Some Buzz from The Hill
June 18, 2009 3 min. read

We’ve been seeing a lot of activity in the past few months in the House of Representatives on climate and energy – see a number of blog items here on the Waxman-Markey bill.  The Senate hasn’t been idle, certainly, but they’ve been flying a bit below the radar.  Senator Boxer, chair of the Environment & […]

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Airlines and the Climate – An Update
June 16, 2009 2 min. read

The airline industry has an awful lot at stake in the debate about how to address the specter of climate change.  I’ve written a few times about what they’re doing, here and here for instance, and in a magazine article I wrote on sustainability at the airports. Emissions caps seen costing airlines $7 billion a […]

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Yvo de Boer's Perspective
June 15, 2009 1 min. read

As you no doubt know, the latest round of UNFCCC negotiations concluded in Bonn last week.  UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer seemed generally pleased.  The representatives had, for the first time, a negotiating text with which to work.  It was delivered on schedule and that in itself was a significant achievement.  The AP reported […]

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Kudos
June 15, 2009 2 min. read

I would like to note here that only one Republican on the House Energy & Commerce Committee voted for the Waxman-Markey bill.  Mary Bono Mack from California deserves, in my opinion, a pat on the back.  Here is an article from the “Press-Enterprise” about her vote and the political pressures on her.   The article notes:  […]

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Brazil and Japan
June 13, 2009 3 min. read

After China and the US, which together contribute 40% of the world’s burden of anthropogenic greenhouse gases, you come to Indonesia and Brazil.  Why?  In a word, deforestation.  Japan, because of its industrial emissions, comes in 8th overall.  So when there’s news on the intentions of these major economies on reducing their GHG, we should […]

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Noteworthy Renewable News
June 11, 2009 3 min. read

I continue to be knocked out by all the innovation and hard-driving progress in building out a zero-carbon world.  I was telling a young man today, a very smart carbon offset development consultant, that I truly never thought, 15 years ago, that I’d live to see the day when we would have the activity and […]

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Fill 'Er Up
June 8, 2009 1 min. read

Project Better Place is coming along nicely.  These are the folks who could catalyze the quest for the electric car’s full penetration into all the world’s markets.  I love this stuff – see Future Car for instance.   Here’s an eye-opening interview with Shai Agassi, PBP’s founder.   I mean, how cool is this?!

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Good Grief, More Inside Baseball
June 7, 2009 3 min. read

If you hadn’t guessed, I love looking at the arcane world of politics inside the Beltway and elsewhere.  There’s a really readable article in this week’s “NY Times” magazine by the perspicacious Matt Bai.  It’s about the politics of health care reform but you could transpose energy and climate change into what’s being said.  There’s […]

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More on Our Relation to the Cosmos
June 5, 2009 3 min. read

“From here on, the primary judgment of all human institutions, professions, programs and activities will be determined by the extent to which they inhibit, ignore or foster a mutually enhancing human-Earth relationship.”  This is what Thomas Berry said in an interview a few years back, as quoted in his recent “NY Times” obituary.  Berry was […]

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NYC Events – June 09
June 4, 2009 1 min. read

I hope to sit in on a couple of local events here in NYC in the next couple of weeks.  The first is Carbon Finance North America 2009, June 11 and 12.  The keynote speaker is Eileen Claussen, President of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, and there will be worthy panelists from government, […]

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"The Story of Stuff"
June 3, 2009 2 min. read

You’re probably way ahead of me and know all about this little blockbuster 20-minute video, but in case you don’t, it’s fabulous and well worth the visit.  You may have any number of quibbles, big and small, with some of what’s being said, but it is definitely lucid, well-argued, and smart.  I’ve touched on some […]

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Dystopia
June 2, 2009 1 min. read
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The world has become, in most respects, unlivable. We have come to the end of nature, people are spiritually and physically dying or already dead, the once blue-green paradise, Earth, is spinning off into space, soon to become just another lifeless rock in the void. That’s one dystopian vision. Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, “The Road […]

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