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Articles Archive
This is the Climate Security Articles Archive, sorted by most current article on down.
- Blood Barrels, Council on Foreign Relations, Ross, May 15 2008
The number of oil-producer-based conflicts is likely to grow in the future as stratospheric prices of crude oil push more countries in the developing world to produce oil and gas.
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- Food Rationing Confronts Breadbasket of the World, New York Sun, Gerstein, Apr 21 2008
Spiking food prices have led to riots in recent weeks in Haiti, Indonesia, and several African nations. India recently banned export of all but the highest quality rice, and Vietnam blocked the signing of a new contract for foreign rice sales.
- Does Global Warming Compromise National Security?, TIME Magazine, Walsh, Apr 18 2008
The two sides — climate and defense — needn't be opposed if there is a desire to survive the future.
- The Right War, Time Magazine, Ki-moon, Apr 16 2008
This year could mark a watershed at the U.N as they will undertake climate-change negotiations in earnest and accelerate our efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals to fight poverty, hunger and disease.
- The U.S. Nears the Limits of Its Water Supplies, Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, Varghese, Apr 8 2008
The water crisis is no longer something that we know about as affecting developing countries or their poor in particular.
- Water will be source of war unless world acts now, warns minister, Independent, Russell, Mar 22 2008
The world faces a future of "water wars", unless action is taken to prevent international water shortages and sanitation issues escalating into conflicts, according to Gareth Thomas, the International Development minister.
- Where climate change meets national security, Christian Science Monitor, Knickerbocker, Mar 13 2008
Last year, a group of retired American military officers warned that, left unchecked, climate change could lead to international instability.
- EU told to prepare for flood of climate change migrants, Guardian, Traynor, Mar 10 2008
Global warming threatens to severely destabilise the planet, rendering a fifth of its population homeless, top officials say.Global warming threatens to severely destabilise the planet, rendering a fifth of its population homeless, top officials say.
- EU warned of climate-induced polar security threat, Reuters, Taylor, Mar 6 2008
Studies are suggesting a host of regional examples of the increased prospect of conflict caused by the reduction of arable land, water shortages, dwindling food and fish stocks, increased flooding and prolonged droughts which were already occurring.
- Pentagon faces a battle on climate change, Financial Times, Podesta, Feb 13 2008
President George W. Bush knows today whether the US will build the national and international frameworks needed to forge a low-carbon future. The business, scientific and political community has failed to coax that information from him. Perhaps if the Pentagon asks, he will answer.
- When climate change threatens national security, Reuters, Rowling, Dec 11 2007
Recent reports show that disasters could lead to civil disorder inside the United States and that extreme weather events, like hurricanes, could severely damage U.S. military bases, both at home and overseas.
- Bill ties climate to national security, Boston Globe, Bender, Apr 9 2007
A new Congressional measure would order the Pentagon to undertake a series of war games to determine how global climate change could affect US security.
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- Report Details Effects of Climate Change Across U.S., Washington Post, Eilperin, May 28 2008
Global warming is already affecting the nation's forests, water resources, farmland and wildlife, and will have serious negative consequences over the next 25 to 50 years, according to a report issued yesterday by the federal government. The scientific assessment by the U.S. Climate Change Science Program, which was commissioned by the Agriculture Department and carried out by 38 scientists inside and outside the government, provides the most detailed look in nearly eight years at how climate change is reshaping the American landscape.
- Global Warming Could Cost U.S. $3.8 Trillion Per Year By 2100, Environmental Leader, , May 24 2008
Doing nothing on global warming will cost the U.S. economy more than 3.6 percent of GDP — or $3.8 trillion annually (in today’s dollars) — by 2100.
- Envisioning Baltimore's greener future, Baltimore Sun, Zeese, Schade, Jun 2 2008
Baltimore's thousands of abandoned homes are a blight - but also an opportunity to create neighborhoods full of green buildings that are efficient and produce solar or geothermal energy.
