31 January 2012

Can carbon finance protect forests and prevent climate change?

Some of our clients will remember that The CarbonNeutral Company started business in 1997 trading as Future Forests, and will know that our services have always recognised the central role played by ecosystems in maintaining a stable climate. Planting and protecting forests makes perfect sense because “trees suck up carbon dioxide and turn it into wood and oxygen”

By Jonathan Shopley | Eco-business | January 25th, 2012

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Muara Tae’s last stand against big palm oil

The fate of a Dayak community deep in the interior of East Kalimantan demonstrates how Indonesia must safeguard the rights of indigenous people if it is to meet ambitious targets to reduce emissions from deforestation

Environmental Investigation Agency | January 24, 2012

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'Peak timber' concerns in tropics

Current tropical timber practices are not sustainable and nations should consider the "implications of 'peak timber'", a study has suggested

By Mark Kinver | BBC News | 24 January 2012
Tropical timber production exceeds forests' ability to replace the felled trees, the study says

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Japan emissions rising after atomic crisis: report

Japanese manufacturer's greenhouse gas emissions are rising after the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster, hurting the country's carbon reduction goals, a report said Sunday

AFP in Google News | 30 Jan 2012
Japanese manufacturer's greenhouse gas emissions are rising after the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster (AFP/POOL/File, David Guttenfelder)

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Q+A: When will the EU raise its green ambitions?

The European Commission's latest analysis on moving beyond its existing set of 2020 green goals, to be published on Monday, finds raising its environmental ambitions would be cheaper than originally thought

By Barbara Lewis | Reuters | Jan 30, 2012

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30 January 2012

Cuba seeks new socialist model

The Sixth Congress of the Cuban Communist Party (PCC), held in April, “endorsed for the first time a fundamental change in the political and economic model”, said Cuban political scientist and Temas editor Rafael Hernandez

By Marce Cameron | Green Left Weekly | January 28, 2012

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Eurozone Fears Permeate Davos

The ongoing eurozone sovereign debt crisis has dominated the start of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, with many private sector business leaders urging Germany to do more to alleviate Europe's fiscal woes. German Chancellor Angela Merkel formally opened the summit on Wednesday, calling on Europe to become "more European" (DeutscheWelle) and implement the fiscal compact agreed upon late last year by EU leaders

Christopher Alessi | Council on Foreign Relations | January 27, 2012

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Palm oil does not meet U.S. renewable fuels standard, rules EPA

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ruled on Friday that palm oil-based biofuels will not meet the renewable fuels standard due to carbon emissions associated with deforestation, reports The Hill

mongabay.com | January 27, 2012
Oil palm plantations and rainforest in Malaysia

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No oil for old countries

I THINK my colleague is right to take some encouragement from the latest Energy Information Agency outlook. As one would expect to occur amid a period of sustained, high oil prices, American oil consumption has fallen from 2005 while its production has risen

The Economist | Jan 24th 2012

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Renewable energy deals hit record high in 2011-PwC

Global deals climbed 40 pct to $53.5 billion in 2011. More consolidation as renewables markets mature. EU economy uncertainty could dampen deal flow in 2012

By Nina Chestney| Reuters | 30 January 2012

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Cutting Climate Change is Simple: Just Stop Subsidising Fossil Fuels

I knew that this was true but I didn’t realise the effect was so great. The simple way to cut climate change is to stop subsidising fossil fuels

Tim Worstall | Forbes | 29 January 2012

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Japan finds water leaks at stricken nuclear plant

Japan's stricken nuclear power plant has leaked more than 600 liters of water, forcing it to briefly suspend cooling operations at a spent-fuel pond at the weekend, but none is thought to have escaped into the ocean, the plant's operator and domestic media said

Reuters | Jan 29, 2012
The crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant's No.4 reactor building is seen before the removal of debris on the upper side of the unit in Fukushima prefecture, in this handout picture taken on September 22, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Tokyo Electric Power Co./Handout

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27 January 2012

Can REDD save the forests of Muara Tae in East Kalimantan, Indonesia?

