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And then I’m done!
I've just now gotten around to closely reading Gore's speech, and felt the usual mix of admiration and sorrow at what could have been. Three bits jumped out at me that I haven't highlighted yet.
First, a little hometown pride:
Many individuals and businesses have decided to take an approach known as "Zero Carbon." They are reducing their CO2 as much as possible and then offsetting the rest with reductions elsewhere including by the planting of trees. At least one entire community -- Ballard, a city of 18,000 people in Washington State -- is embarking on a goal of making the entire community zero carbon.
Ballard in effect! Wo0t!
Ahem.
Second, a little wonkiness:
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Paging a Mr. Lomborg
Who's the object of James Inhofe's latest literary crush?
Why, none other than our old friend Bjorn Lomborg!
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Pombo shows up at Colorado mouse hearings
California Rep. Richard Pombo weighs in on mouse debate in Colorado?
Further evidence that this isn't really about a mouse at all, but rather the business interests at stake in protecting crucial habitats. And Pombo's appearance is an election-year bid to reassure property-rights advocates that he will be steadfast in his support for a bill de-clawing the Endangered Species Act.
Have I mentioned yet that the 3-inch Preble's meadow jumping mouse can jump 18 inches high? Boing!
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A visual representation of the federal budget
Want a truly horrifying look at where your tax money goes? Visit Death and Taxes 2007, where they have a big graph that can (fair warning) suck up an hour of your time. It breaks down federal discretionary spending visually, which gives a real, immediate sense of our priorities.
Looking for the EPA? Oh, it's that wee little circle in the upper right. Sigh.
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To the tune of $25 million
Chevron has just made a $25 million research grant to UC Davis for research on cellulosic ethanol. (Press releases from UC Davis and Chevron.)
This was brought to my attention by reader D. Roberts (really!), who says, "To my knowledge this is one of the largest research awards ever made to any university (other than one outlier at Stanford)."
This is excellent news. The faster we can get cellulosic up and running, the more we can avoid building an enormous and disastrous corn-ethanol infrastructure.
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Wildfires are now in season
Ah, the oncoming of fall in Southern California.
Flakes of ash fall thick, soft, and white as snow. Clouds of smoke bigger than mountains fill the sky. Orange-y sunlight and hazy gray skies last for weeks on end. Thousands of firefighters struggle to contain blazes with flames 20 and 30 feet high. Bulldozers cut firelines. Planes and helicopters water-bomb all through the day. Evacuation orders typically arrive in the dead of night, when the skies are glowing and the traffic is wild.
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Arrr … you ready to party?
Ahoy there, mateys! 'Tis I, ye saucy wench, and this day be wonderful for Something Fishy.First, as has been mentioned several times already, there've been some exciting discoveries out in the South Pacific -- including some 52 new species of fish and corals. I be the first one to tell ye that the oceans are a great unexplored frontier. But when I read the news about all these new critters -- flasher fish! mantis shrimp! "walking" sharks! -- I could hardly believe me
eyeseye.And what better timing could those
scurvy sea dogsresearchers have, what with it being Talk Like a Pirate Day and all. I say we weigh anchor, head for the poop deck, and throw back a noggin o' rum in celebration. Who's with me?I'll even provide the entertainment: footage from our most recent Pirate Convention and this instructional video on pirate-speak:
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Lest we all get screwed.
Want to stop power company TXU from building a whole new set of coal-burning power plants in Texas, thereby single-handedly screwing what pitiful U.S. efforts there are to slow global warming?
Visit StopTXU.com.
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An excerpt from a new book by George Monbiot
Check out this startling excerpt from George Monbiot's new book Heat.It's about the climate-change "denial industry," which most of you are probably familiar with. What you may not know about is the peculiar role of the tobacco industry in the whole mess. I've read about this stuff for years and even I was surprised by some of the details.
When we've finally gotten serious about global warming, when the impacts are really hitting us and we're in a full worldwide scramble to minimize the damage, we should have war crimes trials for these bastards -- some sort of climate Nuremberg.
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Political suppression of scientists continues apace
CNBC asked to interview NOAA scientist Tom Knutson about the link between global warming and hurricanes. (Knutson believes there is one.) The request got passed up the chain at NOAA:
"What is Knutson's view on global warming vs. decadal cycles?" [Commerce press secretary Chuck] Fuqua asked his subordinate.
He's "a bit of a different animal" than the higher-ups at the NOAA, the aide responded.
"Why can't we have one of the other guys on then?" Fuqua emailed back.
NOAA ultimately denied CNBC the interview.You can read the relevant emails here. More here from ThinkProgress.
Update [2006-9-19 12:14:7 by David Roberts]: Ah. Much, much more from Paul D. Thacker over on Salon.