- New Climate Report Foresees Big Changes, New York Times, Revkin, May 28 2008
"The rise in concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere from human activities is influencing climate patterns and vegetation across the U.S. and will significantly disrupt water supplies, agriculture, forestry and ecosystems for decades, a new federal report, [released yesterday,] says. The changes are unfolding in ways that are likely to produce an uneven national map of harms and benefits... The authors... and some independent experts said the main value of its projections was the level of detail and the high confidence in some conclusions [which] comes in part from... emphasis on the next 25 to 50 years, when shifts in emissions are unlikely to make much of a difference in climate trends... The 203-page report... is a review of existing studies, including last year's... from the IPCC. It is part of a continuing assessment of lingering questions related to global warming that was initiated in 2003 by Mr. Bush... The West will not only face a dearth of water, but also large shifts in when it is available. Water supplies there will be transformed by mid-century, with mountain snows that provided a steady flow of runoff for irrigation and reservoirs dwindling. That flow will be replaced by rainfall that comes at times and in amounts that make it hard to manage."
- Tough 2020 climate goals unachievable: U.S., Reuters, Wynn, Jun 3 2008
"The United States will tell a July meeting of the Group of Eight rich nations that it cannot meet big cuts in emissions of planet-warming gases by 2020, its chief climate negotiator Harlan Watson said. 'It's frankly not do-able for us,' he told Reuters on Tuesday, referring to a goal for rich countries to curb greenhouse gases by 25-40 percent by 2020 compared to 1990 levels. A draft summit declaration, dated May 5 and seen by Reuters, showed Washington is blocking efforts to get the summit to agree targets for cutting carbon emissions, insisting that responsibility be shared by big emerging economies. The European Union says it will cut emissions by 30 percent if other rich countries do and supports a goal of 25-40 percent for all industrialized nations."
- NATO set to battle global warming threats, Associated Press, AP, Jun 3 2008
NATO must prepare for new threats in coming decades that stem from the impact of global warming, energy shortages and the spread of nuclear technology, the alliance's top diplomat warned yesterday.
- Senate Republicans Block Windfall Taxes on Big Oil and Block Tax Credit for Wind and Solar, Associated Press, Herbert, Jun 11 2008
Saved by Senate Republicans, big oil companies dodged an attempt to slap them with a windfall profits tax and take away billions of dollars in tax breaks in response to the record gasoline prices that have the nation fuming.
- What Will the Next President Do About Climate Change?, Nation Magazine, Hertsgaard, Jun 6 2008
It's been a long time coming, but the United States is finally going to have a President who takes climate change seriously enough to do something about it
- Water crisis to be biggest world risk, Telegraph UK, Evans-Pritchard, Jun 6 2008
A catastrophic water shortage could prove an even bigger threat to mankind this century than soaring food prices and the relentless exhaustion of energy reserves, according to a panel of global experts at the Goldman Sachs "Top Five Risks" conference.
- California faces water rationing due to drought, Telegraph UK, Elsworth, Jun 5 2008
Californians could face mandatory water rationing unless they drastically reduce consumption because of a state-wide water crisis, governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has said.
- Report on Climate Predicts Extremes, Washington Post, Eilperin, Jun 20 2008
As greenhouse-gas emissions rise, North America is likely to experience more droughts and excessive heat in some regions even as intense downpours and hurricanes pound others more often, according to a report issued yesterday by the U.S. Climate Change Science Program.
- National Intelligence Assessment: Climate Change Could Spark War, Wired Magazine, Shachtman, Jun 23 2008
National Intelligence Assessment finds climate change a threat to national security.
- No Ice at the North Pole, The Independent, Connor, Jun 27 2008
For the first time in human history, ice is on course to disappear entirely from the North Pole this year.
- British Columbia Carbon Tax Starts July 1, Times Colonist, McMillan, Jun 30 2008
British Columbia, Canada has put into effect a carbon tax in order to reduce the use of gas by consumers.
- Georgia Judge Halts Construction of Coal-Fired Plant, Associated Press, Bluestein, Jun 30 2008
The construction of a coal-fired power plant in Georgia was halted Monday when a judge ruled that the plant's builders must first obtain a permit from state regulators that limits the amount of carbon dioxide emissions. This is the first time a court has applied the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that CO2 us a pollutant.
- Germany Wants to Build 30 Wndfarms, Seek to Build 2,000 Offshore Wind Generators, AFP, , Jun 6 2008
The German government wants to build up to 30 offshore windfarms in a bid to meet its renewable energy targets. Te windfarms would be built in the Baltic and North seas and said some 2,000 windmills should soon be producing 11,000 megawatts of electricity.
