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Good News...

  • May. 25th, 2008 at 5:16 PM
Imperial Oil's 'Kearl' project in the Alberta Tar Sands has been delayed due to a water permit being revoked by the fisheries department.

Apparently the operation's projected annual C02 emissions being the equivalent of the annual emissions of 800,000 cars won't have a significant impact on the environment. This is what Imperial's environmental report said when they applied for the license. Hence it being taken away.

But let me see if I've got this straight: the Alberta government is basically saying to these companies, "You can mine for something that's going to aid in the destruction of the world as we know it just so long as you don't cause any damage along the way." What part of that makes sense, exactly?

But that's okay. What's important is that, according to this article, development might be delayed a year or more. Considering Kearl isn't supposed to start production til 2011/2012, this is somewhat encouraging news. A lot can happen in 4-5 years. Laws can change. People can change. Who knows, if it gets delayed enough, maybe it could be stopped altogether.

Hey, I can dream. :\

School Energy Project

  • Apr. 17th, 2007 at 3:56 PM
Hello all!
Hopefully it’s okay if I ask this.
Basically, a friend of mine and myself have begun working on an energy project in our school to try and reduce both energy costs and usage, as well as trying to encourage a ‘greener’ atmosphere amongst students and teachers. We’ve gotten all our business data and graphs and whatnot, spoken with almost every adult in the school who is able to get properly involved, and now we’re thinking about suggestions to reduce energy usage to forward onto the administration (most of who are working with us already anyway), and there is a possibility that the school’s Green Policy will be revived (right now it’s somewhere in a box in the basement, heh).
We’re covering lights, heat and water, which are the basic energy wasters.

I was wondering: do any of you have ideas as to how a large facility such as a school (about 1,200 students and an additional 2000 staff) could go about reducing its energy usage? We’re not quite sure yet how to go about making some suggestions, so I’m asking around all over the place for opinions/ideas to get the ball rolling. Please don’t be shy if you have a suggestion – it can always turn into a larger idea or inspire otheres. I guess I’m asking for some inspiration, perhaps some of you have done similar projects before. If so I’d love to hear some :)

Thanks in advance!

Global Warming Rally this Saturday

  • Apr. 12th, 2007 at 6:42 AM

FREE CONCERT!

LOS LOBOS

Please join Mayor Rocky Anderson and thousands of others this Saturday, April 14th at STEP IT UP Salt Lake City.



David Suzuki's speech from the U.S. Green Building Council's Greenbuild 2006 conference is now available online for download.

x-posted to [info]learnleed

Awesome, no?

  • Feb. 22nd, 2007 at 11:30 AM
Congressional Climate Change

Nancy Pelosi's added a Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming to Congress! Which basically means there'll be a select group of representatives/senators that'll expertise in enegy & global warming and advise other legislators how to vote and what to vote for.

http://www.house.gov/pelosi/press/releases/Feb07/GlobalWarming.html


Live 8 Earth!
Al Gore teamed up with Kevin Wall, producer of Live 8, to create the 24 hour global concert to spread awareness of global warming. Caaaaaan't wait

http://www.liveearth.org/

Feb. 5th, 2007

  • 4:58 AM
Over on It’s Getting Hot In Here - Dispatches from the Global Youth Climate Movement.  there is a post on
Condoms in Green Ads on UK Campuses.

ok, I couldnt’ resist posting on this. Condoms were put over tailpipes and smokestackscondom on car in UK campus ads
According to the BBC: “Condoms were used to illustrate the message that climate change can be stopped by human actions.” There’s also a game on the FOE website (scroll down) with a polar bear that destroys an SUV by throwing ice cubes at it. This campaign corresponds with a FOE survey that suggests 95% of British students think the government’s top priority should be climate change, and only 12% are currrently satisfied with their government’s efforts. Maybe we could use some of these ads on our campuses here in the US?

Jan. 31st, 2007

  • 7:12 AM

The 1st of February 2007

 

 http://www.lalliance.fr

Participate in the biggest mobilization of Citizens Against Global Warming! 

