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  • Environment back in National Security Strategy

    President Bush dropped any references to the environment from his 2002 National Security Strategy. Environment had first appeared in Poppy Bush's NSS in the early 1990s, and made continual appearances in the various Clinton administration iterations.

    But just last week a new NSS was announced by the White House. In the last section, on the opportunities and challenges of globalization, environment appears along with pandemics, trafficking in drugs, people, and sex.

    Environmental destruction, whether caused by human behavior or cataclysmic mega-disasters such as floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, or tsunamis. Problems of this scope may overwhelm the capacity of local authorities to respond, and may even overtax national militaries, requiring a larger international response.

    These challenges are not traditional national security concerns, such as the conflict of arms or ideologies. But if left unaddressed they can threaten national security.

    Obviously Katrina is a key frame of reference, rather than the contribution environmental degradation may be playing in causing instability in developing countries, the focus in previous NSS mentions.

    The NSS is an important document in security circles -- remains to be seen whether this can translate into any new approaches.

  • New-age energy

    Continuing on his energy kick, Tom Friedman devotes his Wednesday column in full to a perhaps shocking speech (pdf) given last week by Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

  • ‘Eco-terrorism’: Cowards with ideals?

    Three people indicted in connection with arsons in the Sacramento area were sentenced last Friday. Sisters Eva Holland and Lili Holland, portrayed by their lawyers as innocents caught up in a plot they didn't fully understand, were given two years apiece. The alleged ringleader, Ryan Lewis, was portrayed as a devoted follower of the ghostly Earth Liberation Front.

  • Ceres top 100 companies on climate change

    Ceres has published a top-100 ranking of companies based on their climate-change strategies.

    After years of inaction, a growing number of leading U.S. companies are confronting the business challenges from global warming, recognizing that greenhouse gas limits are inevitable and that they cannot risk falling behind their international competitors in developing climate-friendly technologies. Some U.S. companies, such as General Electric, are catching up and joining DuPont and Alcoa in leading their industries. But many others are still largely ignoring the climate issue with 'business as usual' strategies that may be putting their companies and shareholders at risk.

    Here are the top "leaders and laggards":

    Sector Leaders Laggards
    Oil/Gas BP (90 points) ExxonMobil (35)
    Chemical DuPont (85) PPG (21)
    Metals/Mining Alcan (77) & Alcoa (74) Newmont (24)
    Electric Power AEP & Cinergy (both 73) Sempra Energy (24)
    Auto Toyota (65) Nissan (33)

    (via Environmental Action)

  • Humans still winning on “Survivor”

    Since the pilot episode of the most ambitious reality series ever -- "Survivor: Earth" -- roughly 65 million years ago, humans have been on a long winning streak. Each week, they've voted other species off the island at a surprising rate. 844 animals and plants are known to have been voted off in the last 500 years, according to a recent count. They've managed to dominate the show, winning every Challenge and conspiring against other species (such as their successful alliance with cows to vote off numerous rainforest species). Dolphins and chimps showed some promise at various points, but they've remained dark-horse contenders, along with cockroaches.

    When viewers got bored with "Survivor: Dinosaurs," the show was yanked from the lineup, making way for the current "Survivor" series. But that earlier show was quite successful, running for 165 million years. Unfortunately, at the rate it's developing, the current series may not have the staying power.

    Humans spur worst extinctions since dinosaurs (Reuters)

  • The Native Movement director chats on Flashpoints radio

    Evon Peter of Native Movement (and InterActivist) fame appeared (was heard?) yesterday on Flashpoints radio. During the 17-minute interview, Peter chats about the Senate vote to allow drilling in his native lands (also known as the Arctic Refuge) and an upcoming March for Human Rights and Sacred Sites on Saturday in Flagstaff, Ariz.

    You can download the entire hour-long Flashpoints show here or just download Peter's portion here.

  • An interview with integration advocate Sheryll Cashin

    Photo: Institute on Race & PovertyIt's been more than 50 years since the Supreme Court ruled that segregation was illegal, yet we still live in a country that's chock-full of racially split neighborhoods (see: New Orleans). Why is integration failing, how does it affect land use, and what do high-tech mapping gadgets have to do with it all? Jon Christensen interviews Georgetown law professor Sheryll Cashin to find out.

  • I Can Feel It Cleaning in the Air Tonight

    Clean up air and death rate drops, study finds Ah, science. It never fails to dazzle and delight. Consider this wildly counterintuitive result: When air pollution falls in a city, fewer people in that city die. Jump back! In a new study, researchers tracked particulate pollution concentrations in six U.S. metropolitan areas from 1974 through […]

  • Maybe I’ll Be There to Take Your Land

    As private forests in U.S. go for sale, enviros are pit against developers Privately owned forests make up nearly 20 percent of U.S. land, and they’re changing hands at a blistering pace. A U.S. Forest Service study predicts that 44 million acres of private forestland will be sold over the next 25 years — an […]