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Just a quick local note: I’ll be in the Pacific Northwest this week discussing The 15 Biggest Lies About the Economy. I’d love to see some AlterNetters come out! And I promise not to actually read passages from the book at these book readings, because there’s little in this world that’s duller. Tomorrow, Tuesday, I’ll be [...]

Source: http://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/22601631/0/alternet

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GE has entered into an agreement with Mass Global Investment, an independent power producer, to provide gas turbines for the 375MW expansion of the Arbil power plant, located in Iraq's Kurdistan region.

Source: http://fossilfuel.energy-business-review.com/news/ge-to-supply-gas-turbines-for-arbil-power-plant-expansion-in-iraq-081210

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The E.P.A. calculated the 99 miles per gallon equivalent figure for the battery-powered car by combining ratings of 106 m.p.g. in city driving and 92 m.p.g. on highways.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=75f6b397ac8a3215b1b73f2bed114ee6

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Affluent Americans are enjoying increasingly stable unions, even as marital happiness is falling and the chances of divorce are rising among middle Americans.

Source: http://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/22612767/0/alternet~Marital-Happiness-Plummets-Among-Many-Working-and-MiddleClass-Americans

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by Josh Nelson.

I wrote yesterday about six companies that are taking greenhouse-gas-emission reductions into their own hands. But businesses aren’t alone—state and local governments are also stepping up to the plate. A COP-16 side event Monday entitled “Using All Tools at Our Disposal” highlighted some of the progress state governments have made in recent years.

The featured speaker at the event was New Mexico Governor and former Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson (D). Richardson framed the discussion by pointing out that climate change impacts aren’t just something we need to worry about in the distant future—they’re here now. “In New Mexico, average temperatures have risen 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit since 1976 ... so in my state we have no time to lose,” he explained.

He noted some of the challenges he faced in his efforts to transform the state’s energy policies, including stiff opposition from the fossil-fuel industry. Those challenges, however, are overshadowed by the opportunities presented by clean energy. “Even though the challenges are many, we also have many opportunities to address climate change while building an environmentally sustainable economy for the future,” he said. The governor insisted that while domestic legislation and a binding international agreement to reduce emissions are absolutely necessary, states must move forward with their own efforts in the meantime.

Richardson then touted some of the state’s clean-energy and emission-reduction accomplishments during his tenure, such as participating in the Western Climate Initiative, seeking out clean-energy companies and enticing them to do business in New Mexico, and collaborating with federal agencies on sustainable energy projects. He also brought up the economic benefits of clean energy policies. “Clean energy and environmental sustainability create jobs,” he said. “These are the jobs of the future.”

Richardson was joined on the panel by several other individuals responsible for implementing climate and energy policies at the state level:

Doug Scott, director of the Illinois EPA, discussed the retrofitting of school buses, no till-farming techniques, and methane digesters. Like Richardson, Scott also brought up the job-creation potential of clean energy. “The good news is that because of the emphasis on renewables that has taken place ... there’s lots of extra work to go around,” he said.
Ricardo Martinez, deputy secretary of the California EPA, talked about the state’s leadership on clean energy policies. He discussed some of California’s major policy victories, such as the Global Warming Solutions Act, the low carbon fuel standard, the Green Building Initiative, and the 33 percent by 2020 renewable electricity standard. He was particularly excited about the California Solar Initiative, a plan to install solar panels on one million California homes by 2016. “We have created a market, and a market creates jobs, and jobs are good for everybody,” he said.
Jared Snyder of the New York Department of Environmental Conservation highlighted his state’s vulnerability to the impacts of climate change. While water shortages are a major concern in New Mexico, New York faces problems at the other end of the spectrum: extreme rainfall and sea level rise. Snyder also discussed some of New York’s clean energy accomplishments, including 1,200+ megawatts of installed wind energy capacity and another 400 megawatts in the pipeline. He took particular pride in a state program that had trained 20,000 workers to implement energy efficiency programs.

