would disappear. It
    won’t happen by 2035, as the report indicated—a fact that has now
    been spread so widely across the Internet that it’s more or less
    obliterated another, undeniable piece of evidence: Virtually every
    glacier on the planet is, in fact, busily melting. 

    Similarly, if you managed to hack 3,000 emails from some scientist’s
    account, you might well find a few that showed them behaving badly, or
    at least talking about doing so. This is the so-called “Climategate”
    scandal from an English research center last fall. The English
    scientist Phil Jones has been placed on leave while his university
    decides if he should be punished for, among other things, not complying
    with Freedom of Information Act requests.  

    Call him the Mark Fuhrman of climate science; attack him often enough and
    maybe people will ignore the inconvenient mountain of evidence about
    climate change that the world’s scientific researchers have, in fact,
    compiled. Indeed, you can make almost exactly the same kind of fuss
    Johnnie Cochran made—that’s what Rep. James Sensenbrenner
    (R-Wis.) did, insisting the emails proved “scientific fascism,” and
    the climate skeptic Christopher Monckton called his opponents “Hitler
    youth.” Such language filters down. I’m now used to a daily diet of
    angry email, often with subject lines like the one that arrived
    yesterday: “Nazi Moron Scumbag.” 

    If you’re smart, you can also take advantage of lucky breaks that
    cross your path. Say a record set of snowstorms hit Washington, D.C.  It
    won’t even matter that such a record is just the kind of thing
    scientists have been predicting, given the extra water vapor global
    warming is adding to the atmosphere. It’s enough that it’s super-snowy
    in what everyone swore was a warming world. 

    For a gifted political operative like, say, Marc Morano, who runs the Climate Depot website,
    the massive snowfalls this winter became the grist for a hundred posts
    poking fun at the very idea that anyone could still possibly believe
    in, you know, physics. Morano, who really is good, posted a link to a
    live webcam so readers could watch snow coming down; his former boss,
    Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), had his grandchildren build an igloo on
    the Capitol grounds, with a sign that read: “Al Gore’s New Home.” These
    are the things that stick in people’s heads. If the winter glove won’t
    fit, you must acquit.

    Why we don’t want to believe in climate change

    The climate deniers come with a few built-in advantages. Thanks to
    ExxonMobil and others with a vested interest in debunking
    climate-change research, their “think tanks” have plenty of money,
    none of which gets wasted doing actual research to disprove climate
    change. It’s also useful for a movement to have its own TV network,
    Fox, though even more crucial to the denial movement are a few
    right-wing British tabloids that validate each new “scandal” and put it
    into media play.

    That these guys are geniuses at working the media was proved this February when even The New York Times ran a front page story,
    “Skeptics Find Fault With U.N. Climate Panel,” which recycled most of
    the accusations of the past few months. What made it such a glorious
    testament to their success was the chief source cited by the Times:
    one Christopher Monckton, or Lord Monckton as he prefers to be called
    since he is some kind of British viscount.  He is also identified as a
    “former advisor to Margaret Thatcher,” and he did write a piece for the
    American Spectator during her term as prime minister offering his prescriptions for “the only way to stop AIDS”:

    … screen the entire population regularly and … quarantine all carriers of the disease for life. Every member of the population should be blood-tested every month … all those found to be infected with the virus, even if only as carriers, should be isolated compulsorily, immediately, and permanently.

    He speaks with equal gusto and good sense on matters climatic—and now from above the fold in the paper of record.

    Access to money and the media is not the only, or even the main,
    reason for the success of the climate deniers, though. They’re not
    actually spending all that much cash and they’ve got legions
    of eager volunteers doing much of the internet lobbying entirely for
    free. Their success can be credited significantly to the way they tap
    into the main currents of our politics of the moment with far more
    savvy and power than most environmentalists can muster. They’ve
    understood the popular rage at elites. They’ve grasped the widespread
    feelings of powerlessness in the U.S., and the widespread suspicion
    that we’re being ripped off by mysterious forces beyond our control.

