Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

Krugman on Climate Change

Paul Krugman had a couple of columns, today and Friday, with some complementary posts at his blog, “The Conscience of a Liberal,” on the economics of cap-and-trade as well as the dire situation in which we find ourselves relative to warming and its impacts.  To refute some of the nonsensical – and false – claims […]

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World Leadership Forum 2009

This year’s annual World Leadership Forum from the Foreign Policy Association was keynoted by Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.  He gave a fascinating speech calling on the US to resume its leadership in the world and to be supported in this by “…a new ‘driving centre’ of global politics and the global economy – a […]

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"An Idea Whose Time Has Come"

Scrapping fossil fuel subsidies is the idea here.  The caption is from today’s lead editorial in the “Financial Times.”  Among its many felicitous effects, is the fact that “If effective in promoting efficient consumption, elimination would reduce the risk of runaway global warming.”  The Third Assessment Report (2001) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change […]

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"The Age of Stupid"

I mentioned this new film on climate change this past Friday.  For more, see this review from my FPA sister blog, Global Film Review.  Sean Murphy is bringing a lot of insight to movies important to a better understanding of international affairs.

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BIG Day at the UN

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon organized a truly historic event today:  the Summit on Climate Change.  President Obama was among the many speakers.  Carol Browner, Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change, and one of the critical voices within the Obama Administration for a robust and progressive approach to meeting the challenge of climate […]

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Urban Green Expo

So while presidents, premiers and prime ministers were over at Ban Ki-moon’s Summit on Climate Change today saving the world, some pretty extraordinary innovators were elsewhere on Manhattan Island talking about green building.  I went to the Green Buildings Expo back in June and visited a lot of folks at their booths and talked with […]

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"FT" on the "Green New Deal"

In yet another in a seemingly endless series of gems of reporting on climate change, energy and sustainability, the “Financial Times” has this today.  The report looks at critical developments from sub-national governments from California to Sao Paulo to London and many points in between.   There are also interesting ads from TckTckTck and UNDP.  There’s […]

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Yvo de Boer on The State of the Negotiations

Here’s a succinct and hopeful message from UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer on where we are on the international politics.  We will know more this week after the UN Climate Summit and the G20 meetings.

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Another Note on Nuclear Power

I’ve written about nuclear power here a number of times.  To be upfront with you:  I’ve been an opponent for almost 40 years, since long before Chernobyl and Three Mile Island.  I have seen very little along the way to change my views.  In the light of the specter of climate change, I’ve tried to […]

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Big Climate Change Meetings and Events

Big Climate Change Meetings and Events

I wrote last month about some exciting activities coming up, including the Brita Climate Ride. In Washington this week, the State Department is hosting meetings of the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate (MEF).  (See my posts related to the MEF.)  US Special Envoy for Climate Change Todd Stern is leading the US delegation.  […]

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Hotspots

Hotspots

The venerable World Resources Institute has a terrific new source for data and information – EarthTrends.  I’ve been using some of their charts in my class on climate change at NYU. Further to my posts from Andalusia and the Algarve on concentrated solar power (here and here), EarthTrends has a terrific graphic on solar radiation […]

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Tom Friedman's Strange Call on China

I wrote a letter to the “NY Times” in response to Tom Friedman’s column last week, Our One-Party Democracy, in which he says, essentially, that because the Chinese have an autocracy they are better at promoting renewable energy.  The “International Herald Tribune” had my letter forwarded from the “NYT” and I had hoped they would […]

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Norway's Elections and the Alberta Tar Sands

What’s one got to do with the other?  Fair question.   I wrote about this relationship in May here. Statoil, the Norwegian oil company, has a big stake in the tar sands, and a number of leading Norwegian politicians and their parties want them out.  Many, if not most Norwegians, infinitely to their credit, want to […]

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Biochar at "The Economist"

The good folks at “The Economist” went to the North American Biochar Conference 2009 in August.  I’ve been bitten by the biochar bug.  See my post here, plus the article I wrote for Grist.  The virtues of biochar – A new growth industry? has some good insights, many of which were gleaned from the papers […]

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Natural Gas in the Senate

I wrote recently about some solid policy analysis that would move the US off its massive dependency on coal for electricity toward a greater reliance on natural gas – until renewables fully kick into their potential.  (Limitless, not incidentally.)  A few days after my post, there was a depressing article in the “NY Times” about […]

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