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Tag Archives: Bill McKibben

The Climate of Opinion

The Climate of Opinion

A study, Extreme Weather, Climate & Preparedness in the American Mind, just out from the excellent Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and its partner, the George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication, purports that “A large majority of Americans believe that global warming made several high profile extreme weather events worse…”  Coverage in […]

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Nordhaus and McKibben – Following Up

Nordhaus and McKibben – Following Up

I wanted to note some follow-up discussion to material that I have flagged here recently at the blog.  The first was my post On the Denialists from March 2nd.  The NY Review of Books has printed a reply to William Nordhaus’s refutation of the claims of the climate denialists, that I discussed at earlier post.  […]

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To Frack or Not to Frack?

To Frack or Not to Frack?

Why Not Frack? is the title of an article in a recent issue of the “NY Review of Books.”  One of the best environmental journalists we’ve got, Bill McKibben, is the author.  McKibben, of course, is more than just a journalist.  He’s a ground-breaking thinker and, in recent years, a very serious and effective activist.  […]

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NOXL? Yes!

NOXL?  Yes!

So, the environmental movement drew the proverbial line in the sand:  no Keystone XL pipeline.  We’ve been fighting the tar sands for years, and will continue, but the Keystone XL has been the first clear solid rallying point and the first time in years that we greens have taken it to the street.  Bill McKibben, […]

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Climate, Energy and Sustainability in 2011 – Year in Review

Climate, Energy and Sustainability in 2011 – Year in Review

The year is certainly not over yet – the annual international UN climate conference is ongoing in South Africa for the next ten days.  Nevertheless, here’s a quick look at what we’ve seen – and what we might expect in 2012. Casting back to my look at 2010 and beyond, I predicted witch hunts from […]

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Better CAFE

Better CAFE

CAFE – That stands for Corporate Average Fuel Economy.  What President Obama announced today was a much higher federal requirement, negotiated with the car companies, for more miles per gallon on average for cars sold in the United States.  As we know, Lower Gasoline Consumption = Lower GHG Output.  How much?  Billions of tons of […]

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Who Are the Radicals?

“The radicals are the people who are fundamentally altering the composition of the atmosphere.”  That’s the voice of Bill McKibben at this year’s annual Power Shift conference in Washington. Power Shift brought ten thousand young leaders to hear about how to transition from the fuel-based energy economy – and the money-driven politics of the special […]

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The Big Picture(s)

The Big Picture(s)

The estimable Bill McKibben and the hard-charging activists at 350.org have organized 350 Earth – “the world’s first art exhibit large enough to be seen from space.”  There are photographs, videos and text here to suit any palate. As the late, great Phil Ochs said: …you must protest you must protest it is your diamond […]

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Renewable Electricity Standard?

Renewable Electricity Standard?

You remember the Waxman-Markey bill – The American Clean Energy And Security Act.  It passed in the House of Representatives in June of 2009.  Oh well, the Senate – being the Senate – allowed the historical moment to pass.  In this case, the cowardice, political cynicism and utter lack of clear thinking has been a […]

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Top Economists on Climate Change and Energy

Top Economists on Climate Change and Energy

The indispensable (to me anyway) “NY Review of Books” has an insightful look at Bill McKibben’s new book, Eaarth.  The reviewer is no less a personage than Nicholas Stern.  In generally praising “McKibben’s engaging and persuasive book,” Lord Stern gives a particularly succinct summary of the history of the science and present state of the […]

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Sequestering Carbon

Tom Friedman’s latest column, Dreaming the Possible Dream, touches on some companies and their promising technologies that we’ve seen here, namely Calera (cement) and Bloomenergy (fuel cells.)  Everybody has seen the hype for Bloomenergy.  I sincerely hope they live long and prosper. I quoted Bill McKibben here a while ago in his review of a […]

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Al Gore's New Book – and Copenhagen

Vice President Al Gore, Nobel Peace Laureate, venture capitalist, author, lecturer, Academy Award winner, activist, the man Denialists love to hate, and the man some others canonize as the path-breaking visionary on the threat of global climate change, has a new book out:  Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis.  It has a […]

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How Uncool is AC?

I’ve written about the revolution in low-tech.  “Teach us delight in simple things …” are words, in my opinion, by which to live.  I wrote about a different view of freedom in which the idea of using less energy and consuming fewer resources might actually be construed as liberating.  I’ve quoted Bill McKibben in my […]

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Some Thoughts on a McKibben Book Review

I’ve written admiringly of Bill McKibben, one of our leading environmental philosophers and journalists.  He reviewed Lord Stern’s The Global Deal: Climate Change and the Creation of a New Era of Progress and Prosperity in a recent issue of the “NY Review of Books.”  The review covered a lot of good ground but it strayed […]

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More on Our Relation to the Cosmos

“From here on, the primary judgment of all human institutions, professions, programs and activities will be determined by the extent to which they inhibit, ignore or foster a mutually enhancing human-Earth relationship.”  This is what Thomas Berry said in an interview a few years back, as quoted in his recent “NY Times” obituary.  Berry was […]

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