Articles by John McGrath
John McGrath is an intinerant student and sometimes reporter currently living in Toronto, Canada. He mainly writes about Canadian and International Politics from an energy and climate perspective
All Articles
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Now it will cause drought in Australia
AUSTRALIA'S crippling drought will worsen if the Howard government succeeds in its push for nuclear power, Queensland Premier Peter Beattie has told a conference.
Addressing the New Zealand Labour Party conference in Rotorua today, Mr Beattie said an independent study commissioned by the Queensland government showed a nuclear power station would use 25 per cent more water than a coal-fired power station.
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"Many towns and shires in our state are struggling to get enough drinking water, let alone enough to satisfy the amount a nuclear station would need to guzzle."It just gets better and better, doesn't it?
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Bashing carbon emissions just makes sense
I understand Jason's intent in his post about ideologues, and I agree (almost) without reservation that environmentalism needs to stay firmly in the realm of reality, facts, and evidence while eschewing fantasy, whims, and delusional optimism -- or, for that matter, delusional pessimism.
However (you knew that was coming) ...
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A new book says tackling climate change is doable
Too many months ago now, I was emailed the manuscript of a book called Cooling It: No Hair Shirt Solutions to Global Warming by Gar Lipow, an occasional commenter at my own blog. I promised Gar I would read it, and then it languished on my desktop for months, silently mocking me.
In any case, I recently finished it and with his permission I thought I'd share my impressions.
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Canadian conservatives suffer for environmental policy
The Conservative government in Canada -- once a proud Tory tradition, now effectively GOP-lite -- is slipping in the polls, after showing some gains during the summer.
The main reason for their difficulties? The laughable attempt to gussy up their hostility to living things and call it an environmental policy.