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  • Oil rig leak and the week in fossil-fuel industry disasters

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    The Gulf of Mexico oil spill.Photo: NASA’s Earth ObservatoryThe oil and coal
    industries have been making themselves look so bad lately, it’s almost as if
    they want to help out their
    clean-energy competitors. It’s time for another damage report:

    About 42,000
    gallons of oil a day are leaking into the Gulf of Mexico after an explosion
    sunk the oil rig Deepwater Horizon
    and left 11 workers missing (the rescue search for them has been
    called off) and three others critically injured. Responders are trying three
    methods to stop the flow—one that would take hours, one that would take months,
    and one that would not plug the leak but would capture the oil. Officials are
    watching the 600-square-mile surface sheen to see if it will strike the coast
    of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, or Florida (map).
    In the wake of the coal-mine
    explosion
    that killed 29 workers, West Virginia’s Massey Energy shows it
    cares about its workers by … hiring a top-dollar PR firm to protect its image.
    It’s using the Austin, Texas, firm Public Strategies, which is run by senior
    communications specialists from the Bush White House and campaigns. The West
    Virginia Gazette‘s Ken Ward Jr. details Massey’s PR game plan, which includes an argument that the Upper Big
    Branch mine had “about an average number of violations in 2009-2010,” though it also concedes it had “a very large number”
    of more serious enforcement violations.
    At another West Virginia coal mine, a 28-year-old
    worker died after being pinned against a mine wall last Thursday.

    The full tally
    for recent fossil-fuel accidents also includes:

    The crash
    of a coal freighter
    into the fragile Great Barrier Reef as it tried to take
    a shortcut from Australian mines to Chinese furnaces.
    The Tesoro oil refinery
    explosion
    that killed five workers in Washington state.
    The spillage
    of 18,000 gallons of crude oil
    from a Chevron pipline into a canal in the Delta
    National Wildlife Refuge in Louisiana.

    Of course, these
    are only the most dramatic costs of fossil-fuel burning. The health effects
    wrought by climate change and mercury and soot pollution have a much larger
    cumulative effect, reaching people who don’t have family members working in energy
    industries.

    There’s an odd parallel here to the national
    struggle over immigration policy. Arizona’s depraved new immigration law has
    the effect of showing the country just how broken our immigration system has
    become. The string of fossil-fuel industry disasters should be making clear just how broken
    our energy system has become.

    Related Links:

    World’s first taxis with easily swapped batteries hit Tokyo

    A near thumbs-up for Joe Romm’s ‘Straight Up’

    Obama blandly invokes ‘American Dream’ in tribute to miners who were denied it






  • DIY cheap, green burial with dryer lint

    by Jen Harper

    One bunny in a dryer yields three urns.Cleaning out the mass of lint, dog and human hair, dirt, and
    dust that collects in the dryer always makes me retch just a bit, but
    Oregon-based mortician Elizabeth Fournier, known as the Green Reaper, obviously
    has a stronger stomach than I do (from dealing with the dead all day, one would
    assume) because she puts that dryer lint amalgamation to use to make a sort of papier-mâché urn. As in
    the thing you keep someone’s ashes in post-cremation.

    “The stuff that ends up in the dryer’s lint trap is
    good fabric and sometimes there’s hair, which is a good binder as well,”
    Fournier told AOL
    News
    .

    She rounds out the recipe
    for a biodegradable and inexpensive urn
    (conventional ones can run upward
    of $1,000) with flour and water. Mmm, nothing like mixing up a batch of lint,
    hair, flour, and water to hold the remains of your dead loved one.

    Eco-friendly? Sure. Inexpensive? Absolutely. Kinda gross?
    Pardon while I go regurgitate my morning muffin.

    ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

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  • A near thumbs-up for Joe Romm’s ‘Straight Up’

    by Ross Gelbspan

    Joe Romm is pissed off—and I’m delighted.

    His
    latest book, Straight Up, takes on the oil and coal
    companies, the skeptics, and the press. His unfailing sense of priorities shines
    through his startlingly thoughtful and brutally blunt writing.

    I
    have one problem with his book—but more about that later.   

    As
    an assistant secretary of energy during the Clinton administration, Romm
    developed expertise in the area of renewable energy technologies. As a climate blogger,
    his even greater asset is his intelligence.  

    Straight Up is a
    compilation of posts from Romm’s popular blog Climate Progress. And while one
    wishes Romm would have stitched the blog posts together into a more coherent
    narrative—and omitted a few that addressed transitory, fleeting events—his
    book is absolutely on point in its insistence that climate change long ago
    ceased to be a scientific issue and, instead, is most clearly a political one.

    Take
    the climate bills pending in Congress. Even though all the proposals on the
    legislative table are pitifully inadequate to the catastrophic threat of
    accelerating climate change, Romm’s book makes the subtext crystal clear.

    The
    conflict in Congress is not really about the science. “The conflict is actually
    a political one between those who believe in government-led solutions and those
    who don’t.” As Romm points out, a central reason that most political
    conservatives and libertarians deny the reality of human-induced climate change
    “is that they simply cannot stand the solution. So they attack both the
    solution and the science.”  I don’t
    recall reading that simple truth in The
    Washington Post, The New York Times,
    or any other major news outlet—virtually all of which treat the climate
    debate as though it actually had some legitimacy.

    Similarly,
    I share Romm’s critical take on the news media for their complicity in creating
    our gathering nightmare.

    Having
    spent 30 years as an editor and reporter at some of the country’s major
    newspapers, I don’t think the worst offenders in the hierarchy of climate
    villainy are the executives of Big Coal and Big Oil. They’re simply doing what
    they’re paid to do: bring us cheap and abundant energy—and defend their
    industries against the imperatives of the science and the onslaught of
    environmentalists.

    The
    larger villain, from my point of view, is the mainstream press that has
    consistently failed to prepare the public for the coming turbulence. The major
    U.S. news outlets have failed to prominently highlight major climate science
    findings. They have failed to mention the role of warming in the increasing
    frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. And they have failed, in the name of
    “journalistic balance,” to distinguish between legitimate, peer-reviewed
    scientific research and the deliberate obfuscation by a cadre of climate
    skeptics, many of whom have been funded by coal and oil companies.

    As
    a result, the public has no idea that we are already at a point of no return in
    terms of staving off climate chaos. 

    Citing
    the dire forecasts from the most recent IPCC report—which significantly underestimate
    the urgency of the situation—Romm blasts the media for treating climate
    skeptics “as if they had a scientifically or morally defensible position.”

    Moreover,
    because the media largely continues to report the climate controversy as though
    it had a middle ground, “they push us closer to the certain catastrophe of
    inaction,” as Romm writes.

    His
    chilling conclusion:  “It appears to me
    that today’s media simply can’t cover humanity’s self-destruction.”

    In
    a similar vein, Romm skewers the media for failing to connect the
    intensification of extreme weather events around the world to our burning of
    coal and oil.

    That
    connection was established as early as 1995, when Tom Karl, David Easterling,
    and other scientists at NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center concluded that as
    earth’s temperature increases, we will see more temperature extremes, more
    intense downpours, and more protracted droughts, among other consequences. Those
    findings were elaborated in a 1997 Scientific
    American articled titled “The Coming
    Climate
    .”

    Nevertheless,
    Romm points out that the coverage by the majority of the U.S. news outlets of
    last year’s hellish wildfires in Australia contained no mention of warming-driven
    heat waves and droughts. Romm cited a
    Reuters headline which read, “Australia Fires a
    Climate Wake-up Call: Experts
    .” 
    By contrast, ABC News anchor Charles Gibson called them “part natural
    disaster” and partly the product of arsonists. 
    ABC’s World News Tonight said
    not one word about the role of human-induced atmospheric warming in the long
    heat wave and drought that created such hospitable conditions for the
    wildfires.