The Dayak Benuaq Indigenous People of Muara Tae in East Kalimantan are defending their last remaining area of forest against two palm oil companies. “This is the last remaining forests that we have and the only land we have to survive. If my forests are gone, our lives will end,” says Pak Singko, a leader of the Dayak Benuaq of Muara Tae

By Chris Lang | REDD-Monitor | 26th January 2012

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Finance for biodiversity is a “new face for capitalism”: Sign on letter to CBD from Acción Ecológica

“Conserving the planet’s species and habitats is central to sustainable development yet the global decline in biodiversity is accelerating,” says UN Secretary General, Ban-Ki Moon

By Chris Lang | REDD-Monitor | 27th January 2012

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Wind power: Clean energy, dirty business?

In the developing world, where land-intensive wind turbines are being rapidly constructed, wind power has often turned clean energy into dirty business

By Erik Vance | Christian Science Monitor | January 26, 2012
Wind power is sweeping the globe: It's clean energy, but it does have some dirty business aspects that hit the developing world particularly hard. This is part of the cover story package in the Jan. 30 issue of The Christian Science Monitor magazine. Reuters photo

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26 January 2012

Green economy and growth: Fiddling while Rome burns?

“Fiddling while Rome burns” may seem a stale analogy, but when talking of “green growth” and “green economy” (GGE, for short), it is appropriate. Despite assertions to the contrary, the only thing innovative about the GGE concepts is the buzz that surrounds them

by Manu V. Mathai | OurWorld 2.0 | January 25, 2012

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Fracking: Anatomy of a free market failure

A recent New York Times article reported that rural landowners who had signed leases with gas and oil companies exchanging drilling rights on their property for royalty payments have discovered that they may have been misled

By Robin Hahnel | Real Climate Economics | January 12, 2012

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New video: “A Darker Shade of Green: REDD Alert and the Future of Forests”

A new video by the Global Forest Coalition and the Global Justice Ecology Project is deeply critical of REDD. Much of the criticism focusses on carbon trading, but through interviews with communities in Chiapas, Mexico, the video illustrates the perverse impacts that REDD can have on the ground

By Chris Lang | REDD-Monitor | 25th January 2012

A Darker Shade of Green: REDD Alert and the Future of Forests

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The scientist: Jim Hansen risks handcuffs to make his research clear

NASA's chief climate scientist built his career studying Earth's atmosphere and modeling humans' potential impacts on climate. Then he realized that laboratory work was only part of the equation

Interview conducted and condensed by Douglas Fischer | DailyClimate.org | Jan. 24, 2012

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Only Civil Society Can Save Rio+20, Say Activists

Large-scale social mobilisation, including street protests and parallel activities, is the only thing can save the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) from ending in nothing but frustration, according to activists and analysts

By Mario Osava* | Inter-Press Service | Jan 24, 2012
Environmental activists from around the world will be gathering in Porto Alegre this month. / Credit:Clarinha Glock/IPS Environmental activists from around the world will be gathering in Porto Alegre this month. Credit:Clarinha Glock/IPS

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In Famatina, Water Is Worth Far More Than Gold

Thousands of people in the northwest Argentine province of La Rioja are mobilising to stop an open-cast gold mining project in the Nevados de Famatina, a snowy peak that is the semi-arid area's sole source of drinking water

By Marcela Valente | Inter-Press Service | Jan 24, 2012

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25 January 2012

In Brazil, Fears of a Slide Back for Amazon Protection

Brazil has made great strides in recent years in slowing Amazon deforestation and showing the world it was serious about protecting the mammoth rain forest

By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO | The New York Times | January 24, 2012
Deforestation in Brazil, driven largely by clearing land for cattle, as in Mato Grosso, above, has lessened. But there has been a shift under President Dilma Rousseff. Damon Winter/The New York Times

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FAO/UNEP Asia-Pacific Forest Meeting Identifies Climate Change Adaptation Strategies

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and RECOFTC - The Centre for People and Forests have released a policy brief resulting from a meeting on forests and climate change adaptation in Asia, held in October 2011

International Institute for Sustainable Development | 18 January 2012

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Complications of Hacking the Planet

As scientists, with some reluctance, begin to study the idea of “geoengineering” the planet to slow or halt global warming, they are finding that any such program would quite likely have a complex array of effects, not all of them to humanity’s benefit

