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  • New blog on climate science

    Via son Roger Pielke Jr. comes news of father Roger Pielke Sr.'s new blog: Climate Science.

    Big Pielke, as I think I'll start calling him, is a professor of atmospheric science, and the blog -- which just started -- will host fairly technical material on climate science, from the look of it. ("These heterogeneous climate forcings could represent a more significant threat to our future climate system than the risk of an increase in the atmospheric concentration of CO2.")

    It's a great new resource to read side by side with RealClimate.

  • The ever-encroaching wireless web

    I think it was Tom Friedman who first referred to the web of communications technologies currently encircling the globe as the "Evernet." Always on and always growing, the net has many beneficial effects, especially in developing countries, as The Economist notes and Emergic and WorldChanging elaborate on.

    Of course, some side effects advise caution. To paraphrase Friedman in The Lexus and the Olive Tree, the result looks more like millions of Little Brothers than one Big Brother.

    While that may be slightly less scary, I think there's something to be said for leaving some parcels of land not only untouched by development, but untouched by the Evernet. The New York Times ran an editorial this morning about the "Frankenpine," a cell phone tower disguised as a white pine tree in the Adirondacks. Setting any visual blight (or attempts to disguise it) aside, however, the whole point of going into a wilderness area is to be "off the grid" and unable to immediately call someone, even in the case of emergency. A concerted effort needs to be made to prevent this Evernet from reaching into every corner of the world.

    Even left unchecked, though, there are some places where the net probably just won't go. And there is always the option of choosing to leave whatever communication device you have at home when you go somewhere. But in the same way that it is exciting to think that you are 50 miles from the nearest passable road, it is exciting to think that it is physically impossible to immediately reach someone or be reached.

    The Nature Conservancy and others already focus on the proximity of roads, but the proximity of the Evernet is looming just as large, if not larger, on many wilderness areas.

  • Umbra on washing machines

    Dear Umbra, I have a top-loading washing machine that’s nine years old. I’ve heard that front-loading machines are a lot more efficient and use less detergent, so I’m thinking about taking the plunge, even though my old machine works fine. How much less water do the front-loading machines use, and why? And is it true […]

  • How a Bill Becomes a Flaw

    Senate passes energy bill Late last month, after seemingly endless go-rounds, the Senate passed an energy bill that contains big boosts for nuclear power, “clean coal,” and corn-blended ethanol, and would require 10 percent of electrical utilities’ power to come from renewables by 2020. “With oil prices recently topping $60 a barrel, this legislation can […]

  • Gutting, No Glory

    House Republicans trying to tweak cornerstone environmental laws Rep. Richard Pombo (R-Calif.) and allies on the House Resources Committee have laid siege to two key environmental laws. They’ve inserted language into the House version of the energy bill to remove numerous drilling projects from review under the National Environmental Policy Act, which mandates environmental impact […]

  • Is This What Rumsfeld Meant by “Messy”?

    Air pollution poses yet another crisis for Iraq As if Iraq didn’t have enough troubles, air pollution has hit alarming levels in the nation, exacerbating respiratory ailments among its citizens. War damage to the power grid has made state-produced electricity unpredictable, and reconstruction promises by the occu- uh, liberating forces have not panned out. Still, […]

  • G8 Expectations

    Bush gets the watered-down G8 climate statement he wanted President Bush got exactly what he wanted on climate change during last week’s G8 meeting of industrialized nations: The appearance of compromise without any shift in his administration’s position. Just when it seemed that U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair — buoyed by London’s winning bid to […]

  • Sustainability as economic advantage

    Everything Nathan Newman says here about national healthcare transfers straightforwardly to environmental health.

    I'll say more about this when it's not so far past my bedtime.

  • Depressingly beautiful — and vice versa — pictures

    photography of edward burtynskyIf Sprol isn't fulfilling your daily visual depression requirement, check out these amazing photos by Edward Burtynsky, now on display at Stanford's Cantor Arts Center. (See also Burtynsky's homepage, where he's showing off some recent pictures of Chinese industrialization.)

  • Young biodiversivists

    I just spent six days in a tent with my family. This was part of an annual event where we gather at a lake resort on the dry side of the mountains with several other families for a week of communing with nature (bullshitting and lounging around).

    An unusual amount of rain has created an explosion of flowers, quail, and voles. The voles are feeding a lot of other creatures, like owls, coyotes, and snakes. I videotaped four snake species (rubber boa, garter, racer, bull), two of which were in the process of eating voles.