    On
    the economic front, Romm is equally ruthless in his criticism. For one thing,
    the press and many economists have consistently overestimated the costs of
    mitigation, starting with the simplest of all remedies: efficiency. In Romm’s
    view, the U.S. is the “Saudi Arabia of energy waste.”

    While
    the press parrots the
    prevailing economic line
    that mitigation will be crushingly expensive. Romm notes
    that during his five-year stint at DOE, “I never saw a building or factory that
    couldn’t cut electricity consumption or greenhouse-gas emissions 25 to 50
    percent with rapid payback.”

    More
    to the point, Straight Up quotes Eric
    Pooley
    ,
    a former editor at Fortune and Time magazine: “The press misrepresented
    the economic debate over cap-and-trade. It failed to recognize … that cap and
    trade would have a marginal effect on economic growth and gave doomsday
    forecasts … The press allowed opponents of climate action to replicate the
    false debate over climate science in the realm of climate economics.” As
    Tufts University economist Frank Ackerman said recently,
    “It’s not the costs of mitigating climate change that worry me, it’s the costs
    of inaction.”

    I
    also share Romm’s impatience with policy analysts who continually call for more
    R&D to solve the climate crisis.  Right
    now we have all the technology we need to begin reducing emissions quickly and
    cheaply. Romm happens to favor both
    efficiency and concentrated solar thermal power. But, his technological preferences aside,
    he’s right on point when he describes the call for more R&D as a stalling
    tactic to avoid coming to grips with the threat. As Romm writes, “deployment
    completely trumps research.”

    Romm
    does overlook one critical point.  While
    renewable technologies may be relatively expensive at this point, that is not a
    function of economics. It is, first and foremost, a function of political will.
    Were the world’s political leaders to mobilize around the need to rewire the
    world with clean energy, the costs of solar panels, solar towers, wind turbines,
    appropriate hydroelectric facilities, and other technologies would drop
    dramatically as they were ramped up to mass production and economies of scale. (For
    one set of strategies to accomplish this, see here.) Recall,
    for instance, that prohibitively expensive early television sets and computers
    became quickly affordable when their production and marketing were scaled up.

    But
    for all the uncompromising wisdom in Straight
    Up, I still have a problem.

    Toward
    the end of his book, Romm wanders into the question of why climate advocates
    are so bad at “messaging.” It may be a
    valid question. Foundations have poured
    thousands of dollars into exploring how best to communicate the realities of
    climate change. George Lakoff, for one,
    has devoted a substantial amount of time to wrestling with this question. 

    But
    I’m afraid the issue of “messaging” is a swerve—a diversion from the real
    question facing all of us at this moment of history.

    We
    have already passed the point of no return. We are already beginning to see crop failures, water shortages,
    increasing extinctions, migrations of environmental refugees, and all manner of
    potential breakdowns in our social lives.

    Where
    Straight Up falls short is in its
    failure to deal with this reality head on. It is not a pretty scenario. When governments
    are confronted by collapse, they too often resort to totalitarian methods to
    keep order in the face of chaos. Given
    the increasingly precarious state of our climate, it is not hard to foresee
    governments resorting to permanent states of martial law. And it is not hard to imagine a short-term
    state of emergency morphing into a long-term state of siege.

    This
    is not at all to minimize the value of Romm’s book. To the contrary, if you think the most
    pressing task today is to limit the coming damage through a transition to
    non-carbon technologies, I can’t think of a better place to start than by
    reading Straight Up.

    But
    that transition can only be a start.

    Unfortunately,
    we have already passed a point of no return in terms of staving off massive
    disruptions. It is time to begin talking
    about how to preserve a coherent human community without a retreat into mass
    survivalism. It is time to start
    planning how we can endure in a world that will be far less stable and far more
    threatening than the one we grew up in.

    Perhaps
    this is an unfair knock on Romm. Perhaps it is not environmentalists—even
    extraordinarily intelligent ones like Romm—to whom we should be looking for
    these kinds of answers.

    The
    overriding threat to our collective future used to be an environmental one. Today it has grown into a global existential one.

    Environmentalists
    have done us a great service by identifying the problem. But the real challenge,
    I think, goes far beyond the reach and expertise of Joe Romm or, for that
    matter, any other environmentalist.

    The
    question of how to reorganize society in the face of impending collapse comes
    down to a choice between a radically more coordinated, cooperative global
    community and a scatter of fortressed, tribalized, and highly defended enclaves.

    That is the real question facing us today. It is a question that requires courage. It is
    a question that requires trust. Finally, it is a question that requires the
    very best thinking of people from every continent, every discipline, and every single
    walk of life.

    Related Links:

    Oil rig leak and the week in fossil-fuel industry disasters

    Obama blandly invokes ‘American Dream’ in tribute to miners who were denied it

    The good news about the very bad news (about climate change)






  • Obama blandly invokes ‘American Dream’ in tribute to miners who were denied it

    by David Roberts

    This weekend there was a memorial service for the 29 miners killed in the explosion at Massey’s Upper Big Branch mine. President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin (D) all spoke. I found Obama’s address infuriating.

    Look, obviously, it’s a memorial service. The focus was on the miners and their families, and that’s entirely appropriate. Turning memorials into political rallies is never a good idea.

    Nonetheless, Obama’s speech was so bland and gauzy, so resolutely inert, that for me at least it amounted to an insult to the miners’ memories. Why must a tribute involve papering over the realities of their lives and the circumstances that led to their deaths? Do we honor them by romanticizing what they did? Do we honor them by referring to the explosion that ended their lives as though it were an unforeseeable act of God?

    Look at this:

    All the hard work; all the hardship; all the time spent underground; it was all for their families. For a car in the driveway. For a roof overhead. For a chance to give their kids opportunities they never knew; and enjoy retirement with their wives. It was all in the hopes of something better. These miners lived—as they died—in pursuit of the American dream.

    So anybody who works to feed their family is living the American dream? What a lazy, limpid bit of rhetoric. People work to feed their families in other countries too. It seems to me what separates the American dream from the dreams of others is that in America every citizen is afforded a measure of dignity. Every citizen can expect to be treated as a human being, not a cog in a machine. Every citizen has the right to unionize, to protect employee interests. Every citizen has a right to a workplace that conforms to reasonable safety standards and an employer who obeys the law. Every citizen has a right to a working and living environment that does not slowly poison their family. Every citizen has a right to speak out without fear of reprisal or bullying from the owners of capital.

    Massey miners had none of those rights. Exploitative work, without union representation, in a patently unsafe environment, run by bullying managers who break the law with impunity? That’s not the American dream. That’s a Third World nightmare. The deaths of these miners was a failure of the American dream. And it didn’t just happen. There were real people behind it, who made real decisions that prioritized rocks over human lives.

    Greed and venality killed these miners. Can’t we feel just a little bit of anger about that? Is it really “politics” to allow ourselves that anger?

    ———

    As an addendum, how are the barons and lobbyists of the coal mining industry reacting to Obama’s kind words? Are they giving him any credit? Being reasonable in return?

    No:

    “You’d be hard pressed to find a president whose actions have been more warlike on coal. There are those who say the president has parked his tanks on our front lawn, and it’s hard to dispute that,” said Luke Popovich of the National Mining Association.

