April 14, 2009

9 Billion People by 2050 + Climate Change = ???

Filed under: Climate change,Green politics — Tags: , — admin @ 10:02 pm

(9 Billion People + Climate Change = ???

(9 Billion People + Climate change = ???

The World’s population is expected to rise to about 9.1 billion from the present 6.8 billion people.

Sir David Attenborough, famous environmental expert and BBC presenter of nature films, says 9 Billion people by 2050 will have a highly destructive effect on the Earth’s eco systems.

Sir David is patron of the British Optimum Population Trust (OPT) which has been pleading for reduction of the British population by at least 0.25 per year. Keep it to two children only, it advocates to new parents.

Reportedly Sir David has his critics, who find reducing population advocacy hard to swallow.

And, yes, there is a danger of forced population reduction measures, such have been operating in China. In general these have left uneven demographic scars with a lopsided male/female population ratio. In particular many Chinese parents must grieve for the children they never had.

But the Optimum Population Trust says it opposes forced population reduction measures.

Climate change is at the top of the public’s agenda right now as a major global threat to life on Earth. But are we ignoring the world’s population explosion as another global threat?

Yet, underlying deep approaches to climate change bear simularities to dealing with over population. Education is a known powerful tool to lift people out of poverty and reduce numbers of children they have.

Education, about our human nature as interdependent with each other and our environments, is essential to a truly sustainable world, in which it great to live and grow.

The double whammy climate change/over population is a powerful stimulus towards a better world, or an abyss. (Still) our choice I think.

Population Clocks

U.S. 306,220,011

World 6,773,447,266

08:48 GMT
(EST+5) Apr 15, 2009

We may install any amount of solar panels, build our own wind generators or convert our cars to electric… But without that vital ingredient: a change in thinking about ourselves and our place on Earth, we would still be in great trouble.

What do you think?

April 6, 2009

Nice Weather? Or Is It Global Warming? What Can Anyone Do Anyway?

Filed under: Climate change — Tags: , — admin @ 7:50 pm
Global warming. Are we going to tackle it with hi-tech or human care and creativity?

Global warming. Are we going to tackle it with hi-tech or human care and creativity?

Hey, beautiful hot weather here in Perth right now. Like summer!

But it’s autumn now and we’re having a stretch of around 30C degree days. Average for April is 24-27C. I wonder if this will shape up statistically significant to have another month declared “the hottest on record.”

Sound familiar to news in your neck of the woods too? Lets hear you here.

Overwhelming? Annoying?

Climate change, global warming, economic crisis, poverty, over population. PLUS the regular earth quakes, mudslides, floodings and fires…

It’s enough to make you want to get off. Except the only immediate way off is obviously a dead end.

Another way is to dismiss these events as far away, untrue and nothing to do with you. Just play it again Sam!

Yes, it very much looks like all 6 billion+plus human beings alive now are in a pickle. The changes to the atmosphere (yes, I do believe in human-caused global warming) over the last 300 years ago have turned the Industrial Revolution into the “Great Extermination Sensation.”

Doing Is Believing

But there are things we can do. Me. You too. You don’t have to know a thing about building a solar panel or a wind turbine. And, though I recommend replacing your incandescent light bulbs for fluorescent ones, turn your thermostat down and so on, there are more powerful things you can do.

OK, hook off here if you think everything is just fine as it is… For those of you who don’t I have a simple strategy that anyone can do.

Care

Way back” in 1992, 1500 scientists signed a declaration about ecological decline and called for a new ethic. They said that this new ethic “must motivate a great movement, convince reluctant leaders and reluctant governments and reluctant people themselves to effect the needed changes…”.

And in calling for a new ethic they effectively identified it. They said that we must find “a new attitude towards discharging our responsibility for caring for ourselves and for the earth (Union of Concerned Scientists 1998). In making this statement these scientists identified an ethic of care, one involving an appreciation of the link between the health of our environment and of our human relations.

