Articles by David Roberts
David Roberts was a staff writer for Grist. You can follow him on Twitter, if you're into that sort of thing.
All Articles
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A guest essay from enviro legend James Gustave Speth
The following is a guest essay from James Gustave Speth, dean of the Yale University School of Forestry & Environmental Studies and author of Red Sky at Morning: America and the Crisis of the Global Environment. The opinions expressed here are his personal views.-----
Thanks to an outpouring of first-rate science, excellent media coverage, and a resurgent Al Gore, the U.S. public may have turned an important corner in acknowledging global warming as a real and serious threat. To see Gore's An Inconvenient Truth in theaters alongside Nacho Libre and the usual fare is extraordinary indeed.
But if Americans take the next step and ask, "OK, what do we do now?" we encounter five other truths, most of them also inconvenient. They do tell us what we must do, however, and by when.
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National efforts to cut GHG emissions will suffer
Everyone is justifiably excited about the good news out of California, but a much more representative microcosm of the climate debate can be found in the
greatstate of Texas.Texas leads the nation in GHG emissions -- it spews more than Canada or the U.K. It has no plan for reducing those emissions. It has rejected legislative efforts to reduce them for years. In essence, Governor Rick Perry has said that he won't do anything until the feds do, which we all know is never.
Now it seems Texas is set to dramatically increase its emissions.
The state may soon approve the construction of 16 old-school coal-fired power plants:
The approval of 16 new power plants that burn coal, by far the most carbon-intensive fuel for making electricity, would add an estimated 117 million tons of carbon dioxide a year, more than the individual emissions from 33 other states and 177 countries.
The power companies say cleaner-burning coal technologies aren't "proven." The business lobby and the governor's office say curbs on GHG gases would hurt the economy.
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Republican War on Science boasts new preface and expanded chapters
Chris Mooney's The Republican War on Science has come out in paperback, with a lengthy new preface and lots of updated material. See the book's website for more details.
I interviewed Chris about a year ago, and the story ended up with one of my favorite headlines.
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A new urban planning info-sharing service
About a week ago Planetizen, the unfortunately named but otherwise great urban planning, design, and development info-sharing service -- launched Planetizen Radar. It's a bloggy compilation of bits and pieces on those subjects from around the MSM and blogospheric worlds. Handy, if you're into that kind of thing, as I am.