    “Tanks on our front lawn.” This from a lobbyist living a comfortable life in D.C., whose manicured nails have never once been stained by a piece of coal, who faces no risk more severe than failing to get a table at The Palm, heading an organization that resolutely fights worker safety protections at every turn. Repulsive. (See Appalachian Voices for more.)

    Related Links:

    Oil rig leak and the week in fossil-fuel industry disasters

    A near thumbs-up for Joe Romm’s ‘Straight Up’

    More lessons from Wales for moving beyond coal






  • Rooftop farming and beekeeping boom in New York

    by Agence France-Presse

    Rooftop garden in Queens. Photo courtesy Your Secret Admiral via FlickrNEW YORK—Urban farming is a growth industry in New York City’s concrete jungle, and with little open land available, agriculturalists and beekeepers have taken to the rooftops to pursue their passion.

    Andrew Cote uses the emergency fire ladder to climb up to the roof of his East Village building, where he tends to 250 beehives. Cote, a professor of Japanese literature, doubles up as president of the New York City Beekeepers Association and is happy that the city authorized beekeeping in mid-March after an 11-year ban. The ban forced beekeepers into hiding, fearing a $2,000 fine if caught.

    “The city wants to plant one million trees, and the trees need to be pollinated,” Cote said. “Our bees pollinate, and they clean the air. It is a way to connect with nature.”

    Bees also produce around 100 pounds of honey per hive per year, he said—honey that he sells at the city’s various farmers markets.

    Cote said he has received several requests to install rooftop beehives and has scheduled a course for aspiring apiculturalists.

    On the other side of Manhattan, in the posh Upper East Side, Eli Zabar, owner of the upscale Vinegar Factory delicatessen, inspects the crops he is growing on the roof of the old factory bought in 1991.

    “I began the greenhouses 15 years ago,” Zabar said. “I grow heirloom tomatoes, lots of different kinds of lettuce, herbs, basil, rosemary, thyme, raspberries, figs, beets. We use the heat of the bakeries and pastries, we recycle the heat. With the use of the heat we have eliminated our [carbon] footprint.”

    About half of the items Zabar sells in his deli come from rooftop farms. “You harvest in the morning, you sell in the afternoon, you don’t refrigerate, it tastes better,” said Zabar. “We pick everything ripe and ready to eat. All our products here are organic.”

    Depending on the time of day, Zabar says with a smile, “the greenhouses smell of bread, brownie, or croissant.”

    From Manhattan to Brooklyn, whether on rooftops, backyards, or in any of the city’s 600 community gardens, urban farming is a growing phenomenon.

    The movement is helped along by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who seeks to turn the city into a sustainable development champion. Through “PlaNYC 2030,” a program he launched on Earth Day 2007, people who install “green roofs” can get a tax break.

    At Randall’s Island, in New York’s East River, the city’s Parks and Recreation Department is currently testing 16 different types of vegetation that could be placed on the roofs of schools, hospitals, or other public buildings. “These are patches of succulent vegetation, like sedum, which protect the roofs [and] isolate the buildings from the heat because the UV sun is not hitting,” said senior project manager John Robilotti.

    The rooftop vegetation also helps maintain a steady temperature inside and captures storm water, which would otherwise run off into the street. “The water that does come out is filtered and kept in tanks, and we use it to water when there is no rain,” Robilotti said.

    The roofs “absorb carbon and create oxygen, so we take carbon from the carbon cycle,” he said. “And they attract birds, butterflies, bees. We even saw a red-tailed hawk.”

    Related Links:

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    Oil rig leak and the week in fossil-fuel industry disasters

    ‘Green tea party’ closes out U.S. Earth Day celebrations






  • ‘Green tea party’ closes out U.S. Earth Day celebrations

    by Agence France-Presse

    Photo courtesy talkradionews via FlickrWASHINGTON—Washington played host Sunday to another ‘tea party’ rally, but this time the tea was green and the message of the thousands who gathered on the National Mall was pro-environment, not anti-government.

    “It’s nice to be at a tea party,” British pop icon Sting said, referring to the vocal conservative and predominantly white activist movement that is vehemently opposed to President Barack Obama’s administration and health-care reforms in particular. “A green tea party, where people know what’s going down, for a change,” he continued, as he took the stage to close out nine hours of music and pleas to save the planet, organized in honor of the 40th anniversary of Earth Day.

    Before Sting, hip-hop artists The Roots, Bob Weir of legendary rock band the Grateful Dead, and John Legend were among the acts who blasted through heavy-bass sets on a temporary stage set up on the Mall, with the Capitol as a backdrop.

    When the sets ended, local and international politicians, stars, and activists took center stage to plead for the planet.

    In a videotaped message, President Barack Obama said Earth Day “has always been about coming together for a cause bigger than ourselves” and urged the thousands gathered under the hot spring sun on the mall to form a united front against climate change.

    Former president of Costa Rica Jose Maria Figueres, who is now a member of the global action committee of the Earth Day Network, warned that, when it comes to climate change, “we have to get it right the first time—we can only have a plan A because there is no planet B.”

    Avatar director James Cameron teamed up with three actors from his blockbuster movie—CCH Pounder, who played the Na’Vi matriarch; Laz Alonzo, who played a Na’Vi warrior; and Giovanni Ribisi, who played earthling Parker Selfridge—to call on what he said were 200,000 people gathered on the Mall “to be warriors for the Earth.”

    “You have to leave here today and fight the deniers. You have to fight the people in doubt and make them understand the urgency of climate change legislation,” Cameron said. “You need to be warriors for the Earth and create change, but your tools will not be physical weapons but words,” said Cameron, whose movie Avatar is about the Na’Vi people’s fight against strip-miners from Earth who want to gut the Na’Vi planet, Pandora, for its precious mineral, unobtainium.

    Civil rights icon the Reverend Jesse Jackson urged Americans to ditch their cars in favor of mass transportation. “I applaud President Obama for the start he has made towards more mass transit, more rail lines, more green jobs. and weatherization … Mass transit is a major key” in the fight against global warming, Jackson said.

    For the Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir, taking to the stage to promote a cause was alien. “People have put us on a kind of pedestal and I’ve been reluctant to use that for political or ideological purposes,” he told reporters. “But this is important enough for me to speak out on. The environment is important and if you have kids, it’s hugely important,” Weir said.

    The celebration on the Mall came ahead of what was supposed to be the introduction of a new compromise energy and climate bill in the Senate. But those plans were thrown into disarray on Saturday when influential Republican Sen. Lindsay Graham of South Carolina abruptly pulled his support for the bill, saying he was outraged over a decision by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to move an immigration bill in the Senate ahead of it.

    Related Links:

    World’s first taxis with easily swapped batteries hit Tokyo

    Oil rig leak and the week in fossil-fuel industry disasters

    Rooftop farming and beekeeping boom in New York






  • Why immigration reform is getting more traction than climate change in the Senate

    by Larry Shapiro

    Sen. Lindsey Graham’s (R-S.C.) decision
    to withdraw from discussions
    with his Senate colleagues regarding climate
    legislation has been greeted by some well-meaning environmentalists as a reason
    to bash President Barack Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)
    for their alleged lack of commitment to climate legislation. I think this is a mistake. Instead, the environmental community should examine
    its own limitations in trying to make sense out of this situation.

    Graham blasted what he described as “a
    decision by the Obama administration and Senate Democratic leadership to move
    immigration instead of energy.” Instead of reflexively agreeing with Graham
    and thereby placing themselves at odds with supporters of immigration reform,
    environmentalists should reflect upon the reasons why immigration reform is at
    this moment a far more politically compelling issue than climate for Senate
    Democrats to tackle.