Green Blog NY Times | January 23, 2012
Laborers in Suchate Garh, India, near the border with Pakistan, planting rice seedlings.Laborers in Suchate Garh, India, near the border with Pakistan, planting rice seedlings. European Pressphoto Agency

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23 January 2012

Featured video: music in Madagascar to protest illegal logging

A new video highlights the plight of Madagascar's protected tropical forests, which are falling prey to illegal logging and foreign contractors. Featuring Razia Said, Malagasy singer and songwriter, the video shows concerts to raise awareness about illegal logging, especially near Maosala National Park

Jeremy Hance | mongabay.com | January 22, 2012
In February 2007, musician Razia Said returned to Madagascar to reconnect with the land she left as an eleven year-old child. For 6 weeks Razia and her band traveled around the island, and discovered the environmental damage taking place as the result of unfettered slash and burn agriculture, illegal logging and climate change

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Corporate Rule Is Not Inevitable

7 signs the corporatocracy is losing its legitimacy ... and 7 populist tools to help shut it down

by Sarah van Gelder | YES! Magazine | Jan 20, 2012
parody by takomabibelotA parody of corporate personhood in D.C.

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22 January 2012

Wind Power Without the Blades: Big Pics

Noise from wind turbine blades, inadvertent bat and bird kills and even the way wind turbines look have made installing them anything but a breeze. New York design firm Atelier DNA has an alternative concept that ditches blades in favor of stalks. Resembling thin cattails, the Windstalks generate electricity when the wind sets them waving

By Alyssa Danigelis | January 22, 2012

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Why are convicted criminals driving the EU’s defence agenda?

Spare a thought these icy days of January for the arms industry. Recession has had such a devastating effect on makers of tanks and warplanes that the European Defence Agency is holding a conference later this month to mull over what can be done

David Cronin | New Europe | JANUARY 21, 2012

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The future of food

By 2050 there will be another 2.5 billion people on the planet. How to feed them? Science's answer: a diet of algae, insects and meat grown in a lab

John Vidal | The Observer | 22 January 2012
seaweed harvesting in BaliSeaweed harvesting in Bali. From seaweed to slime, algae is the future of food, says Professor Mark Edwards Photograph: Ed Wray/AP

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21 January 2012

Theme and variations

State capitalism is not all the same. It is easy for a casual visitor to China to be fooled into thinking that he is in a normal capitalist country. The big cities are dotted with Starbucks and Kinkos. The newspapers run stories about small businesspeople falling prey to loan sharks

The Economist | Jan 21st 2012

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Why now? What’s next? Naomi Klein on Occupy

Naomi Klein in discussion with Occupy Wall Street activist Yotam Marom

Naomi Klein, Yotam Marom | Red Pepper | January 2012

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From Davos to Dystopia

Not long ago the World Economic Forum (WEF) found itself in the sights of the global economic justice movement. At the turn of the last century, before anyone was “occupying” public spaces in protest at the growing inequalities between the top strata of society and the rest, a broad global coalition of environment, development, and peace activists were targeting the public meetings of major institutions such as the WTO, the IMF, and the G8

By Ben Zala | Foreign Policy in Focus | January 19, 2012
World Economic Forum in DavosWorld Economic Forum in Davos

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Indonesia to set aside 45% of Kalimantan for conservation

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY) on Thursday announced a regulation that would protect 45 percent of Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of Borneo, according to a statement issued by his office

mongabay.com | January 19, 2012
Rainforest in West Kalimantan

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FAO-EC project to promote climate-smart farming

Malawi, Vietnam and Zambia will benefit from collaborative effort

FAO | 16 January 2012
Photo: ©FAO/Noah SeelamFarmers participating in an FAO land and water management project in Guthi, India, check a new drip irrigation system

 

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Fossil fuel subsidies: a tour of the data

Fossil fuels are subsidised in much of the world, causing billions of tonnes of addition CO2 emissions

by Duncan Clark | guardian.co.uk | 19 January 2012
fossil fuel emissionsFossil fuels are subsidised in much of the world, causing billions of tonnes of addition CO2 emissions. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

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Greedy Lying Bastards: US filmmaker attacks oil industry