From Disability Experience: A Contribution from the MarginsTowards a Sustainable Future

Now ‘care’ is not new. It is a primary ethic in all great religions as well as in some non-religious schools of thought.

When you pet your dog and take it for walk, that is care. But it is Care if you make sure all its doggy needs are met, give it the best food, exercise and shelter. It ‘costs’ you some effort.

It is Care that has you think of others and what they might need, and act accordingly.

Or take your environment.

I’m a member of a local group that has taken our local wetland under its wing. Thousands of plants have been planted in previously degraded areas. Water quality should be improving, or held at bay from surrounding environmental pressures. I saw four Whistling kites the other day!

But it gets even more simple than that. Even to give that person a ring who you know cannot get out much, or call in and let them know you’re around, is a powerful act in learning to live well with climate change and economic challenges.

What? Are you kidding?

Living well with climate change

It is very clear that we cannot refreeze melting ice waters and put them bvack on glaciers and polar caps. We cannot suck the excess CO 2 out of the atmosphere. We cannot magically flip changed environments back to their pristine states of origin.

The impacts of global warming are being felt now and will get worse before they get better – if they will over the next few generations.

But personal, local caring acts can transform a nightmare into a rich life.

A disabled and well world

It’s like a severe permanent disability. You either accept the reality and do what it takes to live your life as well as possible, or you linger, or give up and get off…

Now the trick with accepting is that it is not the individualistic heroism of climbing Mount Everest while blind, or swimming the Channel without legs, or things of that kind (I do take my hat off to those acievements though) that builds a sustainable world worth living in.

Care really is to do with daily attentions, every day, while trying to be being aware of someone else’s need, do this thoughtfully and competently, with that person’s participation.

Care is done with others. Together.

Because survival as a human community, and even living well under the great challenges of climate change, depends on the two-way street of care. Everyone is interdependent. It only takes us to behave according to that important part of our nature to bring about a sustainable world. Even if it is one with vastly changed environments.

Now that’s why Michelle Obama’s digging up the White House lawn with involvement of a local school, to grow organic vegetables, if more powerful than the G20 meeting ever could be.

It is why the Australian government’s initiative on affordable homes for low-income and homeless people, is more powerful than its handing many Australians $900 as an economic stimulus.

Because these things model social Care. Not charity, but building the capacity of caring community spirit. Examples from which each of us can take their queue.

No amount of solar panels or wind turbines can do that. Together with a culture of care however they’re a winning combination.

Still think your individual act makes no difference? Consider that giving, sharing and caring will make you feel like a million dollars. Nothing beats it.

To get a taste of how to learn to act like that, check out my friend Lily on Earth’s site here.

So, any one thing you can do?

Now I’m sure you can think of many smal things you can do with those people and environments within your personal world. Your personal act of care counts. It is actually the only way towards building a great world to live in for all of us.

Talk about it!

Go here to report local impacts of climate change and what people might be doing about it in your neighborhood.

Antarctica Is Melting – And You CAN Do Something!

From Geology Times an image of the Wilkins Ice Shelf relative to Antarctica as a whole

From Geology Times an image of the Wilkins Ice Shelf relative to Antarctica as a whole

The seventh great Antarctic ice shelf to break away from Antarctica in 30 years is the Connecticut-sized Wilkins ice shelf.

This ice shelf started disintegrating in the 1990′s and its full break-away is now imminent. You can see daily satellite updates here on the event as it progresses.

There is a wide-spread view that this event is yet another symptom of rapid climate change.

A backgrounder on the  Wilkins ice shelf break-up can be watched here on YouTube.

Of course this is not the only ice melting and contributing to rising oceans. Glaciers are too, but that’s another disturbing story.

What can you do? Well, obviously we cannot refreeze the shelf back but we may perhaps prevent the worst of effects, by connecting these big, but far-away results with our daily lives.

You can for example report local impacts of global warming wherever it is that you live. Or tell stories of local initiatives that reduce CO2 or otherwise contribute to a sustainable world.