    There is actually a social movement associated with immigration
    issues. Perhaps even two movements—one on each side. I don’t think
    those of us focused on climate issues have anything similar that we can point
    to.

    Four years ago, when there was a huge wave of pro-immigration
    rallies, I was in Columbia,
    S.C. There was a rally of
    at least 5,000 people, overwhelmingly Mexicans and Central Americans, outside
    the state capitol. As a New Yorker who grew up believing that New York is the center
    of the immigrant universe, I was quite impressed by two things. First,
    there are lots of immigrants everywhere now. Second, people who have a
    lot to lose by demonstrating in public were willing to do so in one of the most
    conservative states in the Union. 

    Immigration reform divides Republicans and helps Democrats energize
    their political base. Big businesses that depend on cheap immigrant
    labor have a very different orientation from that of the Lou
    Dobbs
    crowd. So Republican efforts
    to pander to the anti-immigrant portion of their party come with significant
    risks.

    Not so for the Democrats, especially in the Senate. There are likely to be competitive Senate
    races in any number of states this November in which Latinos form substantial
    portions of the electorate. Nevada is one of those
    states, and even a politician who is often as principled as Reid is driven in
    large part by self-preservation.

    But it’s not just Nevada. Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, and Illinois
    all have large Latino populations and races that may be close. The immigration issue will energize a portion
    of the Democratic base in each of those states. 

    Is there a single state with a contested race in which the Senate
    Democrats will truly be helped by a climate bill? I can’t think of one.

    So the Obama/Reid political calculation that immigration should go
    before climate makes sense for them. The vast majority of politicians—and I have no reason to think Obama and Reid are exceptions to this rule—operate in the world of practical politics. By developing a vibrant movement that is backed up by electoral power,
    immigration-reform supporters have given leading Democrats a reason to believe
    that action on immigration reform will be politically helpful to them. We haven’t done the same on climate.

    Environmentalists who complain about this misunderstand the nature
    of politics. Moreover, they are morally
    wrong. 

    All four of my grandparents were immigrants. I would like to make sure that people looking
    for a better life in the 21st century have the same opportunity to flee poverty
    and oppression that my grandparents had.
    I hope my environmental colleagues feel the same way. 

    So complaining would be futile.
    We would be asking practical politicians such as Obama and Reid to place
    a higher priority on a policy that may be politically dangerous for them than on
    one that aids their political prospects. There may be many reasons why
    doing something worthwhile on climate is a political problem for many politicians,
    but one reason is the fact that we have not developed a true movement that
    could support them if they go down that road.

    Finally, with no movement capable of forcing a
    robust response to the climate crisis, the only way Sens. Graham, John Kerry
    (D-Mass.), and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) could have gotten the Senate to pass a
    bill would have been to appease the special interests at the root of the
    problem. All indications were that the
    proposed bill would have propped up the coal and power industries with billions
    of dollars while forcing low and middle-income Americans to pay higher energy
    costs. The bill also would have stripped
    EPA and state governments of much their legal authority to implement innovative
    climate solutions. In short, I’m not
    sure we’re missing much.

    If we really believe that addressing climate change requires a
    massive social change, it is naive to believe that we can make that change in
    the absence of a massive social movement.
    The beginnings of that movement are visible. We see it in the tremendously successful
    efforts to stop development of coal plants and in the enthusiasm for green jobs
    in many communities throughout the country.
    But this movement has not yet been built.

    Those of us working to address climate change can learn some
    important lessons from supporters of immigration reform. We should take this opportunity to learn
    those lessons, rather than merely express our frustration. 

    Related Links:

    ‘Green tea party’ closes out U.S. Earth Day celebrations

    Obama climate agenda in turmoil after Republican pulls out of compromise

    Graham says he’s going to bail on the climate bill






  • Cuba’s urban-ag revival offers limited lessons

    by Andy Fisher

    Cuba’s flourishing urban agriculture comes with a strong dose of government control.

    This post originally appeared on Civil Eats.

    Many of us in the U.S. sustainable-food movement idolize Cuba’s experience in building a vibrant urban-farming sector. This idealization is due to the lack of information available on the Cuban system, as caused by the travel embargo and media blackout there. Compounding this situation is the vast difference between the Cuban and American political and economic systems.

    Cuba’s accomplishments are undeniably astounding, inspiring and a testament to the country’s flexibility and pragmatism: 350,000 new well paying jobs (out of a total workforce of 5 million) created in urban agriculture nationally; 4 million tons of fruits and vegetables produced annually in Havana, up ten-fold in a decade; and a city of 2.2 million people regionally self-sufficient in produce. These accomplishments have been supported by an extensive network of input suppliers, technical assistance providers, researchers, teachers and government agencies.

    Yet, Cuban urban agriculture, no matter how inspiring, is largely irrelevant to Americans. The state is pervasive throughout Cuba and controls virtually all aspects of the official economy. The government can mobilize quickly and massively around its priorities through an array of powerful policy tools at its disposal. After 50 years of socialist rule, Cuban institutions, as well as the mentality and expectations of the Cuban public, differ vastly from those in the U.S. By way of example, the ruling motto of Cuban urban agriculture states, “We must decentralize only up to a point where control is not lost, and centralize only up to a point where initiative is not killed” embodies the vast differences between their planned economy and our free market system.

    The fundamental differences between the Cuban and American systems as they relate to the success of urban agriculture are vast and, for the most part, are insurmountable.

    Land ownership key

    Case in point, the success of urban agriculture in Cuba has been grounded in the distribution of public land for food production. For example, a law passed in 2008 allowed any citizen or entity to request idle lands up to 33 acres to be passed out in usufruct for 20-40 years. This law resulted in 16,000 persons requesting land in the past two years. Since all land in Cuba – with the exception of private homes – is the property of the State, the government has resources at its disposal to support its policies far beyond that of any American jurisdiction.

    On the other hand, in the U.S., land use laws and private property land tenure represent a very real challenge to the expansion of urban farming. While some cities have made their minimal idle lands available for urban farming, when they do so, garden land tenure is not assured. For example, in New York City, hundreds of community gardens were threatened with destruction and dozens were ultimately plowed under when city government prioritized housing developments.

    Land use planners here typically view urban agriculture as an interim land use at best, until a development opportunity with higher economic utility, such as housing, retail or manufacturing, becomes feasible. Few communities have protected urban agriculture as a permanent use in their planning documents, although this phenomenon is beginning to change. Neighbor complaints about noises, smells, visual clutter and dust created by urban farming are made frequently and deter farm permanence.

    Salary controls nurture Cuban farming

    In Cuba, virtually everyone works for the State. The State sets salaries; economic incentives are controlled by the government. To incent fruit and vegetable production, the government has allowed urban agricultural enterprises to distribute part of their profits back to the workers. These quasi-free enterprise farming operations have led to some unique salary structures wherein farm workers can earn two or three times the salary of the local physicians. These incentives have thus allowed urban farms to retain high quality human resources and maximize production.

    U.S. policymakers have few tools at their disposal to shape the earnings of urban agricultural producers, beyond the nigh-impossible extension of commodity subsidies. Urban farms have to compete with the rest of the labor market for qualified workers, with immigration policy also playing a large factor in agricultural labor supply.