Craig Rosebraugh's new documentary highlights the 'influence, deceit and corruption' of fossil fuel industry

by Leo Hickman | guardian.co.uk | 20 January 2012

Provocative, frank and impossible to ignore. And that's just the title

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UK 'subsidising nuclear power unlawfully'

Green energy campaigners are attempting to block new nuclear power stations in the UK by complaining to the European Commission that government plans contravene EU competition regulations

By Richard Black | BBC News | 20 January 2012
The Fukushima accident illustrates why governments pick up the bills for nuclear disaster

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Gas no good to bridge coal and renewables, says study

The amount of greenhouse gases released by unconventional gas drilling ''exceeds that of oil or coal'', an American study says in contradiction of some claims made by Australia's growing coal-seam gas industry

Ben Cubby | Sydney Morning Herald | January 21, 2012

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Exxon Mobil to Pay $1.6 Million in Penalties for Yellowstone River Oil Spill

Exxon Mobil has reached an agreement with the Montana Department of Environmental Quality to pay $1.6 million in penalties over the Yellowstone River oil spill, according to the Associated Press

Rachel Bogart | Yahoo! News | Jan 2, 2012

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20 January 2012

Rejecting Pipeline Proposal, Obama Blames Congress

President Obama on Wednesday rejected, for now, the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline, saying the $7 billion project could not be adequately reviewed within the 60-day deadline set by Congress. While the president’s action does not preclude later approval of the project, it sets up a baldly partisan fight over energy, jobs and regulation that will most likely persist through the November election

By JOHN M. BRODER and DAN FROSCH | The New York Times | January 18, 2012
House Republican leaders — Jeb Hensarling, Eric Cantor and Speaker John A. Boehner — said the decision would cost thousands of jobs. Stephen Crowley/The New York Times

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Rainforest in Transition: Is the Amazon Transforming before Our Eyes?

A review suggests that the Amazon rainforest may be changing, courtesy of human impacts on the region's weather

By David Biello  | Scientific American | January 18, 2012
amazon-pastureRAINFOREST TO PASTURE: Deforestation, among other human impacts such as climate change, are having a rainforest-wide impact on the Amazon.Image: Courtesy of Compton Tucker, NASA GSFC

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The Dark Side of Serbia's Oil Shale Fairy Tale

According to an old Serbian fairy tale, God tells a poor man who enters a gold mine that no matter what he chooses to do inside, he'll be sorry when he leaves. If he takes some gold, he'll be sorry for not taking more; if he doesn't, he'll be sorry for not taking any at all

By Vesna Peric Zimonjic | Inter-Press Service | Jan 19, 2012

Aerial image of oil-polluted waters / Credit: powerfocusfotografie/CC-BY-2.0Aerial image of oil-polluted waters. Credit: powerfocusfotografie/CC-BY-2.0

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19 January 2012

Cheap Chinese Panels Spark Solar Power Trade War

There's a solar trade war going on inside the U.S., sparked by an invasion of inexpensive imports from China

by CHRISTOPHER JOYCE | NPR.og | January 19, 2012
Contractors with SunEdison install more than 1,000 Chinese-made solar panels on top of a Kohl's Department Store in Hamilton Township, N.J., in 2010. Energy generated by the solar system will cut the store's usage, on average, by 25 to 30 percent.Contractors with SunEdison install more than 1,000 Chinese-made solar panels on top of a Kohl's Department Store in Hamilton Township, N.J., in 2010. Energy generated by the solar system will cut the store's usage, on average, by 25 to 30 percent. Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

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McKinsey’s bad influence on REDD is decreasing – at least in Papua New Guinea

Consulting firm McKinsey has played a key role in pushing a version of REDD that underestimates the role of industrial logging and agriculture on forest destruction, while painting local communities as forest destroyers. McKinsey’s advice, if taken seriously, would have had serious implications for local livelihoods and would do little to reduce deforestation

By Chris Lang | REDD-Monitor | 18th January 2012

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17 January 2012

One company behind U.S.'s top three biggest greenhouse gas emitters

The Atlanta-based Southern company owns the top three biggest sources of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. according to recent data released by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

Jeremy Hance | mongabay.com | January 16, 2012

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The Long Slow March to Nuke Abolition

"We want a nuclear weapons free world." More than 80 percent of people around the globe have expressed this overwhelming desire to authors of a new report

By Jamshed Baruah | IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis | Jan 16, 2012

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16 January 2012

The Law Of Putin’s Jungle

The Russian leader may be in for a surprise: he misjudges his adversaries

The Daily Beast in Newsweek Magazine | Jan 16, 2012

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Is Latvia an Example to Other States in Economic Crisis?