- California Fires: A Sign of Global Warming?, Santa Barbara Independent, Kornell, Jul 6 2008
California fires are more frequent and stronger. These changes are now being linked to climate change.
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- EPA Experts Detail Global Warming's Health Risks, AP, Cappiello, Jul 14 2008
Government scientists detailed a rising death toll from heat waves, wildfires, disease and smog caused by global warming in an analysis the White House buried so it could avoid regulating greenhouse gases. The 149-page document released Monday laid out for the first time the scientific case for the grave risks that global warming poses to people, and to the food, energy and water on which society depends.
- Gore Sets Energy Goal for Next President to Heed, AP, Fournier, Jul 17 2008
Al Gore is challenging the nation to produce every kilowatt of electricity through wind, sun and other Earth-friendly energy sources within 10 years, an audacious goal he hopes the next president will embrace.
- Some Questions on the Bailout, Sierra Club Editorial, Pope, Sep 22 2008
The $700 billion bailout is roughly equal to this year's bill for imported oil. So if the US really took ending our addiction to oil seriously, The Treasury could repaid for the bailout -- and it's hard to see any other pot of money lying around big enough.
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- Democrats to let longtime ban on offshore drilling expire, Los Angeles Times, Simon, Sep 24 2008
A longstanding congressional ban on new offshore oil drilling will expire soon, with Democratic leaders conceding they stand no chance of renewing it this year over President Bush's opposition - and in an election year where gasoline prices have become a hot campaign issue.
- Global Warming Reality Check, Daily Green, Shapley, Sep 25 2008
The increase in emissions out-paces even the worst-case scenarios published by scientists affiliated with the U.N. Carbon emission trends are going in the wrong direction. And fast.
- Gore Calls for Civil Disobedience at Clinton Global Initiative, , Brewer, Sep 24 2008
Environmental panel transcript with Al Gore, Queen Rania of Jordan, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, Neville Isdell CEO of Coca Cola, and U2's Bono and moderated by President Clinton.
- Climate change hot topic at UNGA debate, suKasakaKu.com, , Sep 26 2008
Climate change was a hot topic at the general debate during the 63rd session of the United Nations General Assembly, with urgent calls for global efforts in cutting greenhouse gas emissions, especially from small island nations.
- Oil Shale: Viable Domestic Energy, Or ‘Dirtiest Fuel on the Planet’, New York Times, Mouawad, Sep 30 2008
In theory, the end to the oil shale ban, which has been in effect for two years, could open two million acres for development across Colorado, Utah and Wyoming.
- High stakes in Canada’s vast oil-sands fields, Christian Science Monitor, Tombs, Sep 30 2008
Thanks largely to the prodigious Athabasca oil sands, Canada ranks second only to Saudi Arabia in terms of total oil reserves.
- City of Houston Gives Wind Power a Turn, Boston Globe, Daley, Jul 3 2008
The Green Communities Act was hailed by environmentalists as among the most innovative efforts in the nation to reduce dependence on fossil fuels and to encourage use of clean technologies that don't contribute to global warming.
- World Ports Commit to Reduce Emissions, ClimateBiz.com, , Jul 15 2008
Fifty-five ports from around the world agreed to cut carbon dioxide emissions and boost air quality with the endorsement of the World Ports Climate Declaration.
- There's an 'energy tsunami' coming, Associated Press, Hebert, Jul 16 2008
A bipartisan group of 27 elder statesmen is sending an open letter to both presidential candidates and every member of Congress saying the country faces "a long-term energy crisis" that threatens the security and prosperity of future generations if swift action isn't taken.
- '100 months to save the planet', BBC News, , Jul 21 2008
According to the Green New Deal Group, humanity only has 100 months to prevent dangerous global warming.
- How to Get Serious About Energy Policy, National Journal, Crook, Aug 2 2008
The next president of the United States will arrive at the White House committed to a radical new approach to energy policy.
- McCain at Nuclear Plant Highlights Energy Issue, New York Times, Giordano, Aug 6 2008
Senator John McCain toured a nuclear power plant in Michigan to highlight his support for the construction of 45 new nuclear power generators by 2030.
- Estimated cost of Nevada nuke-waste dump soars, Gristmill, , Aug 5 2008
The total cost of dumping nuclear waste at Nevada's Yucca Mountain repository will hit $96.2 billion.
