Latest Articles
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But It’s Still Friggin’ Raining in Seattle
2005 is hottest year on record, and 2006 weather is wacked We know you’ve been waiting with bated breath to hear the outcome of the competition between 1998 and 2005 for hottest year on record, and NASA’s results are in: 2005 wins! 1998 had El Nino, but 2005 had a remarkably warm Arctic. Congratulations, 2005, […]
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Tadpole Position
Real-world combos of pesticides highly lethal to frogs, study shows Frogs exposed to a pesticide mix similar to what’s found on the average farm die in greater numbers than those dosed with just one pesticide, a new study shows. In new research in the online edition of the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, scientists at UC-Berkeley […]
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Al’s Well That Pens Well
Al Gore to publish new book on global warming The self-proclaimed “former next president of the United States” — currently at the Sundance Film Festival (and, may we point out, looking quite natty) to promote his new documentary about global warming, An Inconvenient Truth — has announced that he’ll soon be coming out with a […]
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A recyclable museum houses Gregory Colbert’s photos of charismatic animals
The Nomadic Museum … wandering the globe. Photos: Gregory Colbert. Over the next few months, hundreds of thousands of animal lovers, art lovers, and the odd Bill or Billy or Mac or Buddy will take a left off Santa Monica Boulevard and head down toward the Nomadic Museum, an extraordinary structure made entirely of reusable […]
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America’s most loathsome
Did you know that you're the fourth most loathsome person in America (for 2005, anyway)?
And my fellow blogger Tom will be happy to see that someone agrees with him about the Mustache of Understanding, who comes in at No. 7:
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A cool head on Cape Wind
Ultimately, I come down against Bobby Kennedy on the Cape Wind issue. But I've been bothered by the strident, dismissive tone of some of the criticism directed against him by his fellow environmentalists.
My sentiments are expressed eloquently in a post by Tom Andersen, author of This Fine Piece of Water: An Environmental History of Long Island Sound. It's the most thoughtful thing I've seen written on this contentious topic.
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Energy use matters as much as — or more than — energy supply
Of the many ideas Amory Lovins has pushed into our cultural dialogue, here's one of the most important, one that everyone involved in energy debates should take to heart:
It is not energy that people want; it is the services energy provides.
The obsessive focus of energy debates on supply -- nuclear or wind? clean coal or hydrogen? -- is so narrow as to distort. The way we use energy is just as important: How do we store it? Transmit it? Where do we live? How do we get around? How can the same services be provisioned with less energy? How much is wasted?
The whole energy system is the proper focus of our attention.
Not a new point, obviously, but worth repeating, as it leads to very different policy debates and outcomes.
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Are FBI informants prodding people into committing ‘eco-terrorism’?
This is not a particularly new subject, but: When exactly does an informant cross the line into entrapment? As readers of my obsessive "eco-terror" blogging know, the big indictment brought recently against 11 people crucially turned on participants that were "persuaded" to act as informants. A closer look at an ongoing case in California that […]
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What will a conservative Canada look like?
While we were busy fretting about eco-terrorists, Canada went and had itself an e-lection.
Newly elected Conservative PM Stephen Harper is a likely Bush ally, says CNN, and aims to "move beyond the Kyoto debate by establishing different environmental controls." Meanwhile, the BBC doesn't pussyfoot: "[he] is known to be hostile to gay marriage and the Kyoto Protocol on climate change."
Sigh. On the other hand, the CBC reports that Harper "believe[s] it's better to light one candle than to promise a million light bulbs." So maybe he's into conservation after all.
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Bill Ford axes a third of his workers, hailed as hero
Despite TIME's fellatial cover story and Wall Street's predictably giddy reaction, it is not in fact good news that Ford Motor Co. is going to sack 30,000 employees. CEO Bill Ford doesn't deserve the lion's share of the blame for this, since the decline has been going on for decades, but it nonetheless seems a little macabre to treat him like a hero. And upper management at Ford deserves a hell of a lot more contempt and pink slips than they seem to be receiving.
Anyway, I was brewing up a long post about all this, but over on Sciencegate, Paul Tullis did it for me. So go read what he said. Particularly this: