Latest Articles
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A Swiftly Heating Planet
Spacecraft heads to Venus to get clues about global warming Venus coulda been a contenda. It’s just a little closer to the sun than Earth, just a little smaller, and once had plentiful water. But instead of evolving life in a tropical paradise, the oceans started heating up and evaporating, trapping the planet in an […]
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Life’s a Bleach and Then You Die
Caribbean coral reefs hammered by bleaching, disease It hasn’t been a good year for coral. Last summer, reefs from Panama to the Virgin Islands suffered bleaching; now coral in the Caribbean, some of it centuries old, is being attacked by deadly diseases. The whole grim sequence can be traced back to unusually high Caribbean ocean […]
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RGGI or Not, Here They Come
Maryland senator chats with Grist about joining regional climate pact Last week, Maryland Gov. Robert Ehrlich (R) signed into law the Healthy Air Act, which restricts emissions of common air pollutants and signs Maryland on to the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), joining seven other Northeast states in committing to cut carbon dioxide emissions. Quite […]
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If At First You Don’t Succeed, Quit
Canada won’t make Kyoto emissions targets; blames targets Canada is nearly 30 percent above its greenhouse-gas emissions targets under the Kyoto Protocol, so it’s redoubling efforts to … abandon the targets. New Environment Minister Rona Ambrose, of the less-than-ambitious Conservative Party that took power in February, concludes “it is impossible, impossible for Canada to reach […]
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Why crude is flirting with its post-Katrina high.
If crude-oil production has peaked or is approaching a peak -- an idea that has risen to the status of religious faith at Gristmill and other greenie blogs -- one would expect the "smart money" (i.e., the speculator class) to snap up oil futures.
And that is precisely what's happening, according to today's Wall Street Journal.
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A chat with Maryland Sen. Paul Pinsky on the Healthy Air Act
Last week, Maryland passed the Healthy Air Act, thereby joining the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative -- the eighth Northeast state to do so. (The Baltimore Sun has more coverage.) It was the rare victory for environmentalists.
I got in touch with state senator Paul Pinsky (D), one of the bill's sponsors, to get the backstory. Our exchange is below the fold.
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Will cleantech turn mercenaries into missionaries?
Lately, politicians from Tony Blair to comrade-in-arms George Bush have raced to embrace green technology — at least on the surface. But is there substance behind their carefully crafted words? Venture capitalists are seeing green. Image: iStockphoto. Well, while government funds may be slow to swing around to so-called “cleantech,” venture capitalists are suddenly sniffing […]
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Fair trade palms
Loving thy palm grower as thyself, a growing number of churches opted last Sunday to celebrate Palm Sunday with palm fronds grown in conditions deemed both worker-friendly and environmentally sustainable.
As Brenda Meier, parish projects coordinator for Lutheran World Relief, told Religion News Service:
To have in our hand on Palm Sunday a palm that we know has been harvested in an ecologically friendly way, in a way that's going to benefit the communities and the people who harvested them, adds that much more depth to our celebration of Palm Sunday.
Amen, sister.
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Rage against the (hybrid) machine
Some California drivers are getting all steamed up that they have to share the carpool lanes with single-occupant hybrids, like the Toyota Prius and Honda Civic, under a new state program. Some of the complaints, of course, should be taken with a grain of salt. Said one fumer in an online discussion group: "These [drivers] barely go 65 mph and allow no one to pass them on the right... Talk about road rage!" Uh, dude, that's not road rage -- that's whining.
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A bit of here, a bit of there
With an ever-growing list of things I want to blog about, I'm inspired by Dave's inconsequential post to
encourage him to grow his hair long againembark on my own post o' randomness.So with no further ado:
If I were an artist -- which I most definitely am not, until "adults drawing like six-year-olds" becomes the new rage -- I would want to put my talents to use at something like disappearing zine. The artist renderings of rapidly-disappearing species are very cool, in a depressing-as-hell sort of way.