Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

Yes, We Can – Part Deux

Yes, We Can – Part Deux

I wrote a couple of weeks ago that we most certainly can eliminate coal-fired power plants.  Well, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), we not only can, we’re on that track now.  How?  The answer lies partly in the switch to natural gas. The FT quotes the EIA here:  “… in 2009, the […]

read more

Germany and Mexico Lead Climate Conference

Germany and Mexico Lead Climate Conference

The Petersberg Climate Dialogue took place near Bonn this week.  German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Mexican President Felipe Calderón brought together environment and climate ministers from 45 countries to “discuss what concrete steps should be taken” prior to the next UNFCCC “Conference of the Parties” (COP) in Cancún in December. Merkel said prior to these […]

read more

The Gulf of Mexico Disaster

The Gulf of Mexico Disaster

I would be remiss if I didn’t point you in the direction of this thoughtful and impassioned column today by Paul Krugman:  Drilling, Disaster, Denial.  Krugman is eloquent about our complacency. He attributes this, in part, to our many successes in fighting the visible manifestations of pollution:  smog-enveloped cities, burning rivers, garbage barges, etc.  He […]

read more

Cape Wind – Phew!

Finally!  See this from Juliet Eilperin at the WaPo and this from the “Boston Globe.”  Plus, here’s the press release from the Department of the Interior. Interior Secretary Salazar said:  “With this decision we are beginning a new direction in our Nation’s energy future, ushering in America’s first offshore wind energy facility and opening a […]

read more

Climate and Energy Legislation?

My head is spinning from the latest developments in the long-running soap opera of climate and energy legislation in the US  Senate.  Plus, I am finally reading How Democratic Is the American Constitution? and I’m even more depressed now than when I wrote this post, SPQR.  Basically, we can never be a real democracy – you […]

read more

Carbon Dioxide is Only Half the Problem

Carbon Dioxide is Only Half the Problem

I want to return to a theme expressed here a number of times:  Carbon dioxide is not the only greenhouse gas with which we need to concern ourselves. The Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development (IGSD) reiterated this important message yesterday in this press release announcing their “Fast-Action Climate Mitigation Campaign.”  What’s the pitch?  “The […]

read more

Happy Earth Day

Happy Earth Day

read more

Dirt! The Movie – Take Two

Dirt!  The Movie – Take Two

I mentioned this movie back in November here and thought it looked as if it were a great flick.  I finally saw it last night on PBS and it was better than I thought it was going to be!  It is fluent, fluid, funny, poignant, smart, hugely informative, and dead on the money in its […]

read more

Yes, We Can

To borrow a catchphrase from Barack Obama’s presidential campaign, yes, we most certainly can eliminate coal-fired power plants.  Knowing what we know, we know that we should, and sooner rather than later.  I’ve decried the many harmful impacts of coal mining and burning to public health, communities and the environment here on numerous occasions.  See […]

read more

Wind Power – More Bad Craziness

A story last week in the Washington Post gave me a jolt:  Pentagon objections hold up Oregon wind farm.  Two weeks prior to breaking ground on an 845-megawatt, $2 billion project in Oregon, the Department of Defense has blocked construction owing to concerns about radar.  Two weeks!  The project has been on the drawing boards […]

read more

Waste Not, Want Not

Waste Not, Want Not

Among my grandmother’s many expressions, this was one of the better ones.  I must’ve taken it very much to heart, as leftovers get eaten in our household and I’m pretty scrupulous about recycling.  I’ve written here numerous times about waste management issues, including referencing my modest proposal for managing New York City’s 25,000 tons a […]

read more

Tar Sands – More Opposition

Here are some updates on the carbon-intensive Alberta tar sands projects.  First, the FT’s “Energy Source” blog reports on recent analysis from Citigroup that says, among other things, “It is not a fuel source that sits naturally within a low carbon economy and is unlikely to be a strategic winner as climate regulation tightens, albeit […]

read more

Meetings and Progress – after Copenhagen

So now it’s four months after the meetings in Copenhagen.  I’m in the group who thinks that more was accomplished than meets the eye and that it was an important way station to achieving more international agreement on stemming the tide of greenhouse gases we confront and adapting to the massive impacts they’ve already caused […]

read more

Visualizations

One of my students flagged a recent Dot Earth post to me about an artist and physicist who creates graphics that depict our carbon output.  Adam Nieman is the creative director of Carbon Visuals Ltd which “…exists to provide a range of carbon visualisation services to government, companies, NGOs and any organisation that has a ‘carbon […]

read more

Bitter Irony at the World Bank

The World Bank, quite rightly, has devoted a tremendous amount of time and money on water projects in recent years, according to the “NY Times” here.  I highlighted World Water Day at the blog a few weeks ago and noted then some of the many critical shortfalls in clean water and proper sanitation that beset […]

read more