- Breaking the political logjam on climate change, San Francisco Chronicle, Mandle, Aug 11 2008
Despite appearances, T. Boone Pickens has not become an instant environmentalist. But he has become an advocate of wind power, because he sees the country's dependence on imported petroleum as a security threat.
- Bush Declared 422 Major Disasters, New York Times, Bogues, Aug 10 2008
During his seven and a half years in office, President Bush has declared 422 major disasters — severe storms, tornadoes, wildfires and floods — or more than one a week.
- US Cities Report Local Climate Actions, Emissions, Science Daily, , Aug 10 2008
At least 30 US urban centers, including New York City, New Orleans and Las Vegas, will team with the UK-based Carbon Disclosure Project to measure their greenhouse gas emissions and other climate change-relevant data.
- An End To Mountaintop Removal Mining?, Bristol Herald Courier, McCown, Aug 11 2008
Mountaintop removal could be ended by as early as next year, said a leader in an environmental group working to halt the destructive mining practices.
- Rush to Arctic as warming opens oil deposits, San Francisco Chronicle, Coile, Aug 12 2008
It's a scramble for the spoils of global warming as the rapid melting of Arctic sea ice is opening access to previously unreachable deposits of oil and gas, setting off a race by northern nations - including the United States, Canada and Russia - to claim them.
- Corporations become prime driver of deforestation, providing clear target for environmentalists, MongaBay.com, Hance, Aug 5 2008
Deforestation has shifted from poverty-driven subsistence farming to major corporations razing forests for large-scale projects in mining, logging, oil and gas development, and agriculture.
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- Roll back time to safeguard climate, expert warns, Guardian, Adam, Sep 15 2008
Scientists may have to turn back time and clean the atmosphere of all man-made carbon dioxide to prevent the worst impacts of global warming, one of Europe's most senior climate scientists has warned.
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- A closer look at Obama’s energy plan, Christian Science Monitor, Clayton, Nov 12 2008
If President-elect Barack Obama enacts the energy plan he laid out during his campaign, American taxpayers will each get a $500 rebate check – funded by a windfall profits taxes on big oil companies.
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- Melting Arctic Ocean Raises Threat of ‘Methane Time Bomb’, Yale Environment 360, Stranahan, Nov 16 2008
Scientists have long believed that thawing permafrost in Arctic soils could release huge amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Now they are watching with increasing concern as methane begins to bubble up from the bottom of the fast-melting Arctic Ocean.
- President-elect Obama promises “new chapter” on climate change, Change.gov, Change.gov, Nov 18 2008
President-elect Obama sent a video message to a conference of governors promising "new chapter in American leadership on climate change."
- California economy loses $28 billion yearly to health effects of pollution, Los Angeles Times, Sahagun, Nov 13 2008
The California economy loses about $28 billion annually due to premature deaths and illnesses linked to ozone and particulates spewed from hundreds of locations in the South Coast and San Joaquin air basins, according to findings by a Cal State Fullerton research team.
- Climate change may carry huge price tag for California, Los Angeles Times, Roosevelt, Nov 14 2008
For the first time, the costs of global warming's projected effects in the nation's largest state have been quantified: About $2.5 trillion of real estate assets in California are at risk from extreme weather events, sea level rise and wildfires, with a projected annual price tag of between $300 million and $3.9 billion.
- Water Laws May Be Used to Fight Warming, New York Times, Revkin, Nov 13 2008
Environmental groups have sought to force the federal government to restrict carbon dioxide emissions using the Clean Air Act, the Endangered Species Act (because of threats to polar bears from global warming) and other federal laws, and now they are poised to add the Clean Water Act to the list.
- Pickens sees US govt move on his energy plan soon, Reuters, Reddall, Nov 11 2008
Billionaire T. Boone Pickens expects to know within 100 days of Barack Obama taking over as president in January whether the U.S. government is going to adopt part of his ambitious and controversial energy plan.
- Report Calls for Overhaul of Power Grid to Handle Sun and Wind Power, New York Times, Wald, Nov 10 2008
Adding electricity from the wind and the sun could increase the frequency of blackouts and reduce the reliability of the nation’s electrical grid, an industry report says.
