Why EPA Regulating Greenhouse Gases Is Absurd…And Why It Doesn’t Matter

John Nielsen-Gammon is not happy with the appeals court decision that upheld EPA GHG emissions rules concluding: Until there’s a reasonably intelligent scheme, approved by Congress and the Administration, for regulating greenhouse gases effectively and appropriately on a national and intenational level, the present absurd approach is mandated by law. To me this seems like plenty of... Continue Reading →

UNESCO to set up UN science advisory board

Via Nature News: The UN secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, has agreed to set up an international scientific advisory board to provide him with guidance on science-related issues, and enable him to provide advice to UN member states on such issues.

Depressing yet expected

Via Nature News: Oil exploration ramps up in US Arctic A new round of exploratory oil drilling is due to begin in the Arctic this July. Oil companies are no doubt dreaming of a northern oil rush, while environmentalists face nightmares of devastating spills.

EO Wilson: Advice to young scientists

It is worth noting that EO Wilson and Richard Dawkins are currently involved in a dispute over some of the more intricate details of evolutionary theory. I mention this only because it highlights a key aspect of scientific disputes that can get lost on (or intentionally abused by) some people. Most of the deep details... Continue Reading →

Rio+20: 20 years of standing still

Rio+20 has come and gone. It ended in the traditional fashion for UN environmental summits with the nations of the world agreeing that, at least in principle, it would be preferable to prevent wide-scale degradation of the planet's natural systems. Furthermore world leaders have agreed that action should be taken, at some unspecified point in... Continue Reading →

Rio+20

Is anyone here interested/hopeful in RIO+20? Personally after watching year after year of UNFCCC meetings agree to do something about GHG emissions... at some unspecified point in the future, I have little hope that Rio+20 will produce anything useful. Though I'd love to be proven wrong.

Canada outlaws the environment

Yes, that is an absolute hyperbole. Did it get your attention? Yesterday the Canadian House of Commons passed the disastrous bill c-38 that rolls back much of Canada's environmental protection legislation. Opposition parties mounted a desperate attempt to make amendments or at least split off some of the more contentious issues so there could be... Continue Reading →

Resilience vs Yield: A Difficult Choice

The challenge of feeding the estimated 10 billion people by 2050 on an already stressed agricultural landscape without further degrading the state of the planet will be an enormous task. This much should be obvious to anyone. What is perhaps less obvious, however, is that we are faced with some very difficult choices as we... Continue Reading →

A terrifying graph

In North America coal use might be down thanks to the abundance of cheap natural gas but the global perspective looks very different: According to the latest BP Statistical Review of World Energy, coal consumption grew 5.4 percent in 2011 and coal production grew by 6.1 percent, giving the resource a 30 percent share of... Continue Reading →

Green from the Grassroots

Elinor Ostrom, Nobel-prize-winning economist of common pool resources, died of cancer this week, aged 78. Her final published article was green from the grassroots here are some excerpts: Decades of research demonstrate that a variety of overlapping policies at city, subnational, national, and international levels is more likely to succeed than are single, overarching binding... Continue Reading →

Japan Restarts Nuclear Reactors

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda ordered the restart of two idle nuclear reactors Saturday amid widespread public opposition, more than a year after a powerful earthquake and tsunami triggered three nuclear meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi Power Plant, and halted all 50 reactors in Japan... Saturday's decision comes as the government scrambles to shore up its energy... Continue Reading →

Yes and no

A simple graphic illustrating what we need to do to actually reduce our emissions: With no meaningful climate policy commitment – no binding emission limits, no carbon pricing, not even a clean energy standard – the awesome work of building a clean energy economy is proceeding in parallel to the unfolding disaster of climate disruption,... Continue Reading →

Rotating the Question

Steve Easterbrook shows the power of simply tilting your head: By putting the dates on the Y-axis and temperatures on the X-axis, and cutting off the graph at 2°C, we get a whole new perspective on what the models runs are telling us. For example, it’s now easy to see that in all these scenarios,... Continue Reading →

Fakegate exhonerations

Looks like an independent investigation done at the behest of the Pacific Institute has confirmed that Peter Gleick did not write the disputed fakegate memo. The Pacific Institute has re-instated him back to his position as president of the Institute And an independent digital forensic investigation done at the behest of Heartland institute found that... Continue Reading →

Making sea level rise illegal

Pure insanity doesn't even come close to what some legislators are trying to do in North Carolina: Some lawmakers will go to great lengths to deny the reality of climate change. But this week, North Carolina lawmakers reached new heights of denial, proposing a new law that would require estimates of sea level rise to be based... Continue Reading →

Black Out, Speak Out

Why was Planet3.0 blacked out yesterday? In short because here in Canada we are facing somewhat of a crisis. While south of the 49th parallel in the US, politicians talk about a wide scale gutting of environmental protection laws, in Canada our politicians are actually going through with it. Since Prime Minister Stephen Harper and... Continue Reading →

The useful side of radiation

The news that Pacific Bluefin tuna caught off the coast of California have been found to have radioactive contamination from the Fukushima nuclear accident has caused quite a stir in some quarters. But there isn't anything to worry about as the BBC makes abundantly clear numerous times: The fish would have picked up the pollution... Continue Reading →

Quote of the day

When anyone says _______ (insert favorite policy, technology here) is "the" solution to a big, complex problem, they are invariably wrong. Via Jonathan Foley on Twitter

The end of Heartland’s climate denial conferences

Lack of funding has prevented Heartland from putting on any more climate denial conferences: In his closing speech at this year’s event in Chicago, Heartland President Joseph Bast said that financial troubles are preventing the organization from putting on another event. “I hope to see you at a future conference, but at this point we... Continue Reading →

Local vs global

Over at collide-a-scape Keith has inadvertently stumbled upon an interesting observation from an article in the Guardian which states: The world’s cities have seen a 45% increase in population since 1992, according to the Global Footprint Network, and urban residents typically have a much larger carbon footprint than their rural counterparts. At first blush this... Continue Reading →

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