You can do that here in writing and photo image or at 3Ceco.com Chronicles of Climate Change by uploading your video.

Yes! You can do something! And it’s easy. Why not get going!

April 4, 2009

Social Housing Stimulus

Social housing should be energy-efficient, use renewable energy and be beautiful.

Social housing should be energy-efficient, use renewable energy and be beautiful.

To report something more creative and lasting than cash hand outs, the Australian government has begun building thousands of new homes for homeless people and low income earners across the nation.

The first round of its economic stimulus package involved billions of cash hand outs to eligible Australians, with the aim of boosting public consumption.

This is the government’s second round, involving 20,000 new social housing dwellings, with three quarters of them to be completed by the end of 2010.

The project is aiming to create 15,000 jobs nationally and protect more people from becoming homeless.

Let’s hope that plenty of such innovative, positive incentives, including solar energy grants, will flow from the G20 resolve.

Let’s also hope that such public housing projects will pay full attention to energy-efficiency, renewable energy use and weatherization. Poorer people need these things most of all.

Sources:

Social housing investment will reduce homeless numbers.

Parisian social housing goes green

April 3, 2009

G20 Summit – For A Sustainable World?

G20 Leaders Are here To Help

G20 Leaders Are here To Help

The G20 – the world’s richest 20 countries – summit is over.  What has it achieved for the global economy and for a sustainable planet?

Well, share markets have risen everywhere after hearing the G20 meeting resolutions.  That’s one (early) vote for its success.

But since the economy is only a subset to a whole, sustainable planet Earth  on which we may live well, has it really adddresssed this vital dimension?

First, its reported runs on the board:

  • It trebled the lending power of the International Monetary Fund to $1 Trillion. That’s important to get credit flows happening again.
  • Poor countries will get some of that money. Besides just being good for them it’s good policy to stop a further global economic crumbling in these regions.
  • Tax havens will be named and shamed.
  • Bankers’  salaries and bonuses  will be cut.
  • Each country will get rid of “toxic” assets.
  • No further trade barriers to be put up, as a boost to free trade.
  • The financial stability Board will monitor whether banks and others are taking excesssive financial risk.
  • A $250 Billion pledge in trade credits issued by the World Bank.

Spot the gap!

What’s missing here?  Yup, you spotted it…

Where are the commitments to phasing out high-CO2 emission-based power plants, manufacturing and transport?

What about growing demand for more consumer products, from developing nations, and just plainly from a growing world population with a heavy eco-footprint?

Underlying the G20 resolutions, as humble old me sees it, is the same thinking that caused us to land in the global warming mess: Growing economies are good.  All we need to do is make sure the financial world keeps on grinding away as it has done, bar some tweaking.

I still think Michelle Obama has it right. Dig up your garden, reduce spending, rely on your local producers … Whoooah! So that’s it! Good Lord!

We cannot have that!

That means people won’t consume, ever more, from China, Japan, Europe, wherever. “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle really means: Reduce the worst pimples on the face of the financial system with a make-over; Reuse the guts of the financial system; and Recycle rhetoric about what’s good for us.

OK, I’ll try to hold on to the body of a rich banker when we are all floating together in rising oceans and you can find a G20 Leader to hang on to. After all, we’re all in this together.

It’ll be allright. Don’t worry. They’re here to help.

Aww…, too cynical? Perhaps  The Communique did include one sentence on the renewable energy White Elephant: “We have today therefore pledged to do whatever is necessary to build an inclusive, green, and sustainable recovery.” That’s it. Hope it means something!

Green investing in renewable energy and infrastructure is unstoppable with Peak Oil around the corner.

Still need a garden though…

April 2, 2009

If the Obamas Can Grow A Garden, So Can You!

The new organic garden site at the White house

The new organic garden site at the White house

Today is the day!