- Ambitious Wind Agenda in Britain at a Standstill, London Times, Pagamenta, Nov 8 2008
The Government wants to build an unprecedented 33 gigawatts of wind power capacity by 2020 to help to meet Britain's carbon reduction targets, but sceptics question whether the 15,000 turbines will ever be built due to lack of financial incentives.
- As First Plan Stalls, NY Mayor Tries New Push for Green Taxis, New York Times, Neuman, Nov 15 2008
After a federal court ruling stalled a city initiative to make most new taxis hybrid vehicles, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said on Friday that he would seek another way, announcing new financial incentives aimed at pushing taxi owners to buy the more environmentally friendly gas-and-electric cars.
- Australians march against climate change, Reuters, Reuters, Nov 15 2008
Tens of thousands of Australians took part in mass protests around the country Saturday to call for tough government action on climate change.
- Lights out: activists are showing the darker side of Paris, London Times, Sage, Nov 8 2008
Le Clan du Néon, an increasingly popular environmental movement that wants to make the City of Lights a little darker. One tactic is to turn off neon shop signs at night by reaching the external fire switches that control them, usually found two or three metres up the façade.
- Mass-Transit Projects Fared Well at Polls, Wall Street Journal, Paul Glader, Nov 12 2008
U.S. voters approved billions of dollars for mass-transit projects, highlighting a growing desire to overhaul the nation's aging transportation systems.
- The Climate for Change, New York Times, Gore, Nov 9 2008
Former Vice President Al Gore puts forward a specific plan to confront climate change.
- Al Gore group urges Obama to create U.S. power grid, Reuters, Zabarenko, Nov 6 2008
Al Gore's Alliance for Climate Protection has some environmental advice for the incoming Obama administration: focus on energy efficiency and renewable resources, and create a unified U.S. power grid.
- President Obama’s Big Climate Challenge, Yale Environment 360, McKibben, Nov 5 2008
As he assumes the presidency, Barack Obama must make climate-change legislation and investment in green energy top priorities. And he must be ready to take bold — and politically unpopular — action to address global warming.
- Climate a factor in NZ election, AAP, AAP, Nov 9 2008
The former New Zealand government's strong policy on climate change was a driving factor behind the Labour party's loss, the federal opposition says.
- Yes to Transit, No to Green Energy in California Votes, Los Angeles Times, Bailey, Nov 5 2008
Mixed results from voters in California; yes to rapid mass transit, no to green power.
- In S.F., voters defeat Prop. H for city utility, San Francisco Chronicle, Knight, Nov 5 2008
San Francisco voters rejected a ballot Proposition that would have authorized a feasibility study of public power and set clean energy mandates
- Could Obama appoint a "climate czar"?, Reuters, Zabarenko, Nov 6 2008
Members of the environmental community in and around Washington say a climate czar could oversee various government agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency and the Interior Department, to focus on tackling global warming and fostering clean energy to jump-start the flagging economy.
- Working Together for a Green New Deal, The Nation Magazine, Jones, Nov 17 2008
Van Jones argues for a green new deal that will produce hundreds of thousands of jobs at all levels of income, especially in urban areas.
- Deconstruct Instead of Demolish: A Green Job Opportunity, Solve Climate, Uhl, Oct 29 2008
Every year America throws away 250,000 homes rather than demolishing them they should be taken apart and re-used.
- U.S. Decides One Nuclear Dump Is Enough, New York Times, Matthew L. Wald, Nov 7 2008
The Bush administration will recommend that Congress give up the idea of a second nuclear waste dump, dropping a grand bargain struck in the 1980s, and instead vote to enlarge the repository now proposed in Nevada.
- Thousands in Germany protest against nuclear waste train, Agence France-Presse, Agence France-Presse, Nov 8 2008
Thousands of protesters took part Saturday in a demonstration at a nuclear waste disposal centre in northern Germany where a trainload of treated waste is due to arrive from France next week.
- Wales to become the first country in UK to bring in law charging 20p for plastic bags, Mail Online, Poulter, Nov 5 2008
Shoppers in Wales could face a charge of up to 20p if they use plastic carrier bags at the check-out making Wales the first country in the UK to tax plastic bags.
- Drivers get charged up about plugging in cars, Boston Globe, Venkataraman, Nov 8 2008
A growing cadre of energy-conscious drivers is leapfrogging auto makers by turning Prius hybrids into plug-in cars, installing an extra battery that comes with a hefty price tag.
