A Smart Way You Can Help Haiti – Solar Energy
January 27, 2010 2 min. read

This month, I made a donation to an interesting organization that is helping with the disaster in Haiti. We Care Solar is a U.S.-based non-profit that helps hospitals in developing regions by providing health workers with reliable lighting, blood bank refrigeration and mobile communication using solar electricity. The organization was founded by Dr. Laura Stachel, […]

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U.S. Defends Internet Freedom
January 26, 2010 2 min. read

The U.S. is defending freedom on the internet. Amid allegations of cyberattacks on an American company, Secretary of State Clinton gave a speech encouraging China to respect the free flow of information on the net: Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy The full text can be found here and […]

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How to Drill a Well
January 26, 2010 1 min. read

In my experience, most people, if you ask them about oil (or gas) drilling, make references to Daniel Day-Lewis with a pickax, snarling something about milkshakes, or perhaps Jed Clampett shootin’ at some food. For those interested in energy issues, it never hurts to be a little more well-versed in the how-to’s. So if you […]

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Further Thoughts on China, Climate and Trade
January 26, 2010 4 min. read

I wrote, in the wake of the shameful Chinese performance in Copenhagen, about China, Climate and Trade.  A couple of days after that post, there was an excellent analysis in the “FT” and I wrote a letter to the editor, alas unpublished.  Here’s the letter now: Geoff Dyer rightly wonders “…whether China’s political system is […]

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In Davos Global Bankers to Lobby Against Reforms
January 26, 2010 4 min. read

The World’s leading banking and finance executives, industry regulators, and billionaire investors like Warren Buffet and George Soros – the Wall Street crowd writ large – will head to the annual World Economic Forum held in Davos, Switzerland this week. On the agenda will be efforts to challenge US President Barack Obama’s efforts to reform the financial industry.

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Plouffe, He's Back
January 26, 2010 2 min. read

The Obama Administration is back to practicing public diplomacy — with the American public.  Stung by the loss in last week’s election in Massachusetts, the White House is bringing back public outreach specialist David Plouffe, the mild-mannered star of the Obama election campaign.  Plouffe had stepped back from politics after the election to write a […]

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Former Guatemalan President charged
January 26, 2010 1 min. read

The former president of Guatemala, Alfonso Portillo, has been charged with money-laundering in the United States, whose banks he had been using to allegedly embezzle from the Guatemalan government. This is an admirable example of an international effort to fight otherwise domestic corruption.

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*Doing* – When it Matters Most
January 25, 2010 3 min. read

What is the human instinct when tragedy strikes outside of your immediate circle?  (I use the term ‘circle’ quite loosely and encourage self definition). For the past two weeks, I’ve been in keen observation mode.  Watching Anderson Cooper on CNN, reading various and varied thoughts on Haiti in my Google Reader, and monitoring the various […]

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Ushahidi – Crowdsourcing Intelligence
January 25, 2010 2 min. read

I spent a night last week working with some friends and colleagues on crisis mapping the disaster in Haiti using a remarkable piece of software called Ushahidi – “testimony” in Swahili. Crisis mapping is taking in live information from a disaster or conflict zone via the Internet and mapping it to physical locations on the […]

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Lawns
January 25, 2010 2 min. read

I’ve wondered out loud here several times about convergence – getting our galloping consumption down in the developed world while simultaneously raising the standard of living for the citizens of developing nations.  You can do this a thousand different ways, most of which can “cool” the planet.  One critical approach is for developing economies to […]

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A passing moment to reflect on humanity
January 25, 2010 1 min. read

Antwerp, Belgium is Europe’s second largest port.  At this very moment it is, like so many other places, going through troubling times.  Unemployment is high and now,  last week, General Motors announced they will close the Opel plant which means thousands of lost jobs in this city.  But this post is not about Opel, nor […]

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