SCREAM TO BE GREEN

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Dec282008

Clean Coal: This is Reality (Part II)

Filed under: energy — admin @ 4:14 pm


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Dec162008

President-Elect Obama Announces Nobel Prize Winner To Cabinet

Filed under: climate, energy — admin @ 3:34 pm

Yesterday, President-elect Obama announced the nomination of a Nobel Prize winner to be our new energy secretary. No, it wasn’t Al Gore. It was physicist Steven Chu.  Wait? A scientist? In the cabinet? That’s so…what’s the phrase? European? Smart? Common-sense? UnBushlike?

“His appointment should send a signal to all that my administration will value science,” Obama said Monday at a Chicago news conference. “We will make decisions based on facts, and we understand that the facts demand bold action.” 

Very interesting words after the past 8 years of blindness and environmental corruption.  A scientist is holding a top-spot in government – not a lawyer.  After a period where NASA scientists were censored and EPA reports were hidden and lied about.

In addition to Chu, Obamaramadingalingadingdong also appointed Carol Browner to be the coordinator of energy and climate change policy (Kyoto for the next generation anyone? Lets giddy up).  Lisa Jackson who ran than the NJ EPA is new EPA Administrator. He also named a council on Environmental Quality – former deputy mayor of LA, Nancy Sutley.  Bring it on!

Here’s an excerpt from an RFK, Jr. speech from a couple years ago to give you and idea of where we were with the Bush administration:

…most insidiously, they have put polluters in charge of virtually all the agencies that are supposed to protect Americans from pollution. President Bush appointed as head of the Forest Service a timber-industry lobbyist, Mark Rey, probably the most rapacious in history. He put in charge of public lands a mining-industry lobbyist, Steven Griles, who believes that public lands are unconstitutional. He put in charge of the air division of the EPA, Jeffrey Holmstead, a utility lobbyist who has represented nothing but the worst air polluters in America. As head of Superfund: a woman whose last job was teaching corporate polluters how to evade Superfund. The second in command of EPA is a Monsanto lobbyist.

The New York Times reported a couple of weeks ago that the second-in-command of the Council on Environmental Quality, which is in the White House directly advising the president on environmental policy, is a lobbyist for the American Petroleum Institute. His only job was to read all of the science from the different federal agencies to make sure they didn’t say anything critical and to excise any critical statements about the oil industry.

“In the next few years, the choices that we make will help determine the kind of country and world that we will leave to our children and our grandchildren.”  Obama also went on to discuss climate change and the imminent dangers we face.

So maybe there is a light at the end of the tunnel. 

Keeping my fingers crossed!

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Dec72008

(Not) My 2008 Green Gift Guide

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 10:41 pm

Newspaper Wrapping from Curlby.comIf you haven’t noticed (since September), the holidays are upon us.  After watching The Story Of Stuff, it’s difficult to want to buy anything.  Since we “have” to – at least maybe we can support the green movement at the same time.  Perhaps I should offer some advice that I use on a daily basis. I happen to have a certain sense of humor that is very quick and often offensive.  In actuality, there is a filter.  Many people can’t believe there is a filter, but there is.  So here’s the advice.  Know your audience.  Here’s an example for the green gift guide.  If your relative is an SUV-driving oil lover who doesn’t care about the environment at all, then don’t buy them a TerraPass gift certificate for carbon credits.  Maybe you get them a nice Patagonia fleece made from recycled materials or a Sigg bottle or something? (but if you’re rich enough to buy a relative Patagonia – can I be your relative?)  They won’t know that the product is green and you’ll feel better buying it.

Why is this called the (Not) My 2008 Green Gift Guide?  Well – simply because I don’t think I need to reguritate the same gift guide that everyone else in the green community is doing.  So I’m going to link to a few of theirs.  Happy shopping and don’t let all of the commercialism get your holiday spirits down. 

More articles:

(more…)

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Dec62008

Don’t Buy Cashmere This Holiday Season

Filed under: Easy Green, climate, energy, products — admin @ 9:34 pm

ORIGINALLY POSTED November 23, 2007

Cashmere GoatBut I love the soft sweater made from those cute cuddly sheep in China. Why don’t you want me to buy cashmere? How will people know that I like to spend money? All valid questions. The problem is that there is so much demand for cashmere here in the U.S. that the land is being over-grazed. There are way too many sheep on one small portion of land in China. The landscape is becoming a dustbowl. The goats have very pointy hooves which poke holes through the salty crust releasing the finer sand beneath.

Why should you care about the dustbowls in China caused from the sheep that shed their coats to make you feel better? Because its going to affect you in the long run. Cashmere is not cotton. You can’t just plant more next year. If the goats have nothing to eat because they’ve chewed all of the prairies to a nub then we have a problem. China’s grasslands are turning in to deserts. The environmental impact, other than the goats eating so far down to the roots that the plants are damaged forever, is the creation of the dustbowls.

There is a huge increase in the number of dust storms. The dust gathers in the atmosphere mixing with the other China industrialized pollution creating huge orange clouds that are toxic. China officials warn residents not to go outside or open their windows during these times because they are so bad. The dust caused by these goats does not just stay in China, though. Its coming to a window near you.

From a Chicago Tribune article, “We had one storm in East Asia which we called the perfect dust storm,” said Barry Huebert, an oceanographer at the University of Hawaii. “There are good images of it following over the Pacific as a yellow plume. When it got to Colorado, it reduced visibility enough to make the national news. It continued east, and the last measurement was in the Canary Islands” off the west coast of Africa. ”

The reason we should care is that China has some of the dirtiest air in the world. The more it become industrialized, the worse it becomes. Also cited in the article are the statistics on the death rate in China directly related to air pollution. Roughly 300,000 people die each year in China of diseases linked to air pollution, according to a Chinese research institute.

Wow. All of this pollution for your vanity.

Source: Chicago Tribune

Carly Simon – You’re So Vain

Led Zeppelin – Kashmir

The Hidden Cost of Cashmere

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Dec52008

Clean Coal: This is Reality

Filed under: energy — admin @ 12:00 am




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Dec42008

CTA Rolling Out Hybrid Buses On Large Scale

Filed under: automotive, energy — admin @ 10:44 pm

CTA has leased 150 “New Flyer” diesel-electric hybrid buses.  Each bus costs roughly a cool $1million.  That’s not chump change, but they plan to save ~$7 million/year in maintenance, fuel, and savings by retiring old buses.  These buses also hold 125 passengers – 45 more than the buses being retired – which could mean running less buses during rush hour yet carrying more passengers.

 

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Dec22008

The Green “New Deal”

Filed under: energy — admin @ 11:30 pm

Achim Steiner, Executive Director of UN Environmental Programme calls for a green “New Deal” ala Roosevelt in the 30’s.  The state can use the current economic crisis as an opportunity to invest in infrastructure, jobs, industries, all in the solution.  If we build-in environmental, energy savings/reduction solutions into the fix for the current solution – we can reap the rewards in the future.

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