    Profit, capital and the marketplace

    The economic conditions under which Cuban urban farms operate are extraordinarily different than the conditions of similar enterprises in the U.S. For example, since they do not purchase or rent the land, they have no mortgage or rental costs to pay. Inputs and technical assistance are subsidized by the government. (A visit from a technician to assess a pest problem costs one cooperative member the equivalent of two bits.) They enjoy little competition from other sources for their fruits and vegetables, which they may sell at farmers’ markets or at on-site farm stands. While capital may be difficult to access from the government, there is no private banking sector and no interest charges to bear.  As a result, the urban farms in Havana are profitable enough to redistribute a significant portion of their earnings (85 percent in one case) back to the workers. In a country where the basic wage is $10 per month and a monthly incentive of $50 per month is quite substantial, these farms clearly do not need to be making enormous profits to make a difference in the lives of their workers.

    Running a profitable urban farming business in the U.S. entails a much more complex set of calculations than in Cuba. In the U.S., small farms struggle to break even, under the weight of high monthly payments for land, inputs and machinery. On the wholesale level, they face difficult access to markets for selling their products and typically receive prices near or below their cost of production. Small farms selling directly to consumers frequently face stiff competition from other farmers or other retail outlets, which are typically better capitalized. The more socially-minded farming enterprises subsidize their operations with grants for educational programs or through agri-tourism schemes. To be profitable, urban farmers must find a market niche at which they excel, such as providing ultra-fresh micro-greens to high-end restaurants or through cause-related marketing.

    Necessity, the mother of invention

    Cuba’s shift to urban and organic agriculture was driven by necessity. As the Soviet bloc fell in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Cuba lost the primary market for its products and its source of subsidized agricultural inputs and petroleum. The crisis that ensued was referred to by the Orwellian term, “the special period,” and they were hungry and dark times for Cuba. To its credit, the Cuban government found partial solutions to this emergency by pushing the country toward organic and urban agriculture. As one highly placed Cuban official said about the decision to support urban farming and farmers’ markets, “We moved food production and the markets as close to the people as possible because there was no oil for transportation to get the people out to the food.” This policy decision came at an ideological cost. It entailed a partial opening of urban food production to the free market, which resulted in increased social inequality through income distortions. It also was a 180-degree turn from the capital and input-intensive, Soviet-influenced production methods valued in Cuba at the time.

    American interest in urban agriculture has been influenced by the state of the economy. Backyard vegetable production and seed sales for 2009 spiked significantly over 2008 levels, and urban farming in Detroit has grown rapidly as a means to deal with acres of vacant land. But, by and large, increased policymaker and public interest in urban agriculture is traced to concerns about food literacy, urban sustainability, community building, obesity prevention and – to a lesser degree – economic development and job training. These goals are important, but they are not driven by a state of emergency as Cuba suffered.

    The success of Cuba’s urban agriculture program is a true inspiration to the people working to green cities here in the U.S. Yet, what is best learned from Cuba’s experience is not the specifics of how to produce more food in urban communities, but the value of alternative economic, political and social structures that can help us accomplish our goals.

     

    Related Links:

    Interview with ‘Growing Green’ business leader Karl Kupers

    A bee wrangler shows you how to mind your own beeswax

    Fred Kirschenmann, winner of NRDC’s Growing Green “Thought Leader” award






  • Obama climate agenda in turmoil after Republican pulls out of compromise

    by Agence France-Presse

    WASHINGTON—President Barack Obama’s climate-change agenda
    was thrown into turmoil over the weekend after a key Republican abruptly pulled
    his support for a compromise energy and climate bill
    . Sen. Lindsey Graham
    (R-S.C.) abandoned what Democrats said was a painstakingly negotiated climate
    bill, saying he was outraged over a decision by Senate Majority Leader Harry
    Reid (D-Nev.) to move forward on an immigration bill first.

    White House officials appeared to be taken aback by the
    move, unsure how to respond to the unraveling of a major component of the
    president’s strategy both for meeting his international pledges on climate
    change and shifting the U.S. economy from its heavy reliance on foreign oil.

    “We need and we welcome that cooperation from Sen.
    Graham. … There is no either/or between energy and immigration reform,”
    said Lawrence Summers, the head of the White House National Economic Council.

    “Even though immigration reform and energy reform are
    both crucial issues for the business community, there has been an enormous back
    pressure against the kind of bipartisan cooperation that Sen. Graham has
    engaged in, and that perhaps has made this a more complex situation, more
    difficult for him than it would otherwise be,” Summers said on CBS’s Face
    the Nation.

    “But we are prepared to go ahead vigorously with any
    partner who wants to join us on both energy reform and immigration legislation
    because we think gridlock needs to end,” he said.

    Reid’s sudden shift in legislative priorities comes as
    Democrats face an increasingly hostile climate in November midterm elections.
    Obama won 67 percent of the Hispanic vote in the 2008 presidential elections,
    but Hispanics have grown impatient with the administration as immigration
    reform has been sidelined by other priorities.

    Ironically, Graham and Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer of
    New York had hammered out an immigration reform bill that would lay the path to
    legalization for millions of illegal immigrants, reinforce border controls, and
    create a process to admit temporary workers and produce biometric Social
    Security cards.

    But in a letter Saturday, Graham accused the administration
    of putting “partisan, political objectives” ahead of the energy bill,
    warning that “moving forward on immigration—in this hurried, panicked
    manner—was nothing more than a cynical political ploy.”

    Graham’s partners in crafting the climate bill, Democratic
    Sen. John Kerry (Mass.) and independent Sen. Joseph Lieberman (Conn.), called
    off plans to introduce it on Monday as they regrouped.

    Kerry warned that this year was “our best and perhaps
    last chance” for Congress to pass a comprehensive reform bill that
    encompassed both climate change and energy. “We have no choice but to act
    this year. The American people deserve better than for the Senate to defer this
    debate or settle for an energy-only bill that won’t get the job done,” he
    said.

    He credited Graham with helping to build “an
    unprecedented coalition of stakeholders from the environmental community and
    the industry who have been prepared to stand together behind a proposal. That
    can’t change. We can’t allow this moment to pass us by.”

    But Republicans questioned whether either the climate or immigration
    reform should be brought to a vote at a time when Congress has its hands full
    with reforming the regulation of the U.S. financial system and major pending
    appropriations bills.

    “I’m not sure how you can really justify bringing
    either one of them up at this point,” Georgia Republican Sen. Saxby
    Chambliss told CNN’s State of the Union.
    “I mean, we’ve got a budget to deal with. We’ve got a lot of work left on
    our plate between now and the rest of the summer.”

    Summers also suggested that climate bill-immigration reform
    flap was a distraction for the administration. “Frankly, for our part,
    what’s really overwhelmingly important is that financial reform pass as soon as
    possible as the next step,” he said.

    Related Links:

    Bolivia ‘people’s conference’ calls for system change, not climate change

    Graham says he’s going to bail on the climate bill

    Federal climate policy should preempt state and regional initiatives






  • Bolivia ‘people’s conference’ calls for system change, not climate change

    by Tina Gerhardt

    Photo: The City Project via FlickrCOCHABAMBA, Bolivia—A fundamental critique of capitalism
    as the source of climate change pervaded the People’s
    World Conference on Climate Change
    , from the opening
    speech of Bolivian President Evo Morales
    on Tuesday to the final
    declaration agreed upon Thursday.

    On the first day, as 15,000 people from 125 countries
    gathered for the summit, Morales laid out his view bluntly: “Either capitalism
    lives or Mother Earth lives.”

    “The main cause of climate change is capitalism,”
    he continued. “As people who inhabit Mother Earth, we have the right to
    say that the cause is capitalism, to protest limitless growth. … More than
    800 million people live on less than $2 per day. Until we change the capitalist
    system, our measures to address climate change are limited.”