- EU nations agree to push back CO2 auto limits to 2015, AFP, AFP, Nov 1 2008
EU member states are ready to grant automakers a three-year delay until 2015 to reduce the CO2 emissions of their new vehicles, in light of the global economic crisis, negotiators said Saturday.
- Google’s Green Agenda Could Pay Off, New York Times, Helft, Oct 28 2008
Google, the Internet search and advertising giant, is increasingly looking to the energy sector as a potential business opportunity. the company has invested millions of dollars in making its own power-hungry data centers more efficient. Its philanthropic arm has made small investments in clean energy technologies.
- Competitive costs give hydropower new spark, USA Today, Davidson, Oct 28 2008
Hydropower, nearly forgotten amid the rush to trendier forms of renewable energy, such as wind and solar. But hydropower — the oldest and by far most widely used alternative energy — is quietly making a comeback spurred by a scramble for clean energy and the high costs of fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas.
- Governor reveals climate change agenda, Portland Business Journal, Siemers, Oct 27 2008
Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski on Monday introduced a wide-ranging climate change agenda led by a contentious cap-and-trade program to curb carbon emissions and incentives for growing the nascent electric car industry in Oregon.
- Bailout (and Buildup), New York Times, Friedman, Oct 21 2008
Thomas Friedman argues the U.S. can’t afford a financial bailout that also isn’t a green buildup — a buildup of a new clean energy industry that strengthens America and helps the planet. Energy technology is the key to the futur.
- Offshore Wind May Power the Future, Scientific American, Waltz, Oct 20 2008
The federal government is about to open up to wind energy development vast swaths of deep ocean waters, and states and wind park developers are vying to be the first to seize the new frontier. Wind parks in these waters can generate more energy than nearshore and onshore sites, they don't ruin seascape views, and they don't interfere as much with other ocean activities.
- Queen breezes in to aid wind projects, The Guardian, Macalister, Oct 20 2008
The Queen of England has helped trigger a resurgence of interest in wind projects in the deep waters off Britain by promising to invest in projects at a time when onshore and other offshore schemes are struggling to meet their potential in the face of planning delays and other problems.
- Solar Refrigeration: A Hot Idea for Cooling, Scientific American, Schrag, Oct 20 2008
Solar refrigeration can be inexpensive and it would give the electric grid much-needed relief.
- Officials celebrate going green in Oakland, Oakland Tribune, Rayburn, Oct 20 2008
Oakland unveiled the Oakland Green Jobs Corps, a new job-creation program officials are hoping to grow in Oakland and, potentially, across the United States.
- Making a Green Revolution, West Coast Climate Equity, Glick, Oct 19 2008
A review of Thomas Friedman's book, Hot, Flat and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution and How it Can Renew America; Michael Brune's Coming Clean: Breaking America's Addiction to Oil and Coal, and Van Jones' The Green Economy: How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems.
- Canadian Liberal Party's Green Shift, Promising but Unlikely., The New Republic, Marche, Oct 7 2008
The Canadian Liberal Party has put one of the boldest and most important policy initiatives in global politics on the table: the Liberal Party's "green shift." The policy would make carbon taxation the principal source of government revenue.
- Projects in the wind, Boston Globe, Ailworth, Oct 8 2008
Wind turbine makers are having a hard time keeping up with demand.
- The Costs of Unconventional Fossil Fuels, New York Times, Galbraith, Oct 8 2008
Producing fuel in unconventional ways, such as from oil sands or coal, would significantly increase carbon emissions relative to conventional oil production, according to a study released on Wednesday by the RAND Corporation, the nonpartisan research institute based in Santa Monica, Calif.
- Wildlife gives early warning of 'deadly dozen' diseases spread by climate change, Times Online, Smith, Oct 8 2008
Ebola, cholera, plague and sleeping sickness were among those identified yesterday by veterinary scientists from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) as spreading across the planet because of climate change. The scientists said that wildlife could give an early warning of the approach of diseases and save millions of people.
- European Legislators Back Emissions Rules, New York Times, Kanter, Oct 8 2008
European Union legislators voted in favor of laws aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but frustrated some environmental advocates by taking steps to ease the burden on industry.