If the Obamas are digging up their White House lawn to grow vegetables, why are you still lagging behind? Don’t worry. I’ll show you how to keep up with her. Read on…

Yes, Michelle Obama has started to dig up the White House South Lawn to grow vegetables in a 1,100-square-foot plot, visible from E-Street. Not only that, she is growing them organically. Twenty-three fifth graders from Bancroft Elementary School in Washington will help her dig up the soil and help plant, harvest and cook the vegetables, berries and herbs.

While Barack is in London trying to convince sceptical Europeans that economic stimulus – read increasing consumption – Michelle is promoting good old-fashioned frugality and self-sufficiency at home.

Of course she is only the second First Lady to do so. Eleanor Roosevelt took this lead during WWII. She also happens to be the architect of the UN Declaration of Human Rights! Talk about social responsibility going hand in hand with practical strategies for a better world…

My bet for a successful strategy towards a sustainable life is on Michelle rather than Barack. Why? Because the consuming-more-is-good kind of thinking has had its day. Its the kind of thinking that actually created our global warming and economic woes.

Consuming less, not just different products. Choosing genuine “green” products. Caring of others and the environment. That’s the stuff of a sustainable Earth.

Hail To The First Lady Michelle! Prince Charles would approve.

What will be grown in Michelle’s garden

The Obamas’ garden will have

  • 55 varieties of vegetables, grown from organic seedlings;
  • Produce will include cilantro, tomatillos and hot peppers. Lettuces will include red romaine, green oak leaf, butterhead, red leaf and galactic. There will be spinach, chard, collards and black kale. There will be a patch of berries. And herbs will include anise hyssop and Thai basil;
  • The garden will be in raised beds, fertilized with White House compost, crab meal from the Chesapeake Bay, lime and green sand;
  • Ladybugs and praying mantises will help control harmful bugs;
  • Two beehives will be kept for honey;
  • Total cost of seeds, mulch and so forth – $200

What a taste bud stimulus package  that is!  I’m coming to dinner!

How You Can grow Vegetables Yourself – Indoors Or Out.

The Food For Everyone Foundation teaches the very best family food production principles and procedures. They believe the “best of organic” methods taught by Dr. Jacob R. Mittleider, and demonstrated in 78 gardening projects – in 28 countries around the world for 37 years – are the very best available anywhere. Download their gardening manuals here.

Self Sufficient Life gives you the plans to building your greenhouse, your hen house, how to keep bees and how to grow fruit. Download their books here.

No land? Grow plants indoors with a simple hydroponics system.Download your indoor system here.

Have land? But don’t know how to start?Here’s your ultimate landscaping resource

Want to go all the way and save more energy by not eating meat? Vegetarian nutrition has many benefits , including gluten-free options and allergy reduction. Check out this book.

Sources:

Obamas To Plant Vegetables At The White House.

March 23, 2009

The Nano, the cheapest low emission, high mileage car in the world.

The Nano car

This little car is very cheap, boasts green credentials, and it comes from India.

The aptly-named Nano car, by Tata Motors was finally launched, after some years of delay in production. The cheapest car in the world!.

The little hatchback Nano is priced starting at 100,000 rupees or $2,050 US. Its length comes in at 3.1 metres, and its features a 623cc, 33 HP rear 2 cylinder engine. With a top speed of 105 km/hr Its mileage is impressive at around 20 km per litre.

What’s also impressive is that the company can squeeze four doors into this short car!

Aircon, radio or cd player? Optional extras only.

An estimated 50,000 of these cars will be produced in its first year, a far cry from the 250,000 the company originally aimed for.

But it is still a potentially explosive market where Indian demand for the Nano is so high that the first customers will be selected at random from among those on the waiting  list.

It is as well that the Nano is miniscule because India’s roads are already congested with millions of cars. And if you have been there you know the chaos that can cause.

Environmentalists cast a worrying eye on the prospect of adding more CO2 emitting cars on India’s congested roads.

But Tata Motorss says Nano’s  CO2 emissions are small by virtue of its high mileage and it emits fewer pollutants than the ubiquitous scooters it aims to replace.

Nano beyond India

The Tata Nano Europa was shown at the Geneva Motor Show this month, with a planned launch of 2011.

