Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

The Catastrophe in the Senate – More Punditry

The Catastrophe in the Senate – More Punditry

I might more accurately call this post The Catastrophe of the Senate, but that won’t get us anywhere – for the moment.  In any event, as you know by now, the concatenation of Republican anti-environmentalism and fear (and no doubt loathing), plus intransigence from Democratic Senators from states where coal and oil are king, has […]

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No New Nukes – NY Times Edition

No New Nukes – NY Times Edition

The NY Times editorial page has, for years and years, been pro-nuclear power.  With all the usual blinders on.  Whatever.  But columnist Bob Herbert had a pretty hard-hitting take last week:  “We’re Not Ready.”  He likens the blithe indifference on safety at offshore oil rigs to that on nuclear power. There is no way to […]

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Solar Roofs

Solar Roofs

Speaking of roofs – as we were in the last post below – here’s an item from CleanTechnica on the passage of draft legislation in the Senate Energy Committee to help drive a push toward ten million solar roofs in the US by 2020.  This is an analogue to the successful California program this now […]

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White Roofs

I’ve said all along that US Energy Secretary Steven Chu is a smart guy.  He’s got a Nobel Prize in Physics to prove it.   (That’s why I say he’s too smart to be taken in by the ongoing boondoggle that is nuclear power.) Here he is talking about a new study from DOE on white […]

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The Climate Bill in the Senate

The Climate Bill in the Senate

(Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid with Senator John Kerry and Director of the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy Carol Browner during a media conference in Washington. Photo: AP) If you follow the climate and energy story, I’m not telling you something you don’t know – or couldn’t have predicted:  the US […]

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Harry Reid Punts – What Can You Do?

For the moment, please refer to my comment on Joe Romm’s tirade about President Obama’s “failed presidency” in light of the decision by the Senate Democratic leadership’s to punt on climate change and energy.  If Obama had tried harder, Romm opines, we’d have cap-and-trade.  I have enormous respect for Romm’s perspectives and his energy, but […]

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Transformational Change

Transformational Change

In talking about the limitless potential for renewables last week, I mentioned the letter from three key ministers from France, Germany and the UK calling for more GHG reductions in Europe than are now in law.  I also mentioned the backlash from some business interests.  An article in the FT today describes a letter from […]

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Stephen Schneider

Stephen Schneider

Stephen Schneider was one of the most influential climate scientists in the world.  His career covered four decades.  He did both the very heavy lifting of research and served to help the public understand the complexities of the subject and the stark reality that the science has been telling us for decades.  He has been […]

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O Brave New Renewable World

O Brave New Renewable World

We looked in the last post at the virtually limitless potential of renewables to supply all of our energy needs: electricity, heating and cooling, and transportation. Indications are that we are well advanced on this path.  I tell people that if you’d told me a dozen years ago we were going to see the penetration […]

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Renewables – Are We Winning?!

Renewables – Are We Winning?!

When I was at the Urban Green Expo last fall, the Energy Maha Guru Amory Lovins gave a riveting talk.  He said:  “The Renewable Revolution has been won.  Sorry, if you missed it.”  I let out a yell.  Well, as I’ve been noting here, this is not mere hyperbole.  Here’s more evidence. In Europe, they’re […]

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Shine, Baby, Shine

Larry Hagman, forever known as J.R. Ewing from “Dallas” (but better remembered by me as Major Tony Nelson, master of Jeannie the genie) is doing a series of ads for SolarWorld, one of the biggest PV manufacturers.  Hagman has the largest solar array of any residence in the US, maybe the world.  He has also […]

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Some Great New Graphics

Some Great New Graphics

The Climate Analysis Indicators Tool (CAIT) is an information and analysis tool on global climate change developed by the World Resources Institute.  It contains a truly impressive array of databases and graphics, excellent for delving deeply into questions of who, what, when, where and why greenhouse gases are being produced.  It has data for the […]

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Of Pipelines and Tar Sands

Of Pipelines and Tar Sands

After some reflection, I can think of nothing good to say about the Alberta tar sands.  The best thing that most people say here is that Canada is not Saudi Arabia or Venezuela and therefore if the US is importing billions of barrels a year (4.28 in 2009), then we’re getting more (900 million) from […]

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More GHGs from China and India

More GHGs from China and India

Amid all the doom and gloom that the media and some of the major environmental groups promulgated before, during and after Copenhagen last December, some voices pointed out that there were important breakthroughs.  One important group, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), noted that “… for the first time, all major economies, including China, India, […]

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$2 Billion for Solar

$2 Billion for Solar

President Obama announced a major commitment to solar production this morning:  loan guarantees to large solar power facilities –  a 280 MW concentrated solar power plant (CSP) and two photovoltaic (PV) factories, with a combined output of 840 MW annually.  See this fact sheet from the White House.  The CSP plant will be built by […]

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