    Some of that is, of course, purely partisan. The columnist David Brooks, for instance, recently said:
    “On the one hand, I totally accept the scientific authorities who say
    that global warming is real and it is manmade. On the other hand, I
    feel a frisson of pleasure when I come across evidence that contradicts
    the models … [in part] because I relish any fact that might make Al Gore
    look silly.” But the passion with which people attack Gore more often
    seems focused on the charge that he’s making large sums of money from
    green investments, and that the whole idea is little more than a scam
    designed to enrich everyone involved. This may be wrong—Gore has
    testified under oath that he donates his green profits to the cause—and scientists are not getting rich researching climate
    change (constant blog comments to the contrary), but it resonates with
    lots of people. I get many emails a day on the same theme: “The game is
    up. We’re on to you.”

    When I say it resonates with lots of people, I mean lots of
    people. O.J.‘s lawyers had to convince a jury made up mostly of black
    women from central city L.A., five of whom reported that they or their
    families had had “negative experiences” with the police. For them, it
    was a reasonably easy sell. When it comes to global warming, we’re
    pretty much all easy sells because we live the life that produces the
    carbon dioxide that’s at the heart of the crisis, and because we like
    that life.

    Very few people really want to change in any meaningful way, and
    given half a chance to think they don’t need to, they’ll take it.
    Especially when it sounds expensive, and especially when the economy
    stinks. Here’s David Harsanyi, a columnist for The Denver Post:
    “If they’re going to ask a nation—a world—to fundamentally alter
    its economy and ask citizens to alter their lifestyles, the believers’
    credibility and evidence had better be unassailable.”

    “Unassailable” sets the bar impossibly high when there is a
    dedicated corps of assailants out there hard at work. It is true that
    those of us who want to see some national and international effort to
    fight global warming need to keep making the case that the science is
    strong. That’s starting to happen.  There are new websites and iPhone apps to provide clear and powerful answers to the skeptic trash-talking, and
    strangely enough, the denier effort may, in some ways, be making the
    case itself: If you go over the multi-volume IPCC report with a fine-tooth comb and come up with three or four lousy citations, that’s
    pretty strong testimony to its essential accuracy.

    Clearly, however, the antiseptic attempt to hide behind the
    magisterium of Science in an effort to avoid the rough-and-tumble of
    Politics is a mistake. It’s a mistake because science can be—and, in
    fact, should be—infinitely argued about. Science is, in fact,
    nothing but an ongoing argument, which is one reason why it
    sounds so disingenuous to most people when someone insists that the
    science is “settled.” That’s especially true of people who have been
    told at various times in their lives that some food is good for you,
    only to be told later that it might increase your likelihood of dying.

    Why data isn’t enough

    I work at Middlebury College, a topflight liberal arts school, so
    I’m surrounded by people who argue constantly. It’s fun. One of the
    better skeptical takes on global warming that I know about is a weekly radio broadcast on our campus radio station run by a pair of undergraduates. They’re
    skeptics, but not cynics. Anyone who works seriously on the science
    soon realizes that we know more than enough to start taking action, but
    less than we someday will. There will always be controversy over
    exactly what we can now say with any certainty. That’s life on the
    cutting edge. I certainly don’t turn my back on the research—we’ve
    spent the last two years at 350.org building what Foreign Policy called “the largest ever coordinated global rally” around a previously
    obscure data point, the amount of atmospheric carbon that scientists
    say is safe, measured in parts per million.

    But it’s a mistake to concentrate solely on the science for another
    reason. Science may be what we know about the world, but politics is
    how we feel about the world. And feelings count at least as much as knowledge. Especially when those feelings are valid. People are getting ripped off. They are powerless against large forces that are, at the moment, beyond their control. Anger is justified.

    So let’s figure out how to talk about it. Let’s look at ExxonMobil,
    which each of the last three years has made more money than any company
    in the history of money. Its business model involves using the
    atmosphere as an open sewer for the carbon dioxide that is the
    inevitable byproduct of the fossil fuel it sells. And yet we let it do
    this for free. It doesn’t pay a red cent for potentially wrecking our
    world. 

    Right now, there’s a bill in the Congress—cap-and-dividend,
    it’s called—that would charge Exxon for that right, and send a check
    to everyone in the country every month. Yes, the company would pass on
    the charge at the pump, but 80 percent of Americans (all except the top-income
    energy hogs) would still make money off the deal. That represents good science, because it starts to send a
    signal that we should park that SUV, but it’s also good politics.

