To Frack or Not to Frack?
March 15, 2012 5 min. read

Why Not Frack? is the title of an article in a recent issue of the “NY Review of Books.”  One of the best environmental journalists we’ve got, Bill McKibben, is the author.  McKibben, of course, is more than just a journalist.  He’s a ground-breaking thinker and, in recent years, a very serious and effective activist.  […]

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Obama Sends More Green Signals
January 12, 2012 5 min. read

I’ve written a good number of times here about how I admire what the Obama Administration has achieved in the teeth of vigorous – some might say fanatical – opposition from Republicans on the Hill and elsewhere, as well as from Democrats too, mostly those beholden to the fossil fuel special interests.  (Here are some […]

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Better CAFE
July 29, 2011 2 min. read

CAFE – That stands for Corporate Average Fuel Economy.  What President Obama announced today was a much higher federal requirement, negotiated with the car companies, for more miles per gallon on average for cars sold in the United States.  As we know, Lower Gasoline Consumption = Lower GHG Output.  How much?  Billions of tons of […]

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Al Gore Speaks (Some) Truth to Power
June 28, 2011 7 min. read

There’s been a fair bit of fur flying as a result of Al Gore’s recent article in Rolling Stone:  Climate of Denial.  Most of the controversy centers around the fact that Gore calls out President Obama for not doing enough on climate change – not using his “bully pulpit.”  More about that tack in a […]

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Why Not Meat?
February 10, 2011 3 min. read

I’m a Paul Krugman devotee.  (How can you not be?)  His column from this past Monday, Droughts, Floods and Food, had nothing but good sense:  rapidly rising food prices have mostly to do with bad weather, namely the fires and drought in Russia and Ukraine this past summer and the floods in Queensland this winter.  […]

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Climate Progress – Surprise Guest Appearance
January 2, 2011 1 min. read

I saw yesterday that an item I wrote in early December, Nuclear Power: Running on fumes?, was re-posted the other day at Climate Progress.  If you don’t know Joe Romm and his and his colleagues’ important writing at Climate Progress, do yourself a favor and get over there and subscribe.  Joe is a senior fellow […]

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Taking the Bull by the Horns
October 8, 2010 4 min. read

If we wait for the US Senate to create even adequate, let alone progressive, thoughtful legislation mandating a price on carbon, it will be too late.  I have written about the manifestly undemocratic public policy graveyard that is the US Senate and its denizens a number of times.  If you care about the parlous state […]

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China's Renewable Exports
September 12, 2010 3 min. read

On Clean Energy, China Skirts Rules was a front-page story at the NY Times this past week.  The gist:  China is cranking up its exports of wind turbines and PV, eclipsing other leaders like the US and Germany.  However, they’re doing it largely on the strength of subsidies illegal under international trade agreements, namely the […]

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The Catastrophe in the Senate – More Punditry
July 28, 2010 4 min. read

I might more accurately call this post The Catastrophe of the Senate, but that won’t get us anywhere – for the moment.  In any event, as you know by now, the concatenation of Republican anti-environmentalism and fear (and no doubt loathing), plus intransigence from Democratic Senators from states where coal and oil are king, has […]

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Harry Reid Punts – What Can You Do?
July 23, 2010 3 min. read

For the moment, please refer to my comment on Joe Romm’s tirade about President Obama’s “failed presidency” in light of the decision by the Senate Democratic leadership’s to punt on climate change and energy.  If Obama had tried harder, Romm opines, we’d have cap-and-trade.  I have enormous respect for Romm’s perspectives and his energy, but […]

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Baby, It's Cold Outside
January 12, 2010 2 min. read

But that sure doesn’t have anything to do with “global cooling.”  In fact, according to the British Met Office, 2010 may well be the warmest year on record.  (2009 was the fifth warmest.)  Further, as the Met Office, among others, have pointed out, it’s not cold everywhere in the world.  Joe Romm had this item […]

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Copenhagen Tonight
December 18, 2009 2 min. read

US aid offer boosts deal at UN climate talks is the headline from the AP tonight.  “Large pieces of a climate deal fell into place Thursday with new offers from the U.S. and China, but other tough issues remained before President Barack Obama and other leaders can sign off on a political accord to contain […]

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