Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

The Technology-Driven Economy

The Technology-Driven Economy

In a story yesterday in the “NY Times” about the Europeans upgrading their factories – and saving jobs while doing it – a Siemens operation in Berlin was highlighted.  Because of the commitment by this 163-year-old company to sustainability, they have spent $700 million to develop new, low carbon turbines.  The kicker for me comes […]

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Making the Case for GHG Reductions

I had a good time the other night talking about climate change policy and politics with Amanda Little on The Hyperbole Hour. We’re on the same wavelength.  (You can download the show as an mp3 file and listen in from around 29 minutes.) One of the points we made was that we really need to […]

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Negative-Carbon Building

You can’t beat that.  Catching up on my reading, I came across this terrific article, Construction plant, from the FT from a couple of weeks ago.  Hemp is the building material that can work wonders.  (This reminds me of biochar, one of the most exciting developments in agriculture and horticulture to come along in a […]

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Dept. of Missed Signals

I wrote in September about what I identified as Tom Friedman’s Strange Call on China.  I was reporting that the “NY Times” hadn’t printed a letter I’d written in response to one of Friedman’s columns – Our One-Party Democracy – and so wanted to share the column and response.   Funny thing:  They did print […]

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"blogtalkradio" tonight

I’ll be in august company tonight, discussing climate change on The Hyperbole Hour.  Gavin Schmidt will be talking about climate science, and Amanda Little and I will be kicking around some policy and politics.  I had the opportunity to review Gavin’s book, Climate Change: Picturing the Science, for “Nature Reports Climate Change” and I had […]

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The Climate in Cambridge

We’re up in Cambridge, Mass., and were over at the MIT Museum yesterday.  One exhibit looked at the work of Daniel Nocera and his colleagues on developing a new catalytic process to convert water to oxygen and hydrogen.  There is wonderful potential in this to create a zero carbon, closed loop distributed energy system. The […]

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Two Good Reads

I had a very busy end of the week and now I’m out of town, so I haven’t been reporting.  Here, however, are two pretty interesting reads for you, from two of my favorite writers. The first is from Fiona Harvey, indefatigable environmental correspondent for the FT.   She has some unkind words for some of […]

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Further Thoughts on China, Climate and Trade

I wrote, in the wake of the shameful Chinese performance in Copenhagen, about China, Climate and Trade.  A couple of days after that post, there was an excellent analysis in the “FT” and I wrote a letter to the editor, alas unpublished.  Here’s the letter now: Geoff Dyer rightly wonders “…whether China’s political system is […]

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Lawns

I’ve wondered out loud here several times about convergence – getting our galloping consumption down in the developed world while simultaneously raising the standard of living for the citizens of developing nations.  You can do this a thousand different ways, most of which can “cool” the planet.  One critical approach is for developing economies to […]

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Food Miles

Food Miles

I wrote here a while ago about food miles – see under Transportation of Food.  I looked at two arguments:  that the long distances we transport food has a discernible impact on the production of greenhouse gases – and that it doesn’t.  From what I’ve been reading over the past couple of years, the weight […]

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Mountaintop Removal Mining – Update

The excellent “Green Energy Reporter” had an item noting a new study on mountaintop removal mining and Stephen Colbert’s take.  There are huge environmental and health impacts associated with coal mining, as I’ve noted a number of times, here and here, among others. Now a group of scientists, led by the University of Maryland’s Dr. […]

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The Reaction

One dictionary I consulted gave several definitions for reaction: 1. a. A response to a stimulus. b. The state resulting from such a response. 2. A reverse or opposing action. 3. a. A tendency to revert to a former state.  b. Opposition to progress or liberalism; extreme conservatism. What I gather from this is that […]

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Cars and Gas

Parade of hybrids zips through Detroit is the headline from SmartPlanet.  They give you a nice rundown of the hybrid and electric vehicles that took over the (very) big Detroit auto show.  I’m not much of a car person, but even I can tell you that just about every automaker seems to be fully on […]

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Baby, It's Cold Outside

But that sure doesn’t have anything to do with “global cooling.”  In fact, according to the British Met Office, 2010 may well be the warmest year on record.  (2009 was the fifth warmest.)  Further, as the Met Office, among others, have pointed out, it’s not cold everywhere in the world.  Joe Romm had this item […]

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Offshore Wind – The Sublime and The Ridiculous

I was talking with an old friend last week about how much renewable energy and energy efficiency can do for us.  Pretty much everything is my argument.  We are making progress along these lines that is sometimes breathtaking. There was a breakthrough announcement on renewable energy last week from the British:  They will be deploying […]

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