Skip to content
Grist home
All donations doubled!

Uncategorized

All Stories

  • No new subsidies needed

    A massive new Apollo project? Massive subsidies for renewable technologies? Thousands of more nuclear plants?

    Wrong.

    It's much simpler than that. This article from Reason succinctly states what most economists agree on:

    ... eliminate all energy subsidies, set a price for carbon, and then let tens of thousands of energy researchers and entrepreneurs develop and test various new technologies in the market.

    Read the rest of the article for more details; it's sobering and should help to focus our energies (no pun intended).

  • Want some big paper decorations?

    If you've been to a Target recently you've probably noticed the gorgeous "cut paper" themed decorations hanging from the ceiling. I asked the manager of my local Target what they do with the decorations when they're through using them, because they are so lovely I hated to think of them being thrown in the trash.

  • Rapper gets thumbs-up from water expert

    I wrote last week about Jay-Z tackling Africa's considerable water and sanitation problems, and an NYC shindig to preview the MTV documentary on his visits to Angola and South Africa.

    I was with a good friend, Peter Gleick of the Pacific Institute, the morning of the UN bash, before he hopped a train to NYC to share the podium with the rapper and music mogul. Peter, one of the world's leading water experts, was at the Wilson Center in Washington that morning presenting his new book, The World's Water 2006-07.

    I asked Peter about the event and his take on Jay-Z as a force for progress on the issue. He wrote in an email:

  • A fired federal employee expresses himself

    Guess who said this, and when:

    While my departure may be satisfying to ExxonMobil, I can assure you that this will not make the scientific challenge of climate change and its impacts go away. That 150 countries unanimously agree about the science of this issue is not because of some "green" conspiracy, but because of the solid scientific underpinning for this issue. Certainly, there are uncertainties, but decisions are made under uncertainty all the time--that is what executives are well paid to do. In this case, ExxonMobil is on the wrong side of the international scientific community, the wrong side of the findings of all the world's leading academies of science, and the wrong side of virtually all of the world's countries as expressed, without dissent, in the IPCC reports....To call ExxonMobil's position out of the mainstream is thus a gross understatement.

  • Glimmers of hope

    Last Thanksgiving I was conflicted. As I enjoyed extraordinary blessings in my own life -- due in large part to the luck of where I was born -- the world around me seemed to be crumbling.

    That disconnect remains, of course, and adds a tinge of melancholy to any celebration. My blessings have only grown, along with my awareness of the billions who do not share them. But this year, glimmers of hope have emerged.

    The climate "debate" seems finally to be over, and the real debate -- what to do about it -- has begun, however tentatively and haltingly. The new Congressional leadership seems to take the issue seriously, and may begin the process of helping America rejoin and resume leadership of the community of nations in search of a solution.

    The question of energy security has moved to the front burner. A buzz of imagination and entrepreneurial activity surrounds the clean energy sector.

    A new wave of environmentalism seems to be sweeping over the country, taking root in pop culture, business, and politics alike.

    We're finally starting to collectively ponder what it would take to create a human society that exists comfortably within the confines of the world's ecological limits.

    Our concern is embryonic, and the steps thus far hopelessly inadequate. But for whatever reason, I'm optimistic that we are beginning to face and understand the task ahead of us. For that, and for the countless unsung citizens and activists who have worked so long to bring it about, today I am thankful.

    I am also thankful for the community that has gathered here at Gristmill, who surprise me every day with their thoughtfulness, humor, and passion.

    Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.

  • Rules make people mean

    I've written about this before, but I love love looove it, so I'm pointing to another story on it (also via Shea):

  • Ali G and Christie Whitman

    Ali G interviews then-EPA head Christie Todd Whitman:

  • Nothing

    Last weekend I was riding the King County Metro bus when a nice man who had recently moved to Seattle from Taiwan asked me to tell him about Thanksgiving. I started in about how we get together with people we love, engage in gluttony, etc., etc.

    He said, "Uh, but I mean, what about the day after Thanksgiving? Tell me about the sales." At which point I realized I'd never been anywhere near a place of commerce on Black Friday. I grew up on a farm, and, well, we just don't like people or commerce enough to risk leaving the house.

    Then this week I discovered an organized ritual against the wanton post-T-day, pre-Christmas consumption of holiday-related paraphernalia: Buy Nothing Day.

  • It’s depressing.

    The Los Angeles Times today concluded a four-part series (with photos) on uranium mining on 27,000 square miles of Navajo lands in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah.

    It's a depressing, but interesting, read.

  • Albertsons joins the ‘green list’

    For the past two years my organization has been working with supermarkets around the country to get them to post FDA warnings about mercury in seafood.

    The FDA warns women of childbearing age (including pregnant and nursing women) and young children to avoid eating any swordfish, tilefish, shark, or king mackerel, and to limit their consumption of albacore tuna and tuna steaks. One store we've focused on, along with Women's Voices for the Earth in Missoula, is Albertsons.

    Today, I'm happy to report that Albertsons and its subsidiaries Acme, Jewel-Osco, Shaw's, and Star Market will be posting that much-needed advice at their seafood counters.