    By the way, if you think there’s a scam underway, you’re right—and to figure it out just track the money going in campaign
    contributions to the politicians doing the bidding of the energy
    companies. Inhofe, the igloo guy? Over a million dollars from energy and utility companies and executives in the last
    two election cycles. You think Al Gore is going to make money from
    green energy? Check out what you get for running an oil company.

    Worried that someone is going to wreck your future? You’re right about that, too. Right now, China is gearing up to dominate the green energy market. They’re making the investments that mean
    future windmills and solar panels, even ones installed in this country,
    will be likely to arrive from factories in Chenzhou, not Chicago.

    Coal companies have already eliminated most good mining jobs, simply
    by automating them in the search for ever higher profits. Now, they’re
    using their political power to make sure that miners’ kids won’t get to
    build wind turbines instead. Everyone should be mighty pissed—just
    not at climate-change scientists.

    But keep in mind as well that fear and rage aren’t the only feelings
    around. They’re powerful feelings, to be sure, but they’re not all we
    feel. And they are not us at our best.

    There’s also love, a force that has often helped motivate
    large-scale change, and one that cynics in particular have little power
    to rouse. Love for poor people around the world, for instance. If you
    think it’s not real, you haven’t been to church recently, especially
    evangelical churches across the country. People who take the Gospel
    seriously also take seriously indeed the injunction to feed the hungry
    and shelter the homeless. 

    It’s becoming patently obvious that nothing challenges that goal
    quite like the rising seas and spreading deserts of climate change.
    That’s why religious environmentalism is one of the most effective
    emerging parts of the global warming movement; that’s why we were able
    to get thousands of churches ringing their bells 350 times last October
    to signify what scientists say is the safe level of CO2 in the
    atmosphere; that’s why Bartholomew, patriarch of the Orthodox church
    and leader of 400 million eastern Christians, said, “Global warming is
    a sin and 350 is an act of redemption.”

    There’s also the deep love for creation, for the natural world. We
    were born to be in contact with the world around us and, though much of
    modernity is designed to insulate us from nature, it doesn’t really
    work. Any time the natural world breaks through—a sunset, an hour in
    the garden—we’re suddenly vulnerable to the realization that we care
    about things beyond ourselves. That’s why, for instance, the Boy Scouts
    and the Girl Scouts are so important: Get someone out in the woods at
    an impressionable age and you’ve accomplished something powerful.
    That’s why art and music need to be part of the story, right alongside
    bar graphs and pie charts. When we campaign about climate change at 350.org,
    we make sure to do it in the most beautiful places we know, the iconic
    spots that conjure up people’s connection to their history, their
    identity, their hope.

    The great irony is that the climate skeptics have prospered by
    insisting that their opponents are radicals. In fact, those who work to
    prevent global warming are deeply conservative, insistent that we
    should leave the world in something like the shape we found it. We want
    our kids to know the world we knew. Here’s the definition of radical:
    doubling the carbon content of the atmosphere because you’re not
    completely convinced it will be a disaster. We want to remove every
    possible doubt before we convict in the courtroom, because an innocent
    man in a jail cell is a scandal, but outside of it we should act more
    conservatively.

    In the long run, the climate deniers will lose; they’ll be a
    footnote to history. (Hey, even O.J. is finally in jail.) But they’ll
    lose because we’ll all lose, because by delaying action, they will have
    helped prevent us from taking the steps we need to take while there’s
    still time. If we’re going to make real change while it matters, it’s
    important to remember that their skepticism isn’t the root of the
    problem. It simply plays on our deep-seated resistance to change.
    That’s what gives the climate cynics ground to operate. That’s what we
    need to overcome, and at bottom that’s a battle as much about courage
    and hope as about data.

    Related Links:

    Gore’s climate remedy must match diagnosis

    Lindsey Graham’s dilemma, part one: How ACES got dealt a poor hand

    Sen. Inhofe’s latest attack is on climate scientists, not just science






  • China says no emissions cap for now

    by Agence France-Presse

    BEIJING—China’s top climate change negotiator has said the world’s biggest carbon polluter has no intention of capping greenhouse-gas emissions for the time being, state media reported Thursday.

