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What’s the Time? It’s Time to Get Iliamna
Proposed Alaskan mine may threaten salmon wonderland Near the shores of vast Lake Iliamna in southern Alaska, locals are worried that a huge proposed open-pit mine at the region’s headwaters could imperil legendary salmon runs. The story is familiar enough: an economically depressed, mineral-rich area gets courted by slick mining-company officials promising jobs and little-to-no […]
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Iceland of Make-Believe
Fascinating facts about a country you could win a trip to You know, ever since we got into the business of shilling Iceland in order to promote our sweepstakes, we’ve learned an awful lot of fascinating stuff. And now we’ve moved past shilling — we just want to share! Guess how many people in Iceland […]
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China’s emerging energy policy
A pseudonymous guest author on Winds of Change looks at China's quest for oil, its tentative relationship with Russia, and the potential for friction between those powers and the United States.
Meanwhile, Jim, a retired engineer who writes on energy topics, has a good post about China's growing realization that it needs to broaden its approach beyond searching for imported oil.
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Optimism
Joel Makower makes the case for optimism:
From my perch -- overlooking the landscape of business and how it is responding to the environmental challenges we face -- there is much good news to report. The world of commerce, still seen by many as the Earth's Evil Empire, is moving, slowly but ever so surely, toward a new environmental consciousness. Despite -- or perhaps in spite of -- the near abdication of energy and environmental leadership on the part of the White House, Congress, and most regulators -- the private sector increasingly is rising to the occasion.
Today's news that JP Morgan Chase bank will be issuing a new set of environmental policies seems to lend weight to Joel's sentiment.
Mainstream environmental groups don't seem to be getting anywhere in D.C. these days. Perhaps they should devote some of their billions to an aggressive cultural campaign, targeting the private sector and pop culture. That's where the individual battles are being won, and despite the paranoia of some progressives, if culture moves, eventually the political class will move with it.
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Whether you recycle plastic really doesn’t matter.
I've been mulling over this "environmental confessions" business. I get that it's fun and light-hearted and I shouldn't take it too seriously. Horrible me, sometimes I don't recycle the kenaf-paper my peasant-collective-raised free-range hand-fed weekly-massaged organic beef comes in! Ha ha, I feel better.
But if there's one thing my two readers expect, it's dry, ponderous posts on subjects of soul-crushing weight, so who am I to deny them?
My thoughts on the matter are captured by this excellent comment from reader greenmark. Read the whole thing, but here's the main bit:
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Board election means club won’t take a stance on immigration limits
The neutralizers carried the day in the Sierra Club's contentious board election, which wrapped up today.
Sierra Club members turned out in historic numbers this year ... to reject a ballot initiative that would have forced the group to support restrictions on immigration. Over fifteen percent of the Club's membership returned 122,308 ballots -- the second highest in the Club's recent history -- and defeated the anti-immigration measure by more than a 5 to 1 margin.
In addition to calling for club policy to remain neutral on immigration, members also elected five establishment-backed board members, while board candidates who advocated immigration restrictions, backed by Sierrans for U.S. Population Stabilization, were soundly squashed.
So immigration's off the table, until next year's election ...
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Sprol
Check out this blog, Sprol, which gathers satellite images and descriptions of "the worst places on Earth" -- i.e., the places most ravaged by human activity. It's fascinating.
(Via Dave Pollard)
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Dress down for the earth
Well here's an energy-saving program I can get behind!
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Big Media Dave
So, this past Friday I was on a radio show called Oregon Territory, which as far as I can tell is pretty wide-ranging.
The subject was peak oil. You can listen here. The first segment is with a petroleum geologist from ARCO; the second is with me.
I've discovered the key to good radio: Do pre-taped shows where they take your rambling and edit it to make you sound smart.
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