The Alliance for the Planet [a group of environmental associations] is calling on all citizens to create 5 minutes of electrical rest for the planet.

People all over the world should turn off their lights and electrical appliances on Thursday, the 1st of February, 2007, between:

Freeping The Weather Channel

  • Jan. 21st, 2007 at 11:49 AM
Dr. Heidi Cullen gets a swift boating hit job, complete with a fanatical freeping of the One Degree blog, by an apparently well-orchestrated onslaught from the minions of Inhofe's 'Pet Weisel', Marc Morano", Fox News, and it would not be complete without the rigorous scientific review of the Limbaugh Cover Story & it's Ditto Heads.

For the record, what The Weather Channel's Dr. Heidi Cullen, Ph.D. in Oceanography/Climate from Lamont-Doherty , has actually written is not what has been repeatedly claimed she has said by many in the Right Wing press, blogosphere, and .gov websites with Inhofe's fingerprints all over them. Read more... )

Cross Posted & LJ Cut for your consideration.

Jan. 19th, 2007

  • 8:53 PM
Published on Friday, January 19, 2007 by the Toronto Star
Landmark UN Study Backs Climate Theory
2,000 scientists all but end the debate: Human activity causes global warming
by Peter Gorrie
 

A major new United Nations report shows global scientists are more convinced than ever that human activity is causing climate change, the Toronto Star has learned.

The rate of warming between now and 2030 is likely to be twice that of the previous century, it says.


A new report concludes that most of the global warning since the middle of the last century has been caused by man-made greenhouse gases. (AP Photo)
And it concludes that most of the global warming since the middle of the last century has been caused by man-made greenhouse gases.

The report, to be released in Paris Feb. 2, should all but end any debate on climate change and compel governments and industries to take urgent measures to deal with it, scientists say.

"It is very likely that (man-made) greenhouse gas increases caused most of the globally average temperature increases since the mid-20th century," states the report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

In the clinical language of science, it paints a stark picture of the effects of greenhouse gas emissions:


Published on Wednesday, January 17, 2007 by the Toronto Star
Doomsday Clock Reset for an Alarming World
Global warming, new nuclear perils shift symbolic hand
by Olivia Ward
 

Be afraid. Be more afraid.


FIVE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
British scientist Stephen Hawking is seen during a press conference on the 'Doomsday Clock', a symbol of the risk of atomic cataclysm, at the Royal Society in London, Wednesday, Jan. 17, 2007. Hawking described climate change Wednesday as a greater threat to the planet than terrorism. Hawking made the remarks as other prominent scientists prepared to push the giant hand of the Doomsday Clock, closer to midnight. (AP Photo/Lewis Whyld, PA)



FIVE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT
Doves fly over the A-bomb Dome at Hiroshima's Peace Memorial Park during the 60th anniversary of the bombing that killed more than 140,000 people in 1945. The world inched closer to nuclear Armageddon on Wednesday, according to a group of prominent scientists who moved a Doomsday Clock two minutes nearer to midnight -- the symbolic end of civilization. (AFP/File/Yoshikazu Tsuno)
For the first time in five years, the elite board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists is moving the minute hand on their Doomsday Clock closer to the fatal hour of midnight.

The clock – a symbol of the perils facing the human race – is expected to shift two minutes, from the current seven minutes to midnight to five, a figure the Bulletin would not confirm before its news conference today.

"This is a sober and highly alarming judgment by a group of people who are knowledgeable and experienced," said Nobel laureate John Polanyi, a faculty member in the University of Toronto's chemistry department.

"The most immediate hazard we face is also the most easily addressed, namely the thousands of nuclear-armed weapons aimed at Russia and the United States, and left pointlessly in a state of high alert. The fact that they are is an appalling failure to step back from the brink."

The clock, which hangs in the University of Chicago, was first set 60 years ago to focus on the danger of nuclear weapons. But for the first time it will take into account the perils posed by global warming, which has sparked renewed interest in building nuclear power plants.