    Su Wei, who led China’s negotiating team at the U.N. climate change talks in Copenhagen in December, said the country’s carbon emissions had to increase because the economy was still developing, the China Daily said. China “could not and should not” set an upper limit on greenhouse-gas emissions at the current stage, Su told a meeting on climate-change policy in Beijing on Wednesday.

    However, he said China was committed to making its economy more energy-efficient. Beijing has pledged to reduce its carbon intensity—the measure of greenhouse-gas emissions per unit of gross domestic product—by 40 to 45 percent by 2020 based on 2005 levels. Su said the pledge would be a binding part of China’s next two five-year economic development plans.

    His remarks came a day after President Hu Jintao told a high-level Communist Party meeting that China must “recognize the importance, urgency, and difficulty of dealing with climate change.”

    Britain and other countries have accused Beijing of vetoing attempts to give legal force to an agreement at the Copenhagen talks in December and blocking an agreement on reductions in global emissions.

    China has said it was never planning to accept outside reviews of its efforts to slow greenhouse-gas emissions at the talks in Denmark.

    China has submitted its plans to fight climate change to the United Nations, but described them as voluntary and has not formally endorsed the Copenhagen Accord.

    The United Nations Environment Program said in a report at its annual meeting on the Indonesian island of Bali this week that commitments made since Copenhagen have been insufficient.

    “No one should assume that the pledges will be enough,” UNEP director Adrian Steiner said. “Countries will have to be far more ambitious in cutting greenhouse-gas emissions if the world is to curb a rise in global temperature.”

    Beijing has repeatedly said rich countries should take the lead in committing to substantial emission reduction targets and provide financing to developing countries battling climate change.

    Yu Qingtai, China’s climate-change ambassador, on Wednesday lashed out at developed countries, saying they were reluctant to promise emission cuts and provide green funding support, according to the China Daily. Rich governments are pressuring developing nations—“emerging big countries” in particular—to shoulder “unreasonable responsibilities,” Yu said, adding the diverging views would be a long-standing problem.

    Related Links:

    Coffee hit by global warming, growers say

    Making sense of Wal-Mart’s big green announcement

    The Climate Post: Climate bill + climategate = Bill ‘Climate’ Gates!






  • Rep. Tom Perriello: ‘Every week the Senate doesn’t act, we’re giving up jobs’

    by David Roberts

    Rep. Tom Perriello (D-Va.)AP Photo/News & Advance, Jill NanceRep. Tom Perriello won one of the most celebrated upsets of 2008, narrowly defeating incumbent Republican Virgil Goode to represent Virginia’s 5th District, an historically red district that Obama lost by 2.5 percent. Since then he has voted against the Democrats on a few high-profile issues—he voted against Obama’s budget—but with them on the biggest ones: the stimulus bill, the health-care reform bill, and the American Clean Energy & Security Act (ACES), also known as the Waxman-Markey bill.

    Conventional wisdom says that those votes have left Perriello highly vulnerable in 2010—he’s on the Rothenberg Report’s “Dangerous Dozen”  list—but the latest polling shows him neck-and-neck with likely opponent Robert Hurt. (Tea Party types unhappy with Hurt are reportedly encouraging Goode to jump in the race as an Independent, which could split the conservative vote.) The way Perriello sees it, voters respect him for doing what he thinks is right and standing behind it, even when they disagree. As I discovered when I talked to him on Tuesday, his alleged vulnerability has done nothing to suppress his fighting spirit.

    ———

    Q. If it came to the floor today, would you vote for ACES again?

    A. I would vote for any aggressive energy-independence effort. This is the challenge of our time—the jobs opportunity, the national security challenge, the scientific challenge of our era. Any plan that uses market forces to signal a carbon-constrained environment is going to move us in the right direction. People who don’t support this kind of aggressive energy independence are just selling Americans short.

    Q. Nothing has changed your mind since that original vote?

    A. Well, I always preferred a tax shift with a major reimbursement on payroll taxes as a cleaner and clearer way to do it. I think there are plenty of better ways we could have written the bill. But you show me a way to get to 218 [votes] on a victory for America’s energy independence and national security and I’ll be there.

    Q. There’s been some criticism of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for holding the vote on ACES so early in the session, before the Senate had its ducks in a row.  Do you think that was the right decision?