While each of these four panelists offered unique approaches to reducing emissions, they have a few things in common. They all recognize both the urgency and the solvability of the climate crisis, and they’ve each begun the critical work of reducing emissions in their respective states.

Related Links:

Colorado is Poised to Actually Close Coal Plants

SF to Cancun: Social Movements Bring Hope as COP16 Falters

Has Japan killed the Kyoto Protocol? Does it really matter?



Source: http://feeds.grist.org/click.phdo?i=ea20959fa733189f7ba3f18cc57f7d73

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Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE) has signed a strategic agreement with Dimplex (Glen Dimplex Group) to develop and deploy systems and products, which can support the decarbonisation of electrical heating.

Source: http://carbon.energy-business-review.com/news/sse-signs-agreement-with-glen-dimplex-on-low-carbon-electricity-071210

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No one in Washington, DC–outside of President Obama–will determine the future of clean water and health care in the Appalachian coalfields more than EPA administrator Lisa Jackson. This Wednesday, December 1st, marks the end of the public comment period over her agency’s proposed guidelines to crack down on the egregious and irreversible impacts of mountaintop [...]

Source: http://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/22448962/0/alternet

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Blog EntryDec 7, '10 11:00 PM
for everyone
A veteran of dozens of research treks on high, eroding ice fields writes a stark warning to his fellow humans.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=0ab18757c9b938ac6c2e53a57a9a5913

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There are no fewer than 251,287 cables from more than 250 US embassies around the world, obtained by WikiLeaks. We present a day-by-day guide to the revelations from the US embassy cables both from the Guardian and its international media partners in the story
US embassy cables: each day's revelations at a glance

Day 9, Tuesday 7 December

The Guardian

? Burma's military junta considered making a $1bn (£634m) bid to buy Manchester United around the time the regime faced UN censure over its slow response to cyclone Nargis in 2008. Than Shwe, commander-in-chief of the country's armed forces and United fan, was urged to mount a takeover bid by his grandson. 

? Nato has drawn up a secret military plan to defend Poland and the Baltic states from Russia.

? The US privately lobbied to block an Iranian scientist's appointment to a key position on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

? Intelligence co-operation has improved so much that the US now considers Algeria the key player in the fight against al-Qaida in the Maghreb region.

? US embassy cables revealed America's ongoing battle to stem the flow of arms from eastern Europe to the Middle East.

Der Spiegel

Der Spiegel focuses on a "non-paper" describing US attempts to co-opt Riyadh's assistance in its quest to cut off the flow of funds from Saudi Arabia to al-Qaida. The magazine highlights the US state department's barely concealed frustration with America's partners: "The authorities in Qatar are described as 'largely passive' in the fight against terror and 'overall ... considered the worst in the region'. Indonesia is said to be an 'alphabet soup' of government bodies supposedly responsible, and a 'universe of aliases' of suspected terrorists and terrorism sponsors."

New York Times

? The cables reveal that a week after Syria's president, Bashar al-Assad, assured a top US state department official that his country was not sending weapons to Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Obama administration lodged a confidential protest accusing Damascus of doing precisely that. 

? They also show US diplomats expressing concern that huge cargo planes operated by Badr Airlines of Sudan were flying weapons from Tehran to Khartoum, from where they were shipped to Hamas in Gaza. The US asked countries in the region to deny overflight rights to the airlines. Jordan and several other countries agreed, but Yemen declined, a February 2009 cable reported.

? The New York Times reports how North Korea has abetted the arms race in the Middle East by providing missile technology to Iran and Syria, which then backed Hamas and Hezbollah, according to American intelligence officials and a cable from the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton. US diplomats raised questions in the spring of 2009 about planned purchases from North Korea of rocket launchers by Sri Lanka and Scud missile launchers by Yemen.

El País

? The former Spanish foreign minister complained to the US ambassador about the contemptuous way President George Bush was treating Spain: "Spain is the eighth world power and we are treated like a country which does not matter."

? Spain is worried by the prospect of Mauritania becoming a failed state, a "second Somalia" and an al-Qaida base as it is only 185 miles from the Canary Islands.