The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists was founded by former Manhattan Project scientists who turned against nuclear weapons after developing the first atomic bomb.

"The major new step reflects growing concerns about a `Second Nuclear Age' marked by grave threats, including: nuclear ambitions in Iran and North Korea, unsecured nuclear materials in Russia and elsewhere, the continuing launch-ready status of 2,000 of the 25,000 nuclear weapons held by the U.S. and Russia, escalating terrorism and new pressure from climate change for expanded civilian nuclear power that could increase proliferation risks," said a statement released before a news conference today.

Solar Gets Simpler

  • Jan. 12th, 2007 at 12:21 AM
Solar Gets Simpler )

Source: Red Herring

Darkblood
*Sun Wuffie*
-2k7

Jan. 5th, 2007

  • 5:46 AM
2007 Predicted to Be World's Warmest Year
by Jeremy Lovell


This year is set to be the hottest on record worldwide due to global warming and the El Nino weather phenomenon, Britain's Meteorological Office said on Thursday.

The Met Office said the combination of factors would likely push average temperatures this year above the record set in 1998. 2006 is set to be the sixth warmest on record globally.

"This new information represents another warning that climate change is happening around the world," said Met Office scientist Katie Hopkins.
Read more... )
Published on Thursday, December 21, 2006 by the Independent / UK
Climate Change vs Mother Nature: Scientists Reveal That Bears Have Stopped Hibernating
by Geneviève Roberts
 

Bears have stopped hibernating in the mountains of northern Spain, scientists revealed yesterday, in what may be one of the strongest signals yet of how much climate change is affecting the natural world.

In a December in which bumblebees, butterflies and even swallows have been on the wing in Britain, European brown bears have been lumbering through the forests of Spain's Cantabrian mountains, when normally they would already be in their long, annual sleep.


European brown bears in Spain.
Bears are supposed to slumber throughout the winter, slowing their body rhythms to a minimum and drawing on stored resources, because frozen weather makes food too scarce to find. The barely breathing creatures can lose up to 40 per cent of their body weight before warmer springtime weather rouses them back to life.

But many of the 130 bears in Spain's northern cordillera - which have a slightly different genetic identity from bear populations elsewhere in the world - have remained active throughout recent winters, naturalists from Spain's Brown Bear Foundation (La Fundación Oso Pardo - FOP) said yesterday.


OAA Ledge Global Warming Protesters Sentenced in Maryland Court

For immediate release
For more information:
Dec. 12, 2006
Ted Glick or Anne Havemann

301-891-6844, 973-460-1458

Two activists who climbed onto a ledge 25 feet over the main entrance to the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Silver Spring, Md. were sentenced
today for their action.

Paul Burman, 24, and Ted Glick 57, were arrested by police on October 23rd four
hours after they had unfurled a banner over the NOAA entrance which read, “Bush:
Let NOAA Tell the Truth!” For close to a year media reports have disclosed a policy
of political censorship at NOAA by Bush top-level political appointees of scientists
whose research showed a connection between global warming and more frequent and
destructive extreme weather events like hurricanes and droughts.Read more... )

Dec. 14th, 2006

  • 12:25 PM
Climate Change Catching Voter Attention around World
by Erik Kirschbaum

BERLIN - "It's the environment, stupid!"

Just as Bill Clinton used the battle cry "It's the economy, stupid!" to keep his 1992 presidential campaign focused, political leaders worldwide are chanting a new mantra based on growing alarm about global warming.

Mainstream parties in Germany, Britain, France, Canada, the United States and Austria believe tackling climate change is a vote winner while established Green parties in Germany and Austria are experiencing a renaissance.

Arnold Schwarzenegger won re-election as California governor in a landslide last month after distancing himself from President George W. Bush, a fellow Republican, and championing measures to cut the state's greenhouse gas emissions.Read more... )

Rebates R' US.

  • Dec. 10th, 2006 at 7:14 AM
For a limited time only Lowes is giving a rebate up to $7.98 for buying some compact fluorescent bulbs.

