Natural Gas in the Senate
September 12, 2009 2 min. read

I wrote recently about some solid policy analysis that would move the US off its massive dependency on coal for electricity toward a greater reliance on natural gas – until renewables fully kick into their potential.  (Limitless, not incidentally.)  A few days after my post, there was a depressing article in the “NY Times” about […]

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Wine at Risk – and Sustainability in the Vineyards
September 11, 2009 1 min. read

We were over in Europe in the summer of 2003, just a few days after the heat wave broke.  It was plenty hot even then.  In this article from the “FT” from last weekend, the experience of the proprietors of a famous French vineyard, returning early from their holiday, is recalled.  “Instead of rows of […]

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A Vision of Climate Catastrophe
September 9, 2009 2 min. read

One of the scenarios that Gore discusses in “An Inconvenient Truth” is the triggering of a massive cooling in the Northern Hemisphere as a consequence of the altering of the “Great Ocean Conveyor.”  NASA scientists, among others, have looked closely at this “chilling possibility.” The freezing of the North, the warming of the South, and […]

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Natural Gas – to Cut GHG Emissions
September 4, 2009 2 min. read

Barry Commoner wrote The Politics of Energy in 1979.  In it, he called for a transition to renewables – with natural gas as the bridge to the future.  30 years later this still sounds pretty good.  One difference, of course, is that we’re so much farther along on renewables than perhaps even Dr. Commoner could’ve dreamed.  A […]

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Updates on recent posts
August 31, 2009 2 min. read

Relative to my post, There Oughta Be a Law, on energy recovery, see this terrific article from Worldwatch, A Bridge to the Renewable Energy Future, fleshing out this “…largely overlooked but potent way to minimize fossil fuel use and the damage it causes.”  On the same subject, see also this from earlier in the summer […]

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Here Come’s The Sun (and Wind) – Spain Edition
August 26, 2009 1 min. read

We are in Andalusia and it’s, no surprise, pretty hot and sunny.  The Spaniards have long since figured out that it’s going to be good for them to take advantage of the sun and its brother, the wind.  Our hotel in Granada had big solar thermal arrays on the roof.  On the drive from Granada […]

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Just Say No
August 21, 2009 3 min. read

For Pete’s sake, even the last US President, a man not highly praised for his environmentalism, said America was addicted to fossil fuels.  If fossil fuels are an addiction, then Canadian tar sands oil are crack.  Put it another way, using the same metaphor:  the US causes the massive drug violence and corruption in Mexico […]

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China Paradox
August 19, 2009 1 min. read
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There’s a very good read, The Great Paradox of China:  Green Energy and Black Skies, that appears at “Yale Environment 360.”  (I wrote China – Getting Closer here late last month.)  What’s the paradox?  “China is on its way to becoming the world’s largest producer of renewable energy, yet it remains one of the most […]

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Green Tech at the FT
August 18, 2009 2 min. read

The “Financial Times” is, for my money, one of the best sources out there, consistently, for news and insight into the ever-burgeoning universe of green technology and the business of green, and all the attendant politics and economics.  The good folks at the FT have just launched a new series on green tech.  (Caveat:  You […]

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Exciting Activities – Coming Up This Fall
August 17, 2009 2 min. read

Ride for the climate from New York City to Washington DC, September 26 – 30.  That’s the story of the Brita Climate Ride.   In addition to raising a lot of consciousness, the two hundred riders will benefit the work of Focus the Nation, the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy, and Clean Air – Cool Planet. The United Nations […]

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Biochar on Grist
August 13, 2009 3 min. read

I’m delighted that an article I’ve done on biochar for Grist went “live” today.  If you don’t know about the extraordinary potential here, check out the article, Biochar as the new black gold.  Even if you do, I think it’s worth a visit.  It’s part of a Grist Special Series, What’s the deal with offsets? […]

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There Oughta Be a Law
August 11, 2009 3 min. read

You will notice in this diagram from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) depicting the total electricity flow in the US for 2008 that “conversion losses” account for 63% of the energy generated.  Got that?!  Nearly two thirds of the energy used to make electricity, 51% of that from coal, 21% from nuclear, and 17% from […]

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