Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

The Future of Cities

The Future of Cities

That’s the title of this special report from the Financial Times.  (You can register for free for limited monthly access to the FT online.  It’s worth it.  See also their many RSS feeds.  I subscribe to “Energy Source,” a highly useful blog.) There are articles here on adaptation to climate change, dealing with the critical […]

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Australians Get It

Australians Get It

In the fall of 2007, Australians threw out the government that had been dragging its feet on action on climate change for years.  The first thing that Kevin Rudd, the new Prime Minister, did was to sign the Kyoto Protocol.  Australians had been experiencing the crush of drought and heat and were more than ready […]

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Lisa Jackson's EPA

Lisa Jackson's EPA

“Lisa Jackson is doing exactly what an Environmental Protection Agency Administrator is supposed to do – thoughtfully and carefully but aggressively implementing our environmental laws to protect public health and our environment. The job of the EPA Administrator is not to make people happy but to make them and their environment healthier.”  That was Time’s […]

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"Refrightening" Stephen Colbert on Warming

I took a quick look at Heidi Cullen’s new book The Weather of the Future recently. (I still have to read it. But I’ve got an Ian Rankin and Lester Brown’s Plan B 4.0 ahead of her in the queue.) But don’t wait for me. See her here with Stephen Colbert. Then read the book. […]

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Green Curtains

Green Curtains

I’ve been off the air for a week because we’ve been on vacation:  Vienna for a few days, then down to Istria for some beach, mountains and sight seeing.  We visited a wonderful Croatian national park today:  Risnjak. Meanwhile, here’s just a quick hitter on an item I saw on “green curtains” from the excellent […]

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Green Building in the UK

Green Building in the UK

I’ve been thinking a lot about green building this week, as I’ve been working on a big writing project with that, among other things, as an important component.  See also my last post below. I’ve been meaning to flag this article – Slash bills and save the world – from a month ago in the […]

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The Sun, Wind and Waves of Portugal

The Sun, Wind and Waves of Portugal

Sounds like a great vacation.  (It is.  I’ve been there a couple of times.)  But the Portuguese are putting their ocean waters, abundant wind and sun to another use as well:  producing renewable energy.  Libby Rosenthal had a characteristically interesting and informative article in the NYT last week on Portugal’s inspiring push to provide 45% […]

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Rick Cook – Leading Green Architect

Rick Cook – Leading Green Architect

Rick Cook is one of the top green architects around.  He and his partner, Bob Fox, designed the truly extraordinary Bank of America Tower, the most sustainable office building in the world today and one of the most aesthetically impressive to boot.  (It’s also the second tallest building in New York City now.) The BofA […]

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New Biochar Studies

New Biochar Studies

In an article I wrote for Grist on biochar systems, I noted its virtues: * (potentially) store billions of tons of carbon in soil for centuries; * dramatically reduce agricultural waste, forest debris and some municipal solid waste, thus eliminating the production of greenhouse gases that result from their decomposition; * generate energy to both […]

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The Fire Next Time

The Fire Next Time

That, of course, is the title of James Baldwin’s famous two-essay collection.  Baldwin took it from the old spiritual, “Oh Mary, Don’t You Weep.” “God gave Noah the rainbow sign, No more water, the fire next time!” Well, I don’t like to get all biblical, but I bet a lot of folks in Russia and […]

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Laughing on the outside….

Laughing on the outside….

(copyright Lee Lorenz and The New Yorker) This recent New Yorker cartoon reminded me of the old Wizard of Id strip that I referenced in my post on Nature’s Way.

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Two More Takes on the Dysfunctional Senate

Two More Takes on the Dysfunctional Senate

Dysfunctional Senate seems to me to be redundant.  Nevertheless, there are those who, with noses held closed, continue to try to deal with a legislative body that is, by its very nature, undemocratic, and by long habit, works in ways that are infuriatingly inappropriate to the creation of good public policy.  What choice do we […]

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(Hot) Summer Reading

(Hot) Summer Reading

I wanted to flag two new books to you and a review of them.  The first is The Weather of the Future: Heat Waves, Extreme Storms, and Other Scenes from a Climate-Changed Planet by Heidi Cullen and the second is The Climate War: True Believers, Power Brokers, and the Eleventh-Hour Fight to Save the Earth […]

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Back to Bonn

Bonn is home base for the Secretariat of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and it’s where meetings are taking place this week to advance international agreement.  With Copenhagen in the rear-view mirror and Cancun up ahead, there is a lot of discussion going of technical matters, and lots of side meetings […]

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"Unmistakable Signs of a Warming World"

"Unmistakable Signs of a Warming World"

If increases in global air temperatures or decreases in Arctic sea ice aren’t enough to convince you of the clear and present danger of the climate crisis, then maybe looking at eight other indicators that show the same trend might be. “Past Decade Warmest on Record According to Scientists in 48 Countries – Earth has […]

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