First of all Al Gore and the IPCC deserve sincere congratulations for winning the Nobel Peace prize. The IPCC has greatly advanced the scientific knowledge of climate change and its effects on the world, while Al Gore has increased awareness and made the science accessible to everyone. We should all be grateful for their efforts.... Continue Reading →
Bring Back Evidence Based Government
Any government that is at war with science is bound to failure: During the past seven years of the Bush administration, America has been subject to what can only be called antiscientific governance. Scientists have been ignored, threatened, suppressed, and censored across agencies, across areas of expertise, and across issues. Policies have gone forward repeatedly... Continue Reading →
UK Judge rules Gore’s Inconvenient Truth is accurate except for minor details
UPDATE: The original headline of “Judge rules Gore’s Inconvenient Truth requires guidance notes to be shown in UK schools” has been updated to more accurately reflect the outcome of this case. A High Court judge who ruled on whether climate change film, An Inconvenient Truth, could be shown in schools said it contains “nine scientific errors”. Mr Justice... Continue Reading →
There isn’t enough water to sustain Ethanol production
A whole range of environmental and social woes have emerged from an ill-informed, incautious rush into biofuels. Humanity's knee jerk reaction has been to seek to replace our dependency upon fossil fuels with a dependency upon living biomass; rather than embracing conservation, efficiency and true renewables. Emerging concerns with biofuels have included well-documented destruction of... Continue Reading →
An Ethics Code for Ocean Carbon Experiments
Scientists and entrepreneurs alike are abuzz over iron fertilization, a controversial technique that uses iron-seeded plankton to sequester atmospheric carbon for centuries deep underwater. Now, a San Francisco-based climate startup called Climos has proposed a code of conduct to address contentious aspects of how experiments are conducted. Some researchers envision the technique as an effective... Continue Reading →
Today is ecological debt day
Experts at the Global Footprint Network calculate that 19 December 1987 was the first time that humanity used up a year's allotment of the earth's resources before a year finished. Each year, this date is moving earlier. Today we pass the threshold of the planet's capacity, equalling a need for 1.3 planets to sustainably support... Continue Reading →
Bird deaths stir oversight for US wind power
The growing U.S. wind power industry is drawing increased scrutiny from states and the federal government over the problem of spinning wind turbines killing birds. The California Energy Commission last week adopted voluntary guidelines to reduce wind energy effects on wildlife, and Washington state, Montana and Texas among other states are reviewing measures. The U.S.... Continue Reading →
The grand peer-review conspiracy
Recently on my post about the crackpot scientists who claimed (though naturally not in a peer-reviewed journal) that Mars was warming up and thus climate change here on earth was not caused by humans but rather by the sun, I received a comment claiming that the reason there are no peer-reviewed articles is because any... Continue Reading →
In the company of smart people
Quirks and Quarks recently aired with a segment Dr. Mark Jaccard, from the School of Resource and Environmental Management at Simon Fraser University that covers the sorry state of Canada's climate change plan. Dr. Jaccard seems to agree that taxing polluters is the best way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and that a technological fix,... Continue Reading →
BC premier rolls out sweeping climate change plan
Continuing his recent U-turn on the >environment BC premier Gordon Campbell has just announced a sweeping new plan to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases emissions coming from BC. B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell laid out more details of his green plan Friday, including the promise of legislation to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions 33 per cent below... Continue Reading →
Why taxing polluters is the right approach
Taxing polluters is a great way to avoid unnecessary and possibly cumbersome environmental regulations and easily account for market failures that result from negative externalities. Many environmental market failures result as a form of the tragedy of the commons; whenever you get a situation where an activity benefits one person, but the costs of that... Continue Reading →
After 7 years Bush finally realizes climate change is a problem, but has no plan to deal with it
[Finally, after almost a decade] President Bush assured the rest of the world today that he takes climate change seriously and vowed that the United States "will do its part" in crafting "a new international approach" to reduce the greenhouse gases that are warming the planet. However, he proposed no new initiatives to do so.... Continue Reading →
Study Shows Fair Use Rights Crucial to U.S. Economy
The entertainment industry's attempts to eliminate (think DRM) and whittle away (think PERFORM Act) your fair use rights are jeopardizing more than just free speech. It also threatens the U.S. economy, as an extensive study released today by the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA) demonstrates. Based on methodology created by the World Intellectual Property... Continue Reading →
Why a technological solution to climate change does not exist
Prime Minister Harper’s talk at the recent UN climate conference echoed Bush's focus on a technological miracle as the solution to the world’s climate change problems. Other leaders have promised the same thing when pledging to reduce emissions intensity; they are promising new technology that will increase efficiency but will do nothing to reduce the... Continue Reading →
Canada’s inaction at the UN climate talks
While it may be tpo late to achieve the 2012 Kyoto targets, there is no excuse for the fact that Canada continues to demand a "flexible" (read: infective intensity based targets) emission reduction plan. To make matters wore Harper used this meeting to announce his government's plan to join the meaningless and deceptive Asia-pacific climate... Continue Reading →
Climate Change or not, carbon dioxide emissions demand EPA attention
All the more reason to take action on climate change and cur CO2 emissions The focus of the public's concern over carbon emissions has been overwhelmingly fixated on the potential for future temperature increases. Accordingly, the legal wrangling has focused there as well, with lawsuits flying over states' ability to regulate automotive CO2 output and... Continue Reading →
Bush’s Evolving Policy on Global Warming
Here is a timeline of President George W. Bush's evolving policy on global warming since 2001: March 28, 2001 - Stating his opposition to the 1997 Kyoto treaty on global warming, Bush says it is against US economic interests and unfair as big developing countries like China and India escape binding emissions pledges. June 11,... Continue Reading →
The age of extinction
Biodiversity loss is an even greater problem than climate change, yet it is even less understood by the general public, and therefore has received very little attention by anyone other than biologists, who have called the current extinction crisis the sixth mass extinction event. We are currently loosing 30,000 species per year or about 3... Continue Reading →
Do carbon emissions make countries happy?