    A. If we were going to wait for the Senate to do anything, we would do nothing. This stuff should have been done 10 to 20 years ago. We’re so far behind China, Europe, and other areas in the energy jobs of the future because neither party has had the guts to take this on.  There are so many spineless people in D.C. To me, the new politics—“change we can believe in” —was about starting with what would solve our problems, not what would get us reelected.  Whether you do it early or late is not the issue. The issue is, is this going to make America more competitive and safer? I think it will.

    Q. If the bill went through the Senate as fast as it went through the House, Democrats would be touting their victory. Instead, Democrats who voted for it in the House have the vote to defend but no victory to point to. They’ve kind of been left hanging. Is there anger in the House toward the Senate right now?

    A. That’s insider baseball stuff.  The American people respect results: they want jobs, they want the country to be safer. The House has produced a historic agenda in that regard, and the Senate hasn’t. But it’s not about pointing fingers; it’s about getting it done.

    One of the reasons why it made sense to move quickly is there’s a tremendous amount of capital on Wall Street and elsewhere waiting to invest in energy. When I talk to investors, they say, “We need predictability.”  Whether it’s financial regs or energy independence or the jobs bill, they’re saying, “Look, if you tell us what the rules are going to be, we’ll go do what we do best, which is create jobs and make profits. But we can’t do that until you act.”  So it’s less important to get some hypothetically perfect rules than to create the certainty that allows investors and innovators to move forward.

    Every week the Senate doesn’t act, it either freezes that investment and innovation or it sends it overseas. We’re giving up jobs. The Senate—the ridiculous tactics of the Republicans and the timidity of the Democrats—is standing in the way of the kind of job creation we need.

    Q. Back in October, Sen. Lindsey Graham [R-S.C.]—who’s now helping to craft a climate and energy bill in the Senate—said, “What I’m trying to do is make sure the Waxman-Markey bill from the House is dead.”  ACES seems to have gotten a reputation as a wildly liberal bill. Do you think that’s accurate? If not, why do you think that House Dems have so lost the messaging battle?

    A. Keep in mind that cap-and-trade is a Republican idea. It was a good idea when the Republicans came up with it and it continues to be when Democrats support it. It’s a good idea because it uses capitalism to solve a core problem. When Republicans are honest with themselves—many of them come up to me and say, “Look, I’d love to support it, I know this is the right approach, but if I do this I’ll have a primary challenger tomorrow.” That’s not conviction politics. That’s spinelessness. There’s a lot of posturing that goes on up here.

    [ACES] is actually a very gradual phase-in; it’s low caps; it’s generous support to the utilities, which frankly I would have liked see go to consumers. Unfortunately, good ideas, ideas that could save our country, sometimes take 30 minutes to explain and only 30 seconds to demagogue. In between those two things is leadership, and we haven’t had the moral courage to take this on.

    The people in the House who stood up and said, “Hey, this is what’s right for our country”—that’s the leadership people want. That’s why, if you look in a district like mine that you would think would be a disaster, it’s actually been a positive. The people respect the conviction of it. We’re making the [clean] energy economy real in southern Virginia. We have our dairy farmers and poultry farmers in on it. We have our municipal electric utilities part of it. We have small businesses that are headed to the next big car, the big battery—this is what we do better than anyone else.

    True bipartisanship in Washington is bipartisan support for bailing out failure in Wall Street instead of standing up for workers and innovation. Cap-and-trade was a real shock to the Washington insider system that’s used to being able to block anything that challenges the status quo. We’ve seen the full weight of corporate capture of government, its ability to buy its way into a message victory.

    Q. One of the options being floated in the Senate is to strip the cap-and-trade part out and pass an energy-only bill. If a bill like that came back to the House, do you think it could get through?

    A. That’s more insider baseball crap. I don’t really care. I’m sick of starting with what can we get through the Senate; let’s start with what solves the damn problem.  Until the Senate gets its head out of its rear-end and starts to see the crisis we’re in, our country is literally at risk. Our economy is at risk, because these jobs are being created overseas.  It should have the same urgency with this problem that it had bailing out Wall Street.