? The US embassy in Nicaragua describes the country as a corrupt criminal state financed by drugs and "suitcases full of money sent by President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela. President Daniel Ortega is seen as unhinged and obsessed by his own security.

Le Monde

? The US and Russia decided to join forces to fight a drug war and identified the main culprit as Afghanistan.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/07/wikileaks-embassy-cables-key-points-day-9

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Blog EntryDec 7, '10 5:00 PM
for everyone

We've mapped the recycling rates for each ward in Cardiff

A few weeks ago Cardiff council released some data on the city's recycling levels.

The recycling rates were broken down by ward level and this Guardian Cardiff blogpost explains how the data was collected by the council as part of their research into how the city can achieve a 70% recycling rate by 2025.

It was revealed Lisvane, in the north of Cardiff, recycles the most rubbish ? with Butetown in the south the lowest recycling ward ? but it was noted households in Lisvane produce two and a half times more waste than in Butetown. Ely produces the most residual (black bag) waste per household.

We've now mapped this data using Google maps and Zeemaps for you to see more clearly how each ward in Cardiff fares against the 2015 52% recycling target and 70% targets set by the Welsh Assembly Government for 2025.

Click on each ward to find out the recycling rate for April to October 2010.

Read more about how this map was created using data from Mapit from My Society here. Feel free to leave your comments below.

Can you do something with this data?

Flickr Please post your visualisations and mash-ups on our Flickr group

? Get the A-Z of data
? More at the Datastore directory

? Follow us on Twitter


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/cardiff/2010/dec/06/map-cardiff-recycling-rates-by-ward

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A federal district judge ruled against five states hoping to stop Asian carp from invading the Great Lakes by closing Chicago-area shipping locks.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a62b7a35216e12ca6994a77d2f95b081

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The current situation demands an "all of the above" strategy when it comes to diversifying the nation's energy portfolio, two officials write.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=fe954fae3d1fb97f303f49e73fd22538

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Researchers have been startled to see signs of rapid melting in Greenland and Antarctica, but lack data to precisely calculate how much flooding could result.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=969ed52b04d97aa121f0db4baf23273b

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This video highlights some of the craziness around what extended the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans could mean in terms of spending. The average amount these tax cuts would give is $80,000, which could allow a rich American to hire the entire staff of the Jersey Shore to appear at a party, [...]

Source: http://feeds.feedblitz.com/~/22493335/0/alternet

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by Sarah Goodyear.

I’m naturally skeptical of any promotional videos from an auto manufacturer. I’m grumpy that way. But I admit to being won over by this entry from Volkswagen’s campaign “The Fun Theory,” which is “dedicated to the thought that something as simple as fun is the easiest way to change people’s behavior for the better.”

As part of the campaign, Volkswagen awarded 2,500 euros (about $3,345) to someone who came up with an idea that could do just that.

The winner was Kevin Richardson’s “Speed Camera Lottery,” which proposed that people who were caught on camera driving within the speed limit would be entered into a lottery to receive cash prizes—with the winnings being drawn from the fines of drivers caught speeding.

The idea so appealed to the powers-that-be in Stockholm, Sweden, that they gave it a whirl. And it worked. Average speeds went from 32 kmh to 25 kmh (20 to 15 mph) during the three-day experiment, a reduction of 22 percent.

Of course, Sweden is a nation so sensible about the impact of automobile traffic on people that they actually have their sights set on a goal of zero traffic-related fatalities and serious injuries. The strategy for getting there is called Vision Zero, and it was adopted by the Swedish Parliament in 1997.

In the case of the U.S., concerns about privacy and fines have long obstructed widespread implementation of speed cameras. Throw in some filthy lucre, though, and maybe you could get people to play along. Sounds like fun, right?

Hat tip to Planetizen and Streetsblog LA.

Related Links:

Smart readers weigh in on behavior change

GM ramps up green hiring as it rolls out Volt

Driving a car doesn’t mean being in control



Source: http://feeds.grist.org/click.phdo?i=c4dc94eaba606eb4a6dcb88786d1543c

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