    Bolivia’s lead climate negotiator, Angelica Navarro, echoed
    Morales’ points: “You cannot create a climate market to solve climate change.
    You have to address the structural causes. These causes are not only to be
    measured in terms of greenhouse gases. They are trade, finances, and economy.”

    The conference ended on Thursday—Earth Day—in
    Cochabamba’s downtown stadium, with world leaders and delegates presenting a
    final declaration that broadly outlined a path forward for addressing both the
    impacts of climate change and the economic and political structures that have
    brought it about.  That statement
    will now be taken to the U.N. ahead of the next big international climate
    conference, COP16, to be held in Cancun, Mexico, at the end of the year. 

    The Bolivian government laid the groundwork for the
    declaration with a set
    of four demands
    : climate reparations from developed countries to developing
    countries; an International Climate Justice Tribunal; a Universal Declaration
    for the Rights of Mother Earth; and development and transfer of clean
    technologies.  The final statement
    called for creating a multilateral organization to fight climate change and
    protect climate migrants; ensuring that knowledge related to technology
    transfer not be privatized; and acknowledging and protecting the rights of
    indigenous peoples.

    The conference sought to avoid the backroom deals and lack
    of transparency that plagued the U.N. talks in Copenhagen in December. “That is
    not democracy. That is not the U.N.,” Navarro said of the Copenhagen
    process. “For months, we were discussing our proposals with other
    countries. They did not listen. What we want in Bolivia is a true and
    participatory democracy. If the governments do not come up with a plan for
    climate change, the people have to lead with a plan.”

    The “people’s conference” invited civil society
    into the process, creating a bottoms-up rather than a top-down approach.
    Seventeen working groups met over the course of the three days, and dozens of
    panels and countless informal strategy sessions were held too.  The working groups had varying degrees
    of success.  Some reached
    agreements that supporters can organize around and push for at future U.N.
    climate meetings.

    The forest working group rejected the U.N. REDD program
    (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation), arguing that by
    using market mechanisms to offset carbon emissions, it allows companies to
    speculate and get around actual carbon reductions.

    The working group on climate refugees drafted a statement
    that was included in the final declaration, calling for protections for the
    hundreds of millions of people expected to be displaced by rising sea levels,
    droughts, floods, and dwindling water supplies. In his opening address on
    Tuesday, Morales had called for borders to be opened to climate refugees.

    The conference also provided a boost to the climate-justice
    movement, giving advocates an opportunity to network, organize, and share
    stories about local and regional environmental and indigenous struggles.

    But there was also dissent at the conference. Various
    organizations and an unofficial 18th working group focused on the discrepancy
    between Morales’ rhetoric on behalf of Mother Earth and his policy of resource
    extraction, emphasizing the environmental degradation brought about by mining
    and oil and gas drilling. Revenues from natural gas help to keep Bolivia, the
    poorest country in South America, afloat. Eduardo Gudynas has referred to this
    policy as the “new
    extractivism
    ” of Latin America. 

    Oscar Olivera, who was active in organizing the “water
    wars
    ” against privatization in Bolivia 10 years ago, argued that there
    are currently two kinds of movements: those on the inside of the government and
    those on the outside. He said, “Social movements in Bolivia are fragmented not
    because of ideological reasons but because of cooptation by the government. One
    of the characteristics of this government is that there is not room left for
    autonomous spaces, for grassroots organizing. Until 2004, the people of society
    in Bolivia were very strong and organizing horizontally. The issue of land
    distribution is not solved. Despite the rhetoric, oil and gas have not been
    nationalized.”

    Still, most conference attendees rallied together around the
    main anti-capitalist message: to solve climate change, we must stop the push
    for unlimited growth that capitalism is based on.  This is well summed-up by a slogan that got attention in
    Copenhagen and even more traction in Bolivia: “System change, not climate change.”

    Related Links:

    Obama climate agenda in turmoil after Republican pulls out of compromise

    The good news about the very bad news (about climate change)

    More lessons from Wales for moving beyond coal






  • Graham says he’s going to bail on the climate bill

    by David Roberts

    Photo: Wonk RoomI’m supposed to be on vacation, but this is pretty ridiculous: it looks like an ass-covering decision by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is about to scuttle efforts to bring a climate/energy bill to the floor this year.

    As Juliet Eilperin reports in WaPo, Sen. Lindsey Graham says he’s about to bail on the bill he’s been working on for months:

    I want to bring to your attention what appears to be a decision by the Obama Administration and Senate Democratic leadership to move immigration instead of energy. Unless their plan substantially changes this weekend, I will be unable to move forward on energy independence legislation at this time. I will not allow our hard work to be rolled out in a manner that has no chance of success.

    It’s stupid to have a Dem majority leader from a red state, for the simple reason that his personal political fortunes are frequently going to run counter to the party’s. Reid is facing a perilous reelection battle in Nevada this year. He’s behind by double digits and desperately needs to mobilize his state’s large Hispanic population. So he’s trying to jam immigration through next, despite the fact that there’s no legislative language and nobody thinks it has a chance of passing. As Jon Chait says, Reid’s flail could end up sinking both bills.

    I can’t imagine Kerry is happy about this. And I can’t believe Obama (or Rahm) will stand by and let Reid do it. The administration has reaffirmed multiple time in past weeks that they want a comprehensive climate/energy bill this year. Obama himself called it a “foundational priority.” Is he willing to let it get lost in the shuffle in a futile bid to save Reid’s ass? If he does he’ll either look powerless over his own party or insincere about his own professed values and priorities. This is test of leadership.

    Related Links:

    Federal climate policy should preempt state and regional initiatives

    Astute climate bill analysis from DJ Biz Markie

    NYPD trashes hundreds of bikes in security response






  • Los Angeles without traffic—in pictures

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    Courtesy Tom BakerToday in happy urban eye
    candy (previous installations here and here)
    photographer Tom Baker gives us a look at what some Los Angeles thoroughfares would look like without
    traffic.

    Point being, L.A.‘s built environment is
    one manner of placemaking—one that uses a lot of cement, takes up a lot of
    space, and makes it difficult to get around in any fashion except driving or
    busing. By removing vehicles and people, Baker dramatizes just how
    out-of-scale these landscapes are to human bodies. They’re built for machines. Machines, people! (Says the guy on the streetcorner…) See Steve
    Price
    for ideas on how to remake these kinds of places.

    A few more from Baker’s
    full
    collection
    :

    Courtesy Tom Baker

    Courtesy Tom Baker

    Courtesy Tom Baker

    Related Links:

    TED talk on building a greener house

    Hey, look: Denver has a bike-sharing program

    ‘Save transit’ rallies start up around U.S.






  • Whales bring up the rear in the fight against oceanic acidification

    by Darby Minow Smith

    Photo courtesy nestor galina via FlickrAnti-whaling advocates can take a giant load off their shoulders. An article
    on Treehugger
    shares yet another reason not to whale on whales: They crap ecosystem
    gold.

    Ocean acidification, caused by seawater absorbing too much carbon dioxide, is a
    major problem facing marine ecosystems. As water’s pH drops, so does aquatic organisms’
    ability to photosynthesize and absorb nutrients.

    One geoengineering quick fix is to plunk iron into the ocean, fertilizing the entire
    food chain and encouraging marine plant growth. But holy crap—researchers recently discovered
    that when whales eat iron-rich krill, they naturally fertilizer the water themselves. 

    Let’s hope the anti-whaling movement finds new fuel in this. Because why
    drop iron into the ocean when whales can naturally dump it for you?

    ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

    Like what you see? Sign up to receive The Grist List, our email roundup of pun-usual green news just like this, sent out every Friday.

