Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

Environmental Protection – NY/NJ Region (and beyond)

Environmental Protection – NY/NJ Region (and beyond)

I attended this recent biannual conference examining key and emerging environmental issues in the EPA Region 2 area.  It was organized by Columbia Law School’s Center for Climate Change Law (CCCL).  There was a lot of interesting discussion of climate change and air pollution, including some of the critically important ins and outs of litigation […]

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Fast Forward

Fast Forward

Fast Forward – Ethics and Politics in the Age of Global Warming is the title of a book just out from two international relations heavyweights at Brookings.  Strobe Talbott was deputy secretary of state in the Clinton administration and William J. Antholis worked at the National Security Council and at State, and was director of […]

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"But it's all right now, in fact, it's a gas!"

"But it's all right now, in fact, it's a gas!"

The Rolling Stones knew it years ago.*  Now we’re catching up. I’ve written about natural gas a few times, basically to the effect that it’s got enormous potential as a transition fuel for many purposes as we wend our way, sooner rather than later, toward a renewable future.  This is what the prophetic Barry Commoner […]

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Veggie, Low-Carbon Fast Food

Otarian is the name of the new chain. I’m all over this.

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"A Fierce Green Fire" (the book)

"A Fierce Green Fire" (the book)

I’ve just finished reading this terrific history of the American environmental movement by Phil Shabecoff.  He was America’s first environmental reporter and he’s quite the historian too.  The title comes from a line from Aldo Leopold’s poignant essay “Thinking Like a Mountain.” He recounts the grand sweep of how Americans have treated their air, lands […]

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The Facts of Cap and Trade

The Facts of Cap and Trade

I was interviewing a world-class expert on energy and the environment yesterday for a project I’m on, and the discussion came around to many environmentalists’ distrust of cap-and-trade and other modes of “market-friendly” environmental activity.  I was reminded of the video from Nathaniel Keohane, Environmental Defense Fund’s Director of Economic Policy and Analysis.  (It is […]

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More EcoCatastrophes

More EcoCatastrophes

In the spirit of yesterday’s photos of the Gulf of Mexico, this photo essay from Newsweek is also resonant. I would’ve added the Canadian tar sands and mountaintop removal mining. 

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Dead Zones

Dead Zones

Here, courtesy of NASA, is a look at two Gulf of Mexico dead zones:  one well established, as a consequence of runoff  (manure, fertilizer, wastewater treatment plant effluent, etc.) from the breadbasket of the US, and the other in the making, from BP’s disastrous well blowout.

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No New Nukes – Last Word (For Now)

No New Nukes – Last Word (For Now)

So at this point I have the score, in a sane world, about ten to nothing against nuclear power.  (See previous two posts below.)  Here are a few more points against: Perhaps the most telling argument against nuclear power, in market economies anyway, is the failure of nuclear power to compete.  Amory Lovins, in his […]

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No New Nukes – Part Deux

No New Nukes – Part Deux

Yesterday I mentioned a number of big-ticket reasons to think that nuclear power is a very bad bet indeed:  It bleeds money from smarter, cheaper and much more climate-friendly options; it’s dangerous; it’s radically inefficient; it’s not, at the end of the day – that is to say, through the whole life cycle – a […]

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Read My Lips: No New Nukes

Read My Lips:  No New Nukes

I am, of course, borrowing from George H.W. Bush’s timeless declaration.  But what’s really at issue here?  There is no sense at all in building new nuclear capability in this country or, for that matter, any other. In my classes on climate change and on clean tech, I identify nuclear power, along with carbon capture […]

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American Power Act

American Power Act

To tell you that I haven’t been skeptical about the value of a weak Senate climate and energy bill would be lying to you.  For one thing, I’m pretty happy with how the EPA has been approaching the regulation of greenhouse gases.  I’d hate to see strong programs like this and the Regional Greenhouse Gas […]

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The United Kingdom's Changing of the Guard

The United Kingdom's Changing of the Guard

I was a fan of Gordon Brown on climate change.  Among other virtues, he was outspoken about the Denialists and he picked up the ball on climate finance and ran with it after Copenhagen.  He is leaving No. 10 today and David Cameron will soon be the new Prime Minister.  See this from the AP. […]

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The Himalayas, India and China

The Himalayas, India and China

I wrote about The Melting Himalayas over a year ago.  Notwithstanding the relatively absurd brouhaha in January caused by the discovery of a one-paragraph error in the 4th Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, research on glacier loss in the Himalayas has been continuing apace.  The minor peccadillo in the report was […]

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How Cool is a Fuel Cell Car?

How Cool is a Fuel Cell Car?

I told one of my classes last week, after the Gulf of Mexico disaster, that the next time I heard someone talk about the romance of the internal combustion engine, I was going to deck them. As with coal, so with oil.  (See last post below.)  We don’t need it, and the sooner we transition […]

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