    We are swearing an oath to do what’s necessary to protect this country, not do what’s necessary to get a bill through the Senate. If you look at what voters were upset with on the health-care bill, it was all the carve-outs and exemptions and watering it down. Voters are smart; they know that the House bill stood up to the health insurance companies and the Senate bill didn’t. The same thing is true here: If they respect that the bill is actually going to transform our economy, make us more competitive and more independent, they’ll support it. If it seems like it’s just a sell-out to the big donors from the oil and gas companies, they won’t support it.

    That’s the question that we should be asking: Does this solve the problem? Is this a solution worthy of the American people? And if it is, then great; let’s move forward with it.

    Related Links:

    Sen. Mark Udall: “I think it’s crucial to price carbon”

    Remaking the Global Climate Framework

    What might Sen. Evan Bayh’s retirement mean for the clean-energy bill?






  • King Corn airs complaints about USDA

    by Tom Philpott

    Obama’s ag policy has come under justifiable criticism from the sustainable food movement—see here and here—for its aggressive pro-biotechnology and pro-trade policies. But it has also managed to enrage industrial-ag interests, too, with its “Know your Farmer” program and other gestures toward alternative food. King Corn, it turns out, is a sensitive sovereign.

    Check this out, from the farm journal Brownfield:

    The chairman of the Iowa Corn Promotion Board is expressing concern about the USDA’s shift in emphasis toward locally grown and organic foods.

    Oh, oh—a corn guy’s getting pissed. In addition to leading his state’s Corn Promotion board, Tim Burrack of Arlington, Iowa is also a farmer. And apparently, he aired his grievance at a public USDA presentation in Iowa featuring Kathleen Merrigan, the agency’s progressive deputy secretary.

    From Brownfield:

    “I’ve farmed for 37 years and worked with the government and everything—and what I’m hearing out here is radically different than what has taken place in the first 36 years of my career,” Burrack says. “And I just got up and told them so—I said, ‘this is not the USDA that people in the Midwest are familiar with.’”

    Burrack goes on to describe Merrigan’s response to his complaint:

    And she said, ‘well, you know, the USDA is a big place and there’s room in the tent for everybody.’ So I guess that’s the attitude that we all need to work under … The concern is that traditional production agriculture has provided for this nation a very safe and very low-cost food supply. And a lot of the emphasis you’re hearing here today is—well, you know, it won’t be cheap food like what we’ve been familiar with. It’s a higher cost source of food—but they say we’re going to do it all.

    Burrack then addresses the question of whether he’s surprised that these scary new directions are happening under Tom Vilsack, former Iowa governor and staunch supporter of GMOs and ethanol. “No,” he replies, “because it’s very apparent the direction is coming from above him [Vilsack].”

    The corn man adds that his comments to Merrigan went over well with the crowd. “I was amazed at the number of USDA employees-and attendees like myself that made a comment to me afterwards saying, ‘thank you for saying what a lot of us are thinking,’” he said.

    Now, change is always alarming; and any of us will defend our livelihood if we perceive it under threat. But Burrack should reflect that aside from “Know Your Farmer”—which doesn’t actually bring additional resources to the table for sustainable farming—the Obama administration is aggressively pursuing the corn-ethanol program, thus ensuring growing demand for Burrack’s product. The administration is also pushing to break down any remaining barriers to foreign trade in ag goods, ensuring that U.S. corn farmers will have a place to sell, not to say, dump, any surpluses that might occur.

    True, the administration is pushing for farm-subsidy cuts, but it’s difficult to imagine that happening any time soon, given the power and composition of the Congressional agriculture committees.

    It should also be noted that when Burrack complains about the still-paltry USDA resources committed to sustainable ag projects, corn growers get between $2 billion and $9 billion in crop subsidies every year. He himself has evidently become accustomed to that largesse. According to the Environmental Working Group database, Burrack Farm Inc. reeled in more than $1 million in crop subsidies between 1995 and an 2006.

    I’ve said it before, and I will say it once more: societies need to support farmers, if they want a robust and ecologically sustainable food supply. But the idea of paying farmers by the bushel to grow resource-intensive corn—by far our biggest fertilizer-dependent, and thus, soil-destroying crop—is insane.