An American Nano? No, no plans for that yet. But there are options there for driving green and cheap too.

Find your own cheap green car.

You can sometimes find amazingly cheap green cars in car auctions.  We found a 2007 Toyota Prius hybrid, sold for under $6,000!

Or look at converting your car to electric.

Early Climate Change Warnings From Copenhagen

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:38 am
Help Think A World Beyond Climate Change

Help Think A World Beyond Climate Change

A conference of up to two and a half thousand top scientists from 80 countries have warned that the world is on the brink of environmental disaster as worst-case IPCC scenarios were being exceeded.

The conference, at the University of Copenhagen, 10-12 March 2009, sought to update climate change knowledge since the 2007 IPCC report. Timely, in view of the UN climate change meeting in Copenhagen in December and because the 2007 report used three years of data analysed up to mid 2006.

Growing Pace Of Climate Change

Climate appears to be happening at an accelerated rate. Environmental tipping points could be reached which would magnify climate change effects and make them much harder to deal with. Irreversible global changes could result.

This conference heard that the overall prognosis on climate change is worse than previous estimates have suggested.

Grave Effects Of Climate Change

  • A 4C rise could turn swaths of southern Europe to desert.
  • Sea levels will rise twice as fast as official estimates predict.
  • Modest warming could unleash a carbon “time bomb” from Arctic soils.
  • A failure to cut emissions could render half of the world uninhabitable.
  • Rising temperatures could kill off 85% of the Amazon rainforest.

What’s Happening Now

The IPCC 2007 report estimated the most likely global warming rate to be 3% by the end of this century. But British economist Nicholas Stern warned that policymakers now need to consider the consequences of global temperature rises of 6°C or more.

And climatologist Konrad Steffen of the University of Colorado at Boulder estimates that sea levels could rise as much as 1 metre by 2100, according to new analyses of ice loss from Greenland. The top estimate from the IPCC’s 2007 report was a rise of 0.59 metres by the end of the century.

A New Thinking

The Kyoto treaty’s first phase ends in 2012 and a greatly more effective agreement must be reached. Essentially we can no longer talk about preventing global warming. We must plan how to live with the effects of it.

Part of that planning must be about technology and different ways of doing things. Most of all it must be about transformation of thinking about ourselves and our role on Mother Earth. Because the underlying thinking that got us into this mess is clearly redundant in getting us out of it.

The new thinking must be about genuine care for each other and our planet.

New thinking starts with you and me. Cause you and I are intimately connected and all of us are intimately connected to our Planet Earth.

The oxygen you breathe has been breathed by dinosaurs (No, c’mon.  Of course I don’t mean certain politicians) and the water you drink is the same water that has passed through the depths of the Earth’s geological structures and has been metabolised by billions of life forms before you.

Every change you can make, affects all of us. Any small caring act goes towards a tipping point of global transformation of consciousness. I can do that. So can you.

I recommend Eckhard Tolle’s book A New Earth and Bradley Nelson’s book The Emotion Code for practical knowledge towards a new way of Being. You can also attend training seminars on The Emotion Code to learn to released “trapped emotions” yourself. What!  Yes, read the book. It does make a lot of sense.

Why do I recommend these books? We are facing a new world: new economics, newly caring for the planet and each other, and ways to live through the transitional turmoil. This must start with you and me. These are quite amazingly practical books for these times.

Cognitive Dissonance

Still, a new Gallup Poll showed that more Americans than ever in the past decade believed the seriousness of climate change was exaggerated.

In the face of growing evidence, of a melting North pole and glaciers and rising temperatures this result could be described as cognitive dissonance. Global warming is such an overwhelmingly uncomfortable issue that one way to live with it may be to rationalise it away, rather than make behavioral changes.

It is one choice you could make.

Copenhagen Zero-Emission City

On a bright note the city of Copenhagen has launched a plan for it to be a zero-emission city by 2025. In view of current trends we may only hope many cities will follow in its footsteps – a governments lose valuable time negotion trade-offs and protections for their economies.