Latvia is the model economy that can teach the world how to survive the financial crisis

By Julia Heath | Foreign Policy in Focus | January 16, 2012
Latvian bank run.Latvian bank run.

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1% increase in forest cover

Since the adoption of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the government took measures to enhance forests cover from 5% to 6% including approval of forestry mega projects at the cost of Rs12 billion, said Muhammad Javed Malik, Federal Secretary, Ministry of National Disaster Management

The News International | January 13, 2012

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Somali famine 'will kill tens of thousands'

The UN in Somalia says tens of thousands of people will have died of starvation by the time the famine in the Horn of Africa ends

BBC News | 15 January 2012
Many Somalis have fled across the border into Ethiopia to seek aid

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German funds plan $2-bln Oman solar project

Private investment funds Terra Nex of Switzerland and Germany's Middle East Best Select (MEBS) plan to build 400 megawatts (MW) of solar power generating capacity in Oman, the European investors said on Sunday

Reuters | Jan 15, 2012

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15 January 2012

Mexico pipeline oil spill may take month to clean

Two weeks after a pipeline leak in coastal Mexico sent oil gushing into a river, state oil monopoly Pemex has recovered about two-thirds of the spilled crude, but the full clean-up could take another month

By Julie Gordon | Reuters | Jan 14, 2012

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With $116 Million Pledged, Ecuador Moves Forward With Plan to Protect Rainforest

After receiving pledges totaling more than its goal of $100 million by a year-end deadline, the Ecuadorian government last week announced that it would move forward with the so-called Yasuni ITT Initiative, an innovative plan to leave untapped more than 900 million barrels of crude oil beneath a pristine Amazonian nature reserve, in exchange for annual international donations

by Eric Marx | Science Insider | 13 January 2012

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Biofuels Land Grab: Guatemala's Farmers Lose Plots and Prosperity to "Energy Independence"

Across the globe, local farmers are being displaced to make way for energy crop plantations

By Eitan Haddok | Scientific American | January 13, 2012
evicted-mayan-peasant-familyTHE DISPOSSESSED: In Guatemala, peasants have been evicted--often forcibly--from land where they had been living, like this young couple and their son taking shelter in a maize field and subsisting on gourd seeds.Image: © Eitan Haddok

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Power Plants Accounted for 72 Percent Of Greenhouse Gases Reported in 2010

Power plants emitted 2.3 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent (CO2e) in 2010, 72.3 percent of reported emissions nationwide, according to data released by the Environmental Protection Agency Jan. 11

By Andrew Childers and Avery Fellow | Daily Environment Report™ in Bloomberg News | January 12, 2012

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Bulgarians protest, seek moratorium on shale gas

Thousands of Bulgarians protested throughout the Balkan country on Saturday against exploration for shale gas, worried it would poison underground waters, trigger earthquakes and pose serious public health hazards

Reuters | Jan 14, 2012

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14 January 2012

Oil's Trouble Spots

At a time of rising dependence on oil, the potential for supply disruptions and the stability of energy-rich regions pose major concerns. While disruptions can happen anywhere along the supply chain, certain areas are particularly vulnerable

Toni Johnson | Council on Foreign Relations | January 13, 2012

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Will New Zealand be the first developed country to evolve a steady-state economy?