I don’t know enough about this subject to argue one way or another but I found this very interesting. Questioning the presumptive link between GDP and happiness is really important, because growth in GDP generally requires growth in use of the planet’s dwindling resources and in pumping its overburdened atmosphere full of greenhouse gas. As... Continue Reading →
More proof that the sun is not responsible for climate change.
I guess the thousands thousands of scientists involved in the IPCC process were right, we are causing climate change and not the sun. Who would have guessed it? A new scientific study concludes that changes in the Sun's output cannot be causing modern-day climate change. It shows that for the last 20 years, the Sun's... Continue Reading →
Time to put a price on pollution
Mention the concept of a new tax to politicians and most will run screaming out of the room to go vacuum their cars or mow their lawns – anything to avoid talking about an issue that they think could lose votes, no matter how sensible or reasonable the concept may be. But that’s going to... Continue Reading →
Thousands of Rubber Ducks to Finally End Journey
The armada of 29,000 plastic yellow ducks, blue turtles and green frogs broke free from a cargo ship 15 years ago. Since then they have travelled 17,000 miles, floating over the site where the Titanic sank, landing in Hawaii and even spending years frozen in an Arctic ice pack... While the ducks are undoubtedly a... Continue Reading →
Want to take pictures in New York? Get a permit
Expect this law to be abused and unfairly targeted towards certain ethic minorities. The fact that the city deliberately kept the language vague means that many amateur photographers will be caught by this legislation. This crackdown on on photographers started unofficially without much thought after 9/11 in an attempt to keep terrorists from being able... Continue Reading →
Everything comes up green
Those cool new green products may not be as green as you think Plastic-handled paint brushes were touted as nature-friendly because they were not made of wood. Wood-handled paint brushes were promoted as better for the planet because they were not made of plastic. An electric chainsaw? Green, because it was not gas-powered. A bug... Continue Reading →
Cheney’s secret campaign to deny climate change
While climate scientists have been clear that the earth is warming and that humans are the cause, the Bush administration has stubbornly refused to believe them, even going so far as censoring government scientists who had data that contradicted the administration's position. the White House has implemented an industry-formulated disinformation campaign designed to actively mislead... Continue Reading →
BC’s beetle outbreak spurs overreaction
The effort to curb Western Canada's pine beetle infestation and salvage dead trees is creating its own problems, according to a study released on Thursday by environmental and labor groups. The infestation has sparked "the forest industry equivalent of a gold rush" as producers scramble to salvage millions of dead trees before they degrade and... Continue Reading →
Icebergs are ‘ecological hotspot’
Drifting icebergs are "ecological hotspots" that enable the surrounding waters to absorb an increased volume of carbon dioxide, a study suggests. US scientists found that minerals released from the melting ice triggered blooms of CO2-absorbing phytoplankton. These microscopic plants were then eaten by krill (shrimp-like organisms), whose waste material containing the carbon sank to the... Continue Reading →
Carbon tax wont hurt economy, will provide future benefits
Was this what the Conservatives were afraid of hearing? An internal report prepared for the Conservative government reveals a carbon tax as high as $50 per tonne of greenhouse gas emissions would cause little economic damage and would actually provide a small boost down the road... At $50, a carbon tax would shave about $4.8-billion... Continue Reading →
If your climate change plan sucks, make sure to silence critics
The Conservative climate change plan sucks. Absolute targets for emissions reductions are set so far in the future that they ensure that the inaction that started under the Liberals will continue under the Conservatives. As action on climate change has gained importance amongst voters the Conservatives been scrambling to greenwash their image, even going as... Continue Reading →
Controversial oil substitutes that arn’t really substitutes at all
The mounting quest for oil alternatives threatens drastic increases in heat-trapping global warming pollution and severe impacts on popular habitats across the United States and Western Canada unless clear safeguards are adopted quickly, according to a new analysis released today by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). The warning comes as lawmakers are facing growing... Continue Reading →
Canada seeks ‘special’ status on warming
Stephen Harper will argue at next week's G8 summit that any international deal on climate change must recognize Canada's unique challenges in curbing greenhouse gases. Of course Harper would have more credibility if he had actually done something to at least attempt to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, and had not attempted to downplay the... Continue Reading →
High tequila prices; the downside to biofuels
This is biggest downside to biofuels yet. Perhaps enough to doom the technology. Mexican farmers are setting ablaze fields of blue agave, the cactus-like plant used to make the fiery spirit tequila, and resowing the land with corn as soaring U.S. ethanol demand pushes up prices.