    Related Links:

    Smithfield tries to weave a silk purse from a sow’s ear

    New research: synthetic nitrogen destroys soil carbon, undermines soil health

    More biofuel waste for cows, plus a California beef packer pulls a Toyota






  • The economics of the Bloom Box

    by Jesse Jenkins

    Bloom Energy at the eBay headquaters. Photo courtesy BloomEnergy via Flickr

    Cross-posted from WattHead.

    With all the hype today around the release of the “breakthrough” Bloom Energy fuel cell (which has become known as the “Bloom box” and is referred to by Bloom as an “Energy Server”), it’s good to find a couple of posts looking at some real details:

    Todd Woody, writing for the NYTimes GreenInc blog, has some details on the design of the Bloom Box solid oxide fuel cells from his look inside the Bloom Energy facilities this week.  And Lux Research has this post looking at the economics of the Bloom Box, which is a good read.

    It
    appears that the unsubsidized price of the Bloom Box is about
    $7-8,000/kW so their 100 kW units cost $700,000-800,000 without
    subsidy. As a fuel cell, it also needs fuel to run, in this case
    natural gas or another source of methane (such as landfill gas or
    biogas from anaerobic digesters).

    After federal subsidies for
    fuel cells (they can claim the same 30 percent investment tax credit that
    solar gets) and a $2,500 California rebate, and assuming $7/mmBTU price
    for natural gas, a 100 kW Bloom Box unit generates electricity at 8-10
    cents/kWh. That compares favorable to commercial electricity rates in
    many parts of the country, (average about 11 cents/kWh across U.S. with
    higher rates in several states, including California, New York, and
    Hawaii) so there could be good market for the Bloom Box in distributed
    generation applications in a variety of places, assuming federal/state
    subsidies holds out.

    Unsubsidized cost would be 13-14 cents/kWh,
    with about 9 cents/kWh from the capital costs of the Bloom box and 5
    cents/kWh from natural gas costs, according to Luz Research. If natural
    gas prices rise or fall 50 percent (gas prices are often volatile), overall
    price would fluctuate from 11.5-12.5 cents/kWh to 20.5-21.5 cents/kWh.
    That unsubsidized price is still too high to compete in most markets
    with retail electricity without subsidy. However, this is the first
    generation, and if Bloom can bring prices down (and/or natural gas
    prices are stable/low), there could be a significant market for this
    fuel cell.

    As far as climate benefits, supposedly it generates electricity at 50-55 percent conversion efficiency.  CO2 emissions when running on natural gas would be just under 0.8 pounds/kWh,
    which compares favorably to electricity from central station coal-fired
    plants (2 lbs/kWh) or natural gas plants (roughly 1.3 lbs/kWh) and the
    national average for on-grid electricity (around 1.3-1.5 lbs/kWh).
    Clearly, though the Bloom Box is still not a zero emissions tech and
    would only cut emissions by roughly 50 percent relative to the national
    average, unless it runs on landfill gas or biogas or hydrogen from
    electrolysis fueled by zero-carbon electricity (which would be much
    more expensive as you have to add cost of electrolysis unit, higher
    cost electricity, and about 30 percent conversion losses in electrolysis).

    It
    is also worth noting that the average emissions rate of grid
    electricity in some states is less than the Bloom Box’s 0.8 lbs/kWh.
    According to EPA’s eGrid database, that list of states includes
    Vermont, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, California and New Jersey. However,
    EPA does not account for imported electricity across state borders,
    which tends to increase the emissions rates of most of these states.
    California, for example, has an emissions rate of about 0.65 lbs/KWh
    according to eGrid—which is notably less than the Bloom Box’s
    emissions rate running on natural gas—but more like 1.0 lbs/KWh when
    imports of mostly-coal-fired electricity from out of state is factored
    in (author’s calculations). When imports are factored in, this author
    calculates that average emissions rates for on-grid electricity in
    Vermont, Washington, and Oregon still fall below that of the Bloom fuel
    cell (but emissions rates vary within each state from utility to
    utility as well).

    Solid oxide fuel cells have notoriously faced challenges with durability, since they operate
    at very high temperatures, which the Bloom box will also have to
    overcome to prove profitable. Todd Woddy writes:

    In seven months of [pilot test] operations, Bloom has replaced a few fuel-cell wafers, but the machines have otherwise operated without a problem, Ms. Skoczlas Cole [of Ebay] said.