New Zealand will inevitably make a transition to a steady-state economy. The onset of energy descent — having less and less energy to use with each passing decade — will push it to do so sooner rather than later. The critical question is whether the transition to a steady-state economy will be by design or disaster

by Jack Santa Barbara | Jan 11 2012 by Feasta in Energy Bulletin | Jan 13 2012

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Energy Resources Saudi oil output 'stretched to the limit'

Saudi Arabia, the world's leading oil exporter, has for decades used spare production capacity to cover shortfalls in output by other oil states and prevent prices spiraling in times of crisis

United Press International | Jan. 13, 2012

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Metal tissue holders contain radioactivity

12 metal tissue box holders containing low levels of cobalt-60 radioactivity were removed from four store

United Press International in Disasater News Network | January 13, 2012

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Scientists scrutinise first draft of Rio+20 agreement

The starting document for negotiations ahead of the Rio+20 summit ― the 'zero draft' ― contains more references to science than was expected by the scientific community, but still falls short on the specifics and avoids mentioning some critical, science-related issues

Mićo Tatalović | Science and Development Network | 12 January 2012

Biogas facility in Meru, Kenya

Local scientists should be supported to develop green technologies, says the zero draft. Flickr/Sustainable_Sanitation

 

 

 

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Tanzania: Funding for Carbon Trading Projects Halted

Funding for a carbon trading system known as Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) has been suspended until further negotiations between poor countries and powerful industrial nations

Ludger Kasumuni | The Citizen (Dar es Salaam) in AllAfrica.com | 12 January 2012

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China orders 7 pilot cities and provinces to set CO2 caps

China has ordered seven provinces and cities to set caps on greenhouse gas emissions in preparation for the launch of local pilot carbon markets, according to a notice issued by the country's state planning agency on Friday

Reuters | Jan 13, 2012

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13 January 2012

IRENA Releases Renewable Energy Profiles for Pacific Countries

The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) has released a publication titled “Renewable Energy Country Profiles: Pacific.” The country profiles consider where renewable energy can contribute significantly to combating climate change

Climate Change Policy & Practice | 12 January 2011

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Newly Elected ECOSOC President Outlines Priorities

Slovak Ambassador Miloš Koterec has been elected to serve as President of the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). Addressing the Council in New York, US, after his election, Koterec called for a new approach to development, including changing old perceptions about development and finding new ways to optimize cooperation among donor and aid recipient countries

Climate Change Policy & Practice | 10 January 2012

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FAO Guidebook Highlights Carbon Finance Options for Smallholder Farmers

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN (FAO) has published a guidebook titled "Climate Change Mitigation Finance for Smallholder Agriculture - A guide book to harvesting soil carbon sequestration benefits," which underscores the role of agriculture in global climate change mitigation efforts and describes approaches for participating in carbon financing opportunities

Climate Change Policy & Practice | 10 January 2011

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World’s largest investors issue guidelines for company action on climate change

The world’s largest investors have issued a document detailing their expectations of how companies should approach responding to climate change

Institutional Asset Manager | 12/01/2012

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12 January 2012

The Blood of the Earth, or Pulp Nonfiction

Some of my readers have wondered aloud why it is that I’ve devoted so much time in recent weeks to the current flurry of 2012 prophecies and their close equivalents. One reason is that there’s good reason to think that we’re going to hear quite a bit more about these prophecies in the months to come; unless I miss my guess, the apocalyptic bubble that’s inflating now, and will pop this coming December 22, is going to be one for the record books. Still, there’s at least one more reason to pay close attention to that bubble just now

by John Michael Greer | Jan 11 2012 by The Archdruid Report in Energy Bulletin | Jan 11 2012

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Free trade or bioregional security?

Word reached me yesterday that Colin Hines is writing again about the destructive nature of the global trade system and the need to protect our security of supply. In standard economic theory protectionism is a dirty word, the impulse to be resilient and self-reliant undermining the ability of merchants to achieve arbitrage profits

by Molly Scott Cato | Jan 12 2012 by Gaian Economics in Energy Bulletin | Jan 12 2012

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How European Banks Fuel Hunger

A new report by Friends of the Earth Europe has faulted European banks, pension funds and insurance companies for increasing global hunger and poverty by speculating on food prices and financing land grabs in poorer countries

By Jaya Ramachandran | IDN-InDepth NewsReport | January 11, 2012

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The Faustian bargain that modern economists never mention

Historically people have shifted their belief systems in various ways. The Greeks and Romans believed in numerous gods and goddesses and attributed all kinds of powers to them. Then the great monotheistic religions came along and people began to believe in just one god, though they honored him under different names

by Dr. Gary Peters | Jan 9 2012 by Our Finite World in Energy Bulletin | Jan 11 2012

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11 January 2012

Natural gas is clean, cheap — and risky

Political leaders from both parties argue that natural gas could save our economy and the environment and promote our national security. Is this so? Or is it just a dream?