- UN Calls for Reviewing biofuel policies and subsidies, Food and Agriculture Orgnizaton of the United Nations, Food and Agriculture Orgnizaton of the United Nations, Oct 7 2008
Biofuel policies and subsidies should be urgently reviewed in order to preserve the goal of world food security, protect poor farmers, promote broad-based rural development and ensure environmental sustainability, Food and Agriculture Orgnizaton of the United Nations said today in a new edition of its annual flagship publication The State of Food and Agriculture (SOFA) 2008
- Electric car fueling stations planned in Hawaii, Associated Press, Associated Press, Oct 6 2008
A California company is planning to build a network of charging stations on four Hawaii islands to fuel electric-powered cars.
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- Pelosi will re-establish climate-change panel, Politco, O Connor, Nov 20 2008
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) plans to renew her select committee to address global warming next year, ending speculation that she would terminate the panel to clear the way for the next chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee.
- Waxman's win signals shift in Congress on climate and energy policy, Grist, Sheppard, Nov 20 2008
House Democrats removed John Dingell (D-Mich.) as chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, installing Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) in his stead -- a move that will have resounding implications for climate and energy policy going forward and demonstrates growing strength among the party's more liberal wing, especially when it comes to climate policy.
- Boxer announces two climate bills to be introduced in January, Grist, Roberts, Nov 20 2008
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), chair of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, announced that she will introduce two pieces of green legislation in January. The first is a proposal to create a grant program that would hand out $15 billion a year to support clean energy innovation. The second bill would direct the U.S. EPA to develop a carbon cap-and-trade system by amending the Clean Air Act.
- G.M.’s Latest Great Green Hope Is a Tall Order, New York Times, Maynard, Nov 21 2008
Executives at General Motors, the largest and apparently the most imperiled of the three American car companies, are using the Volt as the centerpiece of their case to a skeptical Congress that their business plan for a turnaround is strong, and that a federal bailout would be a good investment in G.M.’s future.
- San Francisco leaders plan electric car stations, Associated Press, Dearen, Nov 20 2008
Palo Alto-based Better Place along with San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums and San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed announced a plan which sets out to install charging stations in northern California homes, businesses, parking lots and government buildings by 2012.
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- Africans to stick together in climate change talks, Associated Press, de Montesquiou, Nov 23 2008
African countries have agreed to negotiate as a bloc in talks on a new global warming treaty, a move meant to give the continent highly threatened by climate change a greater say in the future pact.
- Brazil's once booming ethanol sector hits brakes, Associated Press, Clendenning, Nov 20 2008
Brazil's biofuel industry just months ago was being flooded with billions in new investments for vast new sugarcane plantations and gleaming distilleries that churn out the cheapest ethanol on earth. But the global financial crisis has put the brakes on that boom.
- Climate Protests Escalate Worldwide, World Watch Institute, Block, Nov 19 2008
Climate activists worldwide are raising the stakes on coal, with many turning to civil disobedience to make their voices heard. Actions in recent months have ranged from chaining themselves to coal conveyor belts in Sydney, to forming port blockades in the Netherlands, to scaling smokestacks in the United Kingdom.
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- Capturing the Ocean’s Energy, Environment 360, Luoma, Dec 1 2008
Despite daunting challenges, technology to harness the power of the waves and tides is now being deployed around the world – from Portugal to South Korea to New York’s East River. These projects, just beginning to produce electricity, are on the cutting edge of renewable energy’s latest frontier: hydrodynamic power.
- US DOE Report on US Greenhouse Emissions, DesMogBlog.com, , Dec 3 2008
The US Department of Energy (DOE) has released its 2007 Greenhouse Gas Emissions report, outlining the the latest trends in US energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions: Total greenhouse gas emissions in 2007 were 1.4 percent higher than in 2006.
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- There is no such thing as clean coal, Care2 News, Wilson, Jan 9 2009
This Tennessee TVA spill is over 40 times bigger than the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska. Our movement needs to draw on the first hand accounts, images and videos from this catastrophe to show people that coal is a dirty business and needs to be replaced.
- Study Ties Tree Deaths To Change in Climate, Washington Post, Eilperin, Jan 23 2009
The death rates of trees in Western U.S. forests have doubled over the past two to three decades, according to a new study spearheaded by the U.S. Geological Survey, driven in large part by higher temperatures and water scarcity linked to climate change.
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