Why not aim to be a zero-emission zone all by yourself? Think about it!

March 10, 2009

Green Cities, Green Homes

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 2:03 am

Green Cities 09 was a 4-day expo/conference, recently held in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Many policy makers, builders, investors, architects, planners, home owners milled and absorbed the latest information on green building and green homes.

It is  interesting Queensland was the venue as it has over the last few years been pummeled by extra heavy duty cyclones and floods, causing devastation.

Aptly, the keynote address by Charles Lockwood, was entitled:  “Will the economic crisis stall – or kill – green buildings?” about the impact of another crisis of our own making, The Economy.

A Green Home - Dream Home Or Existing ApartmentTaking the aggregate respoonse of the event’s 72 speakers, on the whole, the answer was resoundingly “no.”

There are emissions to be reduced, waste to be cut AND money to be made.

It’s always only the cream of an entire presentation to get the Power Point version only, but nevertheless the expo’s database of the 72 presentations is worth a look, if you weren’t able to be there.

Put it in your diary for 2010.

Why?

Well, just look at what info was dished out this year:

  • What investors want from green homes
  • How To Build Green Cities
  • How the rating tool Energy Star performs
  • How to deliver greener residentisl developments
  • and that’s just a grab in the barrel…

Of course you can get your own Ozzie Green Building Guide right now and go green today!

And as far as green investing advice goes, it’s not far away…

Cheers

March 6, 2009

Of Alternative Energy In The Classroom And Easy Hydrogen

Gosh, isn’t the ProCon site a great one?

What? Oh, sorry, you’re yet to be introduced to it?

It’s an educational site that presents both sides of the coin of controversial social issues. If your school is not using it, look into it now.

The latest Procon issue is around the question “Can alternative energy effectively replace fossil fuels?”

AlternateEnergySources.com was delighted to be asked to contribute to it. Here you can find Pro and Con statements by various invited commentators.

For UK edicators, there’s Taecanet, bringing quality content into the classroom. Alternate Energy Sources.com is also a proud content provider for this innovative web-based learning in the classroom.

Free hydrogen?

hydrogenelement1

Anyway, I found an intriguing comment there from a representative of Genysis LLC who claim to have found, and patented a breakthrough process in renewable hydrogen generating technology. A carbon-neutral process which generates its own electricity.

This process is contrary to existing means of releasing hydrogen from water through electrolysis, where an external power source (often fossil fuels) is needed to fire the process.

The best example of clean hydrogen I can think of is that of Iceland’s hydrogen-powered fishing fleet, where the electricility to make the hydrogen comes from its own, easily accessible,  geothermal resources.

The world regularly hears from people who claim to have found the Holy Grail of alternative energy. Is this it?

Here’s a quote:

Water has the highest concentration of hydrogen of any known, stable, non-carbon substance. RET requires little energy in order to generate hydrogen from water. RET operates at room temperature, is scaleable and carbon neutral. The principle of this technology relies on the unique properties of the oxygen-hydrogen bond. By using electromagnetic radiation tuned to the O-H bond energy, RET breaks the bond with a minimal amount of energy. The rate of hydrogen production using this technology far exceeds that of electrolytic processes. The RET process generates its own electricity whereas electrolysis must obtain electrical energy from external sources, such as fossil fuels, to operate. The capital costs associated with RET are envisioned to be much smaller than with electrolysis process equipment.

Read the whole thing here.

Who knows what Google will think of this? “Why should they be interested”, you ask…  Well, Google is considered a corporate leader in this area .

But  paradoxically it has also put a kind of Big Brother stop to advertising for HHO energy-saving devices. HHO is also called Brown’s gas and is a highly combustible product from electrolysis of water. A grassroots application of hydrogen in water. Google decided it would no longer allow advertising for it, presumably because they thought it a bad product.

I don’t. Read about HHO gas and applications for vehicles, machinery and homes here. It does work.

Keep in touch! Won’t you?

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