By Hal Harvey | Centre Daily | Jan 11, 2012

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The Not-About-Iraqi-Oil Iraqi Oil Map

Dahr Jamail's report on energy majors in Iraq reminds us of one of the other, other, otherreasons for the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the one nearest and dearest to neoconservatives' political action committees: oil

By Paul Mutter | Foreign Policy in Focus | January 10, 2012
Aljazeera.Aljazeera.

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Canadian natives warn against pipeline to Pacific

Aboriginal leaders opposed to a C$5.5 billion ($5.4 billion) oil sands pipeline backed by Canada's government warned on Tuesday that the project could devastate fishing and traditional life on the rugged Pacific Coast and called for it to be stopped

By Jeffrey Jones | Reuters | Jan 10, 2012
Hereditary Chief of the Haisla First Nation, Sam Robinson (L), testifies next to Henry Amos, a band councillor, before the Enbridge's Inc's Northern Gateway pipeline Joint Review hearing in Kitamaat Village, British Columbia, January 10, 2012. Aboriginal leaders opposed to a C$5.5 billion ($5.4 billion) oil sands pipeline backed by Canada's government warned on Tuesday that the project could devastate fishing and traditional life on the rugged Pacific Coast and called for it to be stopped. Credit: Reuters/Robin Rowland

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The return of "The Limits to Growth"

The return of interest in "The Limits to Growth" continues. After decades of ridicule and insults, the value of the 1972 study and of its sequels is more and more recognized. The latest item in the series of revisitations is the article published by Debora McKenzie in the New Scientist on Jan 10, 2012 and titled "Boom and Doom, revisiting prophecies of collapse" (can be read on the New Scientist site after registration)
by Ugo Bardi | Jan 10 2012 by Cassandra's legacy in Energy Bulletin | Jan 10 2012
 The main results of the "base case" scenario of "The Limits to Growth" study, from a recent article on theNew Scientist by Debora McKenzie (available upon registration)

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Climate change and the USA

The EPA and Congress fought bitterly in 2011 to ensure the government did/did not pass carbon permitting policy. Cities throughout the US have thwarted congress in many cases by enacting their own initiatives, but business and the public still view the enactment of climate change legalities as a distant ideological objective

by Dave Armstrong | Earth Times | 10 Jan 2012
New York now has not only the lungs of Central Park, but it has also reduced energy consumption inside buildings via Shutterstock

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Industrial palm oil production expands at expense of rainforests in Peru

Intensive palm oil production is expanding at the expense of biolologically-rich lowland rainforests in the Peruvian Amazon, reports a study published in Environmental Research Letters

mongabay.com | January 10, 2012

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Whither environmentalism?

In the latest issue of Orion Magazine, environmental activists Derrick Jensen and Paul Kingsnorth both express their frustrations with the current environmental movement

by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez | CommonDreams | Jan 8 2012

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Warm and Fuzzy on Geothermal?

The Earth started its existence as a red-hot rock, and has been cooling ever since. It’s still quite toasty in the core, and will remain so for billions of years, yet. Cooling implies a flow of heat, and where heat flows, the possibility exists of capturing useful energy

Tom Murphy | Do the Math | January 10, 2012
Geysers and volcanoes are obvious manifestations of geothermal energy, but what role can it play toward satisfying our current global demand? Following the recent theme of Do the Math, we will put geothermal in one of three boxes labeled abundant, potent, or niche (puny). Have any guesses?

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Danger waters

Welcome to an edgy world where a single incident at an energy “chokepoint” could set a region aflame, provoking bloody encounters, boosting oil prices, and putting the global economy at risk.  With energy demand on the rise and sources of supply dwindling, we are, in fact, entering a new epoch -- the Geo-Energy Era -- in which disputes over vital resources will dominate world affairs

by Michael Klare | Jan 10 2012 by TomDispatch in Energy Bulletin | Jan 10 2012

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10 January 2012

NEGOTIATIONS: Can a new structure based on the notion of 'equity' replace the Kyoto pact?