"Purchase a 4 Pack of Sylvania Mini Twist Lightbulbs (item 146558) at a Lowe's
Home Improvement Warehouse between 12/7/06 and 12/21/06.
Requests must be postmarked by 1/21/07."


Lowes CFL Mail-In Rebate form

I would've posted it sooner, but I just learned about it.

Dec. 9th, 2006

  • 2:53 PM
Thursday, December 07, 2006
EPA: Leaded gas may return, along with lower standards
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Bush administration is considering doing away with health standards that cut lead from gasoline, widely regarded as one of the nation's biggest clean-air accomplishments.

The Environmental Protection Agency said this week that revoking those standards might be justified "given the significantly changed circumstances since lead was listed in 1976" as an air pollutant, claiming that concentrations of lead in the air have dropped more than 90 percent in the past 2 1/2 decades. Battery makers, lead smelters, refiners all have lobbied the administration to do away with the Clean Air Act limits.

But Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., the incoming chairman of the House Committee on Government Reform, called on the agency to "renounce this dangerous proposal immediately," because lead, a highly toxic element, can cause severe nerve damage, especially in children.
Court Appearance Tuesday for Two Activists Arrested on NOAA Ledge October 23rd

On Tuesday morning, December 12th, climate activists Paul Burman, 23 and Ted Glick, 57, will appear in court to face charges stemming from an October 23rd demonstration at the headquarters in Silver Spring of NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The demonstration was
organized by the U.S. Climate Emergency Council
(www.climateemergency.org).

On the morning of October 23rd Glick and Burman carried a 32-foot extension ladder to the building's main entrance. They ascended the ladder, climbed onto a ledge over the
entrance and unfurled a banner saying, "Bush: Let NOAA Tell the Truth!" This was in reference to the suppression by Bush political appointees of scientists at NOAA and other federal
agencies whose research shows a connection between global warming and more destructive hurricanes, droughts, wildfires and other extreme weather events.
Read more... )

Dec. 5th, 2006

  • 12:21 PM
Global Warming Gag Order
Senators to Exxon: Shut up, and pay up.

Monday, December 4, 2006 12:01 a.m. EST

Washington has no shortage of bullies, but even we can't quite believe an October 27 letter that Senators Jay Rockefeller and Olympia Snowe sent to ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson. Its message: Start toeing the Senators' line on climate change, or else.

We reprint the full text of the letter here, so readers can see for themselves. But its essential point is that the two Senators believe global warming is a fact, and therefore all debate about the issue must stop and ExxonMobil should "end its dangerous support of the [global warming] 'deniers.' " Not only that, the company "should repudiate its climate change denial campaign and make public its funding history." And in extra penance for being "one of the world's largest carbon emitters," Exxon should spend that money on "global remediation efforts."

The Senators aren't dumb enough to risk an ethics inquiry by threatening specific consequences if Mr. Tillerson declines this offer he can't refuse. But in case the CEO doesn't understand his company's jeopardy, they add that "ExxonMobil and its partners in denial have manufactured controversy, sown doubt, and impeded progress with strategies all-too reminiscent of those used by the tobacco industry for so many years." (Our emphasis.) The Senators also graciously copied the Exxon board on their missive.

This is amazing stuff. On the one hand, the Senators say that everyone agrees on the facts and consequences of climate change. But at the same time they are so afraid of debate that they want Exxon to stop financing a doughty band of dissenters who can barely get their name in the paper. We respect the folks at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, but we didn't know until reading the Rockefeller-Snowe letter that they ran U.S. climate policy and led the mainstream media around by the nose, too. Congratulations.


Not to be missed

  • Nov. 30th, 2006 at 10:32 PM
You Canadians in the group already know it, but for the benefit of the Yanks in the crowd the CBC has a better investigative journalism outfit on TV than anything (outside of PBS's Frontline) in the US: the fifth estate.

Their latest story directly involves this group. They expose those scientists who cast doubt on the global warming debate through obfuscation and denial. See "The Denial Machine" online, or catch it on cable later.

Not to be missed.