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  • Politician instructs media on accuracy; timespace implodes on itself

    You know the press is failing in its obligations when a politician has to instruct it on honesty and integrity.

    Sen. Frank Lautenberg just sent a letter to the Washington Post taking them to task for bogus "he said - she said" journalism on the subject of global warming. The article in question, by Juliet Eilperin, discussed a recent study on heat waves caused by climate change. Says Lautenberg:

    But the last half of the article is squandered on the views of Myron Ebell, an economist -- not a climate scientist -- whose "studies" at the American Enterprise Institute are funded by Exxon Mobil. The article fails to mention this shameless conflict of interest.

    The problem with this type of reporting was highlighted at a recent Senate Commerce Committee hearing. Robert Correll, senior fellow at the American Meteorological Society, warned, "The trouble with a debate of this nature is you put 2,600 [scientists] against two or three or four [scientists who disagree]." Ebell is not in the same league as the qualified climate scientists who report that the climate is changing before our eyes; only the intensity and the speed of those changes are unknown. Your newspaper does an injustice to its readers by giving Ebell's caterwauling equal weight with the widely accepted views of reputable and unbiased scientists.

    That's exactly right. Eilperin is an excellent reporter, and I don't know what kind of pressure she's under from higher-ups, but she -- and environmental reporters generally -- needs to take a stand and stop watering her pieces down with this sort of misleading faux-balance.

    UPDATE: Well, egg on my face. Both Chris Mooney and RealClimate beat me to the punch.

  • New blood at EPA

    Current EPA head Mike Leavitt was just tapped to head the Department of Health and Human Services according to the AP. The appointment was a surprise so no word yet on likely successors.

  • Nobel Peace Prize update

    The first Nobel Peace Prize given to an environmental activist, Kenyan Wangari Maathai, was officially awarded Friday night in Oslo. Professor Maathai laid out her case for an integrated understanding of the fights for the environment, democracy, and equitable natural resource management in a New York Times op-ed. Her acceptance speech is available on the Nobel site.

    As earlier posts discussed, this particular award was not without its critics.

  • Four green strategies

    Via New Donkey, I see that the Progressive Policy Institute has released a fairly substantial report outlining four strategies the environmental movement can use to move forward in coming years. (The DLC summarizes them here.) It says state-level changes are where the action is, and offers copious case studies. Worthwhile reading.

  • The Vinyl Countdown

    Anti-PVC campaign gets rolling A coalition of environmental and public-health groups this week kicked off a new campaign to discourage the purchase of products containing polyvinyl chloride, or PVC, which they argue is harmful to health and the environment. A report compiled by two of the groups concluded there is no safe way to dispose […]

  • Lights

    Looking for some environmentally friendly -- yet full of holiday cheer -- lights for your tree/house/yard/plastic reindeer this season?  MetaEfficient recommends LED.

  • Diesel

    Green Car Congress compares four Honda Accords -- a hybrid, a clean diesel, and two sedans -- and comes to a rather surprising conclusion: "The outcome: the Accord Diesel (using petroleum diesel) offers the lowest fuel consumption and the lowest CO2 emissions, even surpassing the Accord Hybrid."

    UPDATE: Here's a follow-up post comparing different versions of the Honda Civic.

  • The people on top of our oil

    It was published the day before the election, so it didn't get the attention it should have, but it's worth your time to go back and read Daniel Glick's piece in Salon about Bush's renewed push to drill in Alaska's Northeast National Petroleum Reserve and the threat it poses to the Eskimo way of life. NPR-A is the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge's less-celebrated cousin, but at 23.5 million acres, it's the largest chunk of public land in the U.S. It's worth some attention, and so is the life the Eskimos there have lived for hundreds of years.

  • Seeking dough from the breadbasket of America

    Congrats to the newly-greened states of Massachusetts, Colorado, New Hampshire, and Idaho, and the District of Columbia!

    To the rest of you out there: Get cracking! Connecticut, Maryland, North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, you only need one more vote, so make it happen.

    And here's a shout-out to the breadbasket of America: Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Iowa, Missouri, you put the heart in heartland -- now show everyone you heart Grist by donating now!

    And if you're donating from outside the U.S., make your provisional donation where it's needed most -- Mississippi and South Carolina still have goose eggs in the Donations column, and Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Texas still need at least 10 votes to go green. Where is the love?

    Our fundraising appeal is half over, and we're at nearly half our goal, but we're trying to raise $50,000 here, people! So, if you're from a state that's already green, keep giving.

    We don't want to guilt you into giving us your green -- ok, yes we do -- but all of Grist's award-winning content is delivered to your inbox completely free of charge! That's right; no annoying registration pages, no pop-up ads, and no annual fee. Want to keep it that way? We thought so.

    Give to Grist and insure the future of your favorite source of environmental journalism.

  • Behind the Filipino floods

    Want to get smart in a hurry on the environment in the Philippines, where illegal and legal logging are widely blamed for last week's devastating flooding? Population Reference Bureau, a Washington-based NGO, has just published a short primer on environment, demographic, and health conditions there. The brief presents a good overview, and it also provides specific suggestions for integrated population-health-conservation programs.

    Stay tuned to the PRB website for further info on these issues in the Philippines. Their population-environment team -- headed by Roger-Mark De Souza -- has just returned from working with the first Filipino national conference on population, health and environment (PHE), attended by more than 250 officials, experts, donors, and media (including a representative from the President's Office) that resulted in a National PHE Declaration signed by congressional staff and mayors.