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  • What is the social cost of carbon?

    by Frank Ackerman

    The
    social cost of carbon may be the most important number you’ve never heard of.
    U.S. climate legislation is stalled in Congress, but in the meantime, the Obama
    administration is trying to fill the gap by considering climate impacts in the
    regulatory process: from the tailpipe emissions limits and gas mileage
    standards unveiled April 1, to energy-efficiency standards for many types of
    residential appliances and commercial equipment.

    This
    is important work; U.S. action to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions is long
    overdue, and it’s crucial in the global picture, both because of our large
    share of total emissions, and because of our ability to influence other
    nations. But it’s also important to do this right, and a look at how the
    administration has handled the social cost of carbon (SCC) raises some serious
    concerns.

    The
    SCC is the estimated price of the damages caused by each ton of carbon dioxide
    (CO2) released into the atmosphere. In cost-benefit analysis of government
    regulations, it’s a sort of volume dial: The higher the SCC, the more stringent
    the standards—if it’s $5, say, only regulations that cost less than $5 to
    implement would be deemed worthwhile; if it’s $500, the demands imposed on
    polluters could be correspondingly greater. (With no price on carbon emissions
    at all, of course, the effective price is $0, and no reductions are
    “worthwhile.”)

    So
    far, the administration’s interagency working group that has been studying the
    SCC has come up with a range of values, with a “central” estimate of $21 per
    ton of CO2 in 2010, or roughly 20 cents per gallon of gasoline. Over time, the
    SCC would rise, but only to $45 per ton (in 2007 dollars) by 2050. That’s far
    lower than the projected cost of many substantive mitigation measures, and if
    widely adopted, it could result in ineffectual regulations that would barely
    reduce U.S. emissions, if at all.

    Even
    worse, the $21 SCC could easily find its way into discussions in Congress, and
    be taken as the recommended level for a carbon tax or permit price. If that
    happens, there is no way the United States could reach the widely discussed,
    science-based goal of cutting emissions by 80 percent by 2050, which would
    require a much higher price on carbon. Given how cost-benefit analyses dominate
    U.S. policymaking, a $21 SCC could have a devastating impact on environmental
    legislation.

    But
    this doesn’t need to be the last word. In fact, it absolutely shouldn’t be,
    because the analysis that led to that number is based on deeply flawed
    economics, omissions, and poor value judgments. We’re not alone in pointing
    this out: The Environmental Defense Fund, the Natural Resources Defense Council,
    the Pew Center, the Sierra Club, the Union of Concerned Scientists, and others
    raised many of the same points we’ve made in formal comments to the
    Environmental Protection Agency as part of its tailpipe emissions standards
    review.

    What’s
    wrong with the analysis behind the $21 SCC? For starters, it relies on an
    overly narrow review of climate economics, relying on a handpicked set of
    models—FUND, PAGE, and DICE—that happen to produce very low SCC
    estimates. All three models have serious problems: FUND mistakenly predicts a
    huge reduction in mortality due to the early stages of climate change, then
    values the lives allegedly saved on the basis of their per capita incomes.
    PAGE, in its default mode, assumes that developed nations will adapt to climate
    change at near-zero cost (it offers a wide range of alternate estimates, the
    higher of which the working group ignored). DICE assumes on very thin evidence
    that most people in the world would prefer, and would be willing to pay for, a
    warmer climate, and recommends a very slow “climate policy ramp” as a result.

    We
    also found that the working group was aggressive in “discounting” the value of
    future costs, considering rates of 2.5 to 5 percent per year that trivialize
    future damages, suggesting it is worth spending very little to protect the
    environment our descendants will inherit. And the estimates fail to consider
    unmonetizable costs—from the true value of human lives, to the value of our
    ecosystems.

    A
    last and very serious concern is that the SCC calculations don’t take into
    account the small but hugely important risk of catastrophic climate damage. As
    climate scientists refine their models, they are finding that a significant
    degree of uncertainty in their predictions is inescapable, and disastrous
    worst-case scenarios cannot be ruled out. Responding to the average projected
    damages—as measured by the SCC—may be less important than doing whatever
    it takes to eliminate the risk of catastrophe. Policy designed from this
    perspective would not rely on cost-benefit calculations, but rather would set a
    “safe” minimum standard, based on the scientific analysis of potential risks,
    and determine the least-cost strategies to meet it. The “cost” of carbon would
    equal the cost of those strategies.

    There
    are too many open questions in the SCC calculation to recommend a precise
    alternate value based on the information now available; there is a need for
    more extensive research, examining the full range of available studies of
    climate damages and costs, and analyzing assumptions about the risks and
    magnitudes of potential climate catastrophes. In the United Kingdom, where
    carbon pricing and cost calculations have a longer, better-researched history,
    the latest estimate is a range of $41 to $124 per ton of CO2, with a central case
    of $83. We believe an expanded calculation of carbon prices for the United
    States should at least explore prices in this range, and should consider the
    policy options that such prices would open up.

    Related Links:

    Federal climate policy should preempt state and regional initiatives

    Perpetuating the myth that climate policy is all cost

    U.S. military shrinking its carbon ‘boot print’






  • Federal climate policy should preempt state and regional initiatives

    by Robert Stavins

    In just a few days, Sens. John Kerry, Lindsey Graham, and Joe Lieberman will release their much-anticipated proposal for comprehensive climate
    and energy legislation—the best remaining shot at forging a
    bipartisan consensus on this issue in 2010. Their proposal has many
    strengths, but there’s an issue brewing that could undermine its
    effectiveness and drive up its costs. I wrote about this in a Boston Globe op-ed on Earth Day, April 22.

    Government officials from California, New England, New York, and
    other northeastern states are vociferously lobbying in Washington to
    retain their existing state and regional systems for reducing
    greenhouse gas emissions, even after a new federal system comes into
    force. That would be a mistake—and a potentially expensive one for
    residents of those states, who could wind up subsidizing the rest of
    the country. The Senate should do as the House did in its climate legislation: preempt state and regional climate policies. There’s no risk, because
    if federal legislation is not enacted, preemption will not take effect.

    The regional systems—including the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) in the Northeast and Assembly Bill 32 in
    California—seek to limit carbon dioxide emissions from power plants
    and other sources, mainly by making emissions more costly for firms and
    individuals. These systems were explicitly developed because the
    federal government was not moving fast enough.

    But times have changed. Like the House climate legislation passed last June, the new Senate bill will feature at its heart an
    economy-wide carbon-pricing scheme to reduce carbon dioxide emissions,
    including a cap-and-trade system (under a different name) for the electricity and industrial sectors.
    (In a departure from the House version, it may have a carbon fee for
    transportation fuels.)

    Though the Congress has a history of allowing states to act more
    aggressively on environmental protection, this tradition makes no sense
    when it comes to climate change policy. For other, localized
    environmental problems, California or Massachusetts may wish to incur
    the costs of achieving cleaner air or water within their borders than
    required by a national threshold. But with climate change, it is
    impossible for regions, states, or localities to achieve greater
    protection for their jurisdictions through more ambitious actions.

    This is because of the nature of the climate change problem.
    Greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, uniformly mix in the
    atmosphere—a unit of carbon dioxide emitted in California contributes
    just as much to the problem as carbon dioxide emitted in Tennessee. The overall magnitude of damages—and their location—are
    completely unaffected by the location of emissions. This means that
    for any individual jurisdiction, the benefits of action will inevitably
    be less than the costs. (This is the same reason why U.S. federal
    action on climate change should occur at the same time as other countries take actions to reduce their emissions).

