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  • All’s Wells That Lends Well

    Big banks sign on to stricter environmental and social guidelines Big financial institutions are increasingly talking green — and some of them might even mean it. Forty-one lenders from around the world, including Citigroup and J. P. Morgan Chase, have signed on to the three-year-old Equator Principles, which call for investment projects to avoid harming […]

  • Acid Vicious

    Coral and other sea critters suffer as CO2 makes oceans more acidic By the end of the century, oceans may no longer be livable habitat for coral, a coalition of U.S. scientists warned yesterday in a new report. The world’s oceans absorb about a third of the atmosphere’s carbon dioxide, which these days is a […]

  • Dinosaur Farts?

    Alberta premier doesn’t like Al Gore talkin’ smack about oil sands Al Gore has pushed the buttons of Ralph Klein, premier of Canada’s conservative Alberta province (think North Dakota, but even norther). Interviewed in the latest Rolling Stone, Gore disparaged Alberta’s oil-sands industry: “For every barrel of oil they extract there, they have to use […]

  • Good news! Green views renew you! EBN reviews the how-tos.

    Environmental Building News has an article up on integrating biophilia into green building practices.

    Biophilia is a notion popularized by biologist E. O. Wilson. It describes humans' innate affiliation for the natural world. Biophilia attempts to define "the connections that human beings subconsciously seek with the rest of life."

    The thrust of the article is that biophilia is an underdeveloped element of green building practices, but one that has significant potential benefits.

  • Words fail me. Well, not really.

    So Andrew Sullivan says global warming is like the WMD "debate" before the Iraq War:

    It occurs to me that the global warming debate is not unlike the WMD-terrorist debate, except the sides are reversed ....

    In both cases, however, the evidence is complicated and hard to pin down with absolute certainty. We know we are at much greater risk now from Islamist terror than we were a decade ago - but measuring how much, and where from specifically, is very hard. Equally, we know that global warming is real, but whether it has reached or will soon reach a dangerous tipping point is not a given.

    Riiight. I can think of a number of ways that Iraq and climate change are similar, but that isn't one of them. Let's count the ways:

  • Coral reefs face growing threats

    Coral reefs just can't catch a break. It's not enough that deep sea corals are ripped from the ocean floor by destructive trawling -- now shallow water corals are contending with global warming.

    High sea temperatures stress coral, making them susceptible to disease and premature death. Last year, up to 40 percent of coral died in abnormally warm seas around the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the stage is set for the same to happen this year. Yesterday, ENN reported that Caribbean Sea temperatures have reached their annual high two months ahead of schedule.

  • Umbra on old clothes

    Dear Umbra, I promise that I searched the archives before emailing you, so hopefully you haven’t already answered this question. I’m wondering about the best way to dispose of old clothes and shoes — the tired, well-loved, and much-worn items that thrift shops really don’t want. I wear my clothes until the bitter end, and […]

  • Tax-funded press release ‘highly partisan and political’

    There's not much new info in Jim Motavalli's review of the infamous AP article and Inhofe's infamous response thereto. But I thought one bit was fairly remarkable. Recall that the Inhofe press release came directly from the Senate Environment and Public Works committee -- your tax money at work, as they say. Witness:

    Marc Morano, a spokesperson for the Senate majority on the Environment and Public Works committee ... denied, however, that the press release was "an official government action," implying subpoenas or hearings. "This was not from a senator, but from the Republican majority," Morano said. "It's up to others to decide if it was unusual or not. I'd be surprised if there was no precedent, because many congressional committees are highly partisan and political."

    (Morano, you'll recall, is a long-time Republican media thug.)

    Notice that Morano implicitly concedes two things. The first is that he and his boss view global warming purely as a "highly partisan and political" issue. The second is that it's now scarcely noteworthy that Senate committees are used for the personal partisan vendettas of their chairs.

    The moral and political bankruptcy of the gang in charge in D.C. is now accepted fact, one they don't even bother to deny.

  • Database of sustainability communication projects

    The United Nations Environment Program must have been listening to all the Grist chatter (here and here) about how to communicate environmental issues, because they have just launched the Creative Gallery on Sustainability Communications, described as the ...

  • Try This on for Seismic

    Climate change may lead to more earthquakes and volcanic eruptions Geologists are concerned about the seismic repercussions of disappearing glaciers, noting that the sheer weight of the humongous blocks of ice helps to keep the earth in place. Glacial melting and the reduction of that weight may release pent-up pressure in the planet’s crust, leading […]