U.S. diplomats returned from last month's global climate summit in Durban, South Africa, crowing that they had cracked the armor shielding China, India and other emerging nations from accepting binding emission cuts

Lisa Friedman | ClimateWire, January 9, 2012 in E&ENews.net | Jan 10, 2012

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The Reality of Extreme Weather, Part 1

Editor’s note: This report is the first in a two-part series chronicling recent findings about climate change. Part 2, to be published in our Jan. 19 issue, examines “What Can Be Done.” Gov. Jerry Brown requested the Scripps Institution of Oceanography meeting as part of a series of events focusing on climate change that the State of California is undertaking over the next several months with the goal of guiding contingency plans for extreme-weather disaster response.

By Lynne Friedmann | Del Mar Times | Jan 10, 2012

Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, Senior Development Engineer Douglas Alden conducts fieldwork in the southern Sierra Nevada.

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Obama bans uranium mining around Grand Canyon

The Obama administration banned new uranium mining claims around the Grand Canyon for the next 20 years, a move hailed by conservationists on Monday as key to the president's environmental legacy but slammed by opponents as a job-killer

By Deborah Zabarenko | Reuters | Jan 9, 2012

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As Fukushima cleanup begins, long-term impacts are weighed

The Japanese government is launching a large-scale cleanup of the fields, forests, and villages contaminated by the Fukushima nuclear disaster. But some experts caution that an overly aggressive remediation program could create a host of other environmental problems

by Winifred Bird | Jan 9 2012 by Yale Environment 360 in Energy Bulletin | Jan 9 2012

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Revisiting the Deepwater Horizon Plumes

Maybe the plumes were really clouds. I am talking about the famous plumes from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the event that roiled the Gulf Coast and scrambled energy politics in mid-2010. Many readers will remember reports, first carried in this newspaper, that a considerable volume of hydrocarbons released in the spill did not reach the surface of the gulf. Instead they dissolved into deep water, forming what appeared at the time to be enormous plumes of dissolved oil and gas

By JUSTIN GILLIS | The New York Times | January 9, 2012
Oil on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico in June 2010.ReutersOil on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico in June 2010.

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Possible U.S., China trade dispute looms

Strained trade relations between the world's largest economies will be further tested this year as the U.S. weighs anti-dumping duties on a range of Chinese products

By Kathy Chu | USA TODAY | Jan 9, 2012

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Energy Resources China plans tax on carbon emissions

China, the world's top emitter of greenhouse gases, plans a tax on carbon emissions

UPI.com | Jan. 9, 2012

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09 January 2012

Technological progress for dummies

Not you, CASSE signatory. You’re no dummy. You already know that the fundamental conflict between economic growth and environmental protection can’t be overcome with technological progress

by Brian Czech | Jan 9 2012 by The Daly News in Energy Bulletin Jan 9 2012

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Nigeria's oil disasters are met by silence

The global media have had little to say on Nigeria's latest oil spill and the hundreds of others that have destroyed so many lives

Michael Keating | guardian.co.uk | 9 January 2012
A man covers his hands in crude oil during a Nigerian protest against Shell after last month's spillA man covers his hands in crude oil during a Nigerian protest against Shell after last month's spill. Photograph: George Esiri/EPA

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Time to Worry: World Oil Production Finishes Six Years of No Growth

As oil prices rose ever higher in the last decade, the optimists kept predicting rising production capacity and plummeting prices. Looks like they got it wrong

By Kurt Cobb | SCITIZEN | 2 Nov 2011

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08 January 2012

Heinberg, Kunstler, Foss, Orlov & Chomsky on A Public Affair

Richard Heinberg joins James Howard Kunstler, Nicole Foss, Dmitri Orlov and Noam Chomsky in a panel discussion. The discussion begins after the news bulletin and lead-in music (about 7:00 into the audio)

Jan 2 2012 by WORT-FM in Energy Bulletin | Jan 6 2012

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German solar market stable in 2011: industry body

Germany's solar market remained stable last year compared with 2010, the country's main industry association BSW said, suggesting demand for modules remains high despite large cuts in support for the sector over the past two years

Reuters | Jan 7, 2012
Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit (R) assembles a solar panel during his visit to the Solon solar panel company in Berlin July 18, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch

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