    If federal climate policy comes into force, the more stringent
    California policy will accomplish no additional reductions in
    greenhouse gases, but simply increase the state’s costs and subsidize
    other parts of the country. This is because under a nationwide
    cap-and-trade system, any additional emission reductions achieved in
    California will be offset by fewer reductions in other states.

    A national cap-and-trade system—which is needed to address emissions meaningfully and
    cost-effectively—will undo the effects of a more stringent cap within
    any state or group of states. RGGI, which covers only electricity
    generation and which will be less stringent than the federal policy,
    will be irrelevant once the federal system comes into force.

    In principle, a new federal policy could allow states to opt out if
    they implement a program at least as stringent. But why should states
    want to opt out? High-cost states will be better off joining the
    national system to lower their costs. And states that can reduce
    emissions more cheaply will be net sellers of federal allowances.

    Is there any possible role for state and local policies? Yes.
    Price signals provided by a national cap-and-trade system are necessary
    to meaningfully address climate change at sensible cost, but such price
    signals are not sufficient. Other market failures call for supplementary policies. Take, for example, the principal-agent problem through which despite higher energy prices, both landlords and tenants
    lack incentives to make economically-efficient energy-conservation
    investments, such as installing thermal insulation. This problem can
    be handled by state and local authorities through
    regionally-differentiated building codes and zoning.

    But for the core of climate policy—which is carbon pricing—the
    simplest, cleanest, and best way to avoid unnecessary costs and
    unnecessary actions is for existing state systems to become part of the
    federal system. Political leaders from across the country—including
    the Northeast and California—would do well to follow the progressive
    lead of Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick and Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs Ian Bowles,
    who have played key roles in the design and implementation of RGGI, and
    yet have also publicly supported its preemption by a meaningful
    national program.

    California’s leaders and those in the Northeast may take great pride
    in their state and regional climate policies, but if they accomplish
    their frequently-stated goal—helping to bring about the enactment of
    a meaningful national climate policy—they will better serve their
    states and the country by declaring victory and getting out of the way.

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  • TED talk on building a greener house

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    Robotics engineer Catherine Mohr is
    tired of enviros “long on moral authority and short on data.” She’s got a smart
    TED talk
    clip
    about the greenest options for (a) wiping up a yogurt spill and (b) building
    a house. The point in each case is that the best option is often not what you’d
    expect.

    She sorta takes the
    annoying and all too common tone of “everything you’ve been trying to do out of
    good faith is wrong and stupid,” which isn’t motivating. But she brings the
    data and presents it clearly, and that’s worth a shout-out:

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  • Watch out, Kerry—Big Ag’s not done with your climate bill

    by Tom Philpott

    The agribiz lobby: plenty of horsepower. With the support of three big oil companies in hand, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) is now tailoring his climate bill to please the folks over at the Chamber of Commerce, Mother Jones’ Kate Sheppard reports.

    What about agribiz? The good senator seems intent on bringing that greenhouse-gas-spewing industry into the fold, too. “Agriculture would be entirely exempt from the cap on carbon emissions,” Sheppard reports.

    But as we learned last summer in the fight over the House climate bill, just exempting ag from the carbon cap isn’t enough. As I put it then, Big Ag’s message can be boiled down to: “screw the cap—just give us the trade!!!” In other words, agribiz interests are demanding that a generous stream of carbon-offset cash flow into what they call “production” (and I call “industrial”) agriculture.

    In short, they demand that farmers be rewarded richly for doing exactly what they’re already doing: spewing greenhouse gas while consuming plenty of agrichemicals.

    We don’t know yet how the Kerry bill will treat the question of agricultural offsets. For hints as to how it will play out, we can look again at what happened to the House’s climate legislation, named for its sponsors, Reps. Waxman and Markey.

    Like the original Mayor Daley running his Chicago “machine,” House Ag committee chair Collin Peterson (D-Minn.) wrangled and threatened and fulminated before turning Waxman-Markey into another potential cash cow for Big Ag.

    Before the bill had even made it out of committee, agriculture—a massive emitter of greenhouse gases—had been exempted from any carbon cap. By the time Peterson got done with it, it was full of goodies for agribusiness. His biggest coup was probably engineering things such that the USDA, not the EPA, runs the ag-offsets program. The EPA’s role in life—true, often honored in the breach—is to protect the environment. The USDA’s is to promote U.S. agriculture—and most of U.S. agriculture is environmentally devastating.

    And Waxman-Markey enshrined an expansive definition of offsets for agricultural practices. The practice of “chemical no-till”—essentially, replacing tillage with heavy applications of broad-spectrum herbicides and herbicide-tolerant GMO seeds—is already widely practiced in the Corn Belt, to the delight GMO seed/agrichemical giant Monsanto.

    As I wrote last summer, there’s no evidence that chemical no-till increases soil carbon content—indeed, there’s evidence that it does the opposite. Yet under Waxman-Markey, farmers stand to reap extra rewards from this dubious practice—without having to change a thing about how they farm.

    There’s no telling now whether the Kerry bill will play out in similar fashion. But with the sponsor in deal-making mode and the industrial-ag stalwart Blanche Lincoln in charge of the Senate ag committee, I fear that the Senate version will be at least as bad as the House version viz. agriculture—and possibly even worse.

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  • NYPD trashes hundreds of bikes in security response

    by Keith Caswell

    Well, so much for Earth Day. Since yesterday morning, the blogosphere and Twitter have been in a tizzy over the disposal of hundreds of bikes by the NYPD due to President Barack Obama’s visit to New York City yesterday. The story, accompanied by a photo, was initially sent in to the blog This Is Fyf:

    Citing security concerns that bikes might be secret pipe bombs, NYPD officers clipped the locks of hundreds of bikes along Houston Street this morning in preparation for President Obama’s speech at Cooper Union.  The bikes were unceremoniously put in the back of the truck.  There was no prior notification of the bikes needing to be cleared along the route by NYPD and onlookers were not given information as to what would become of the bikes.

    Though apparently absent from major media, the story was picked up by Gothamist and eventually Streetsblog.org. The seizure of the bikes, not only inconvenient for the unfortunate riders and doubly inauspicious for our poor planet on Earth Day of all days, is also poor PR for Bike Month NYC next month.

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  • More lessons from Wales for moving beyond coal

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    Guardian columnist
    George Monbiot reported
    recently
    on the unlikely groundswell of environmental progress in Wales, the
    Appalachia of the U.K.
    Its national Plaid Cymru party is more progressive and
    more ambitious than Britain’s three leading parties when it comes to building a
    low-carbon economy.

    Monbiot argues that it’s
    the unusually flexible and open political climate that enable Wales’ success: “The
    English like to think of themselves as a modern and sophisticated nation, and
    sometimes ignorantly view the Welsh as backward and uncouth. But as far as
    democracy is concerned, the English are light years behind.”

    I tried to make a
    similar case last month. After visiting Welsh cleantech businesses and research
    hubs for a week, I suggested it’s the political culture plus a national existential crisis brought on by the
    collapse of the coal-mining industry that are driving Wales’ ambitious effort to become a cleantech leader. Because West Virginia
    and other coal-dependent regions of the U.S. are following the same coal-driven
    trajectory, just a few decades behind, Wales has a lot to teach them.

    If you want the audio
    version, I spoke
    with Marc Steiner of WEAA Baltimore
    about Wales’ lessons for Appalachia. Or
    you can skip right over me and listen to Marc talk to West Virginia mountain-defender
    Maria Gunnoe, who knows
    her stuff
    .

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