    Bloom executives said the company spent years developing a proprietary seal made from low-cost materials to prevent cracks and leaks. They estimate that the Bloom boxes will have a 10-year lifespan and that the company will have to swap out the fuel-cell stacks twice during that time.

    Mike Brown, an executive with UTC Power, a leading fuel-cell maker, said the fuel cells need to last at least four or five years for the technology to be competitive.

    The advantage of solid oxide fuel cells running so hot is that all that waste heat can potentially be put to good use. When co-generating heat and electricity, solid oxide fuel cells can reach combined efficiencies upwards of 85 percent, which is excellent, but no word yet whether or not the Bloom fuel cell will co-generate heat. At this point, it appears that it does not (particularly given it’s use to power data centers and the like, which can’t put the heat to very good use; cooling is more of an issue for data centers!). That’s a shame, but perhaps another model of the
    product at some point in the future will be suited to co-generation
    applications (e.g. to provide process heat to industrial facilities or
    neighborhood district heating schemes).  [Update: commenter Amazingdrx at Grist reminds me that waste heat can indeed be used to provide cooling using the common absorption refrigeration technique (which I should have recalled, since the entire campus at my alma
    mater, the University of Oregon – Go Ducks! – was cooled using
    absorption chillers run by our natural gas plant). So the waste heat from these fuel cell stacks should be used to cool the data centers they also power, increasing the efficiency and economics of the system…]

    I also hear that it may require zirconium oxide as a membrane (can anyone confirm that?) and zirconium doesn’t grow on
    trees, nor is it processed quickly, which may hamper production volumes.

    So
    is the Bloom Box the solution to all the world’s energy problems? Of
    course not. But could it finally move fuel cells for stationary power
    generation a big step forward? It looks like the chances are good. Only
    time, and the tests of the market, will tell …

    It’s worth
    noting though that with the idea initially funded through NASA’s Mars
    program and initial product launch only enabled by public deployment
    incentives, the Bloom Energy fuel cell is another good example of how public investments in technology R&D and deployment can catalyze significant private sector investment, innovation and
    entrepreneurship to drive forward a new technology with potential for
    widespread application as costs come down.

    Related Links:

    Bloom: Thinking inside the box

    What the heck is a Bloom Box and will it solve the world’s energy problems?

    Ask Umbra’s pearls of wisdom on nuclear energy






  • Hummer to hum along no more?

    by Ashley Braun

    Crash course

    General Motors has decided to park the ultimate gas guzzler in that big garage in the sky. GM thought its plans to sell Hummer to a Chinese company had the green light, but got run off the road this week by the Chinese government, ironically, over fears of pollution. Enviros who say fuH2 may be cheering, but what will they make fun of now?

    UPDATE: The pearly garage doors may not have shut on Hummer quite yet, as two previously shunned suitors have come a-callin’ to GM.

    Photo: blmurch via Flickr

    Related Links:

    Hop on the bus, texters

    British Airways plans to get wasted on future flights

    Chinese pollution concerns dash Hummer deal, analysts say






  • Your car and your meat-eating: the biggest causes of climate change

    by treehugger.com

    A new study coming out of NASA’s Goddard
    Institute for Space Studies
    , and published in the Proceedings of the
    National Academy of Sciences
    , shows that when it comes to the net
    contribution to climate change
    on-road transportation, burning
    biomass for cooking, and raising animals for food are the biggest
    culprits. Since most of us don’t regularly use
    biomass stoves to cook, as do millions of people in developing nations,
    that leaves us with your car and your diet to tackle.

    Rather than looking at the sources of different chemicals linked with
    global warming, the GISS study looked at net climate impact from
    different economic sectors. By net impact, we’re talking about emissions
    than contribute to warming (the usual suspects CO2, methane, black
    carbon
    , etc) minus those emissions that actually slow warming (some
    aerosols, sulfates, etc) by reflecting light and altering clouds.

    Get the rest of the story from our friends at TreeHugger.

    Related Links:

    Hop on the bus, texters

    Hummer to hum along no more?

    Smithfield tries to weave a silk purse from a sow’s ear