Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

Landfill Mining

The IPCC says “Post-consumer waste is a small contributor to global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (<5%) with total emissions of approximately 1,300 Mt carbon dioxide-eq in 2005. The largest source is landfill methane ”  Still, that’s a lot of GHG.  (See the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Working Group III Report “Mitigation of Climate Change” – Chapter […]

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The Earth

We were talking about the ocean. Now let’s talk about the earth. More specifically, let’s focus on the soil , that which gives us the food that all of us need. There is a truly terrific piece in the latest “National Geographic,” Our Good Earth. It looks at all manner of good news and bad […]

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The Ocean – Part Deux

The Ocean – Part Deux

These photos are too good not to put up here.  They come courtesy of Bill Romatzick.  We met Bill and his wife, Sue, both experienced divers, on our vacation.  The first is the flying gurnard which I spotted in the sand on a snorkel trip.  The second is a sea turtle.  The third is a […]

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The Ocean

The Ocean

While on vacation, we spent, not surprisingly, a ton of time in the water.  There were some perfectly lovely rock reefs right off the beach from where we were staying and that was a great way to get my daughter (7½) going on snorkeling. Here's the thing:  When John Muir started the Sierra Club in […]

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Desalination and Energy, Plus A Concrete Idea for Carbon Sequestration

We were in St. Martin for vacation.  The southern part is Dutch and the northern part is French.  The whole island uses desalinated water, so I've been thinking about that some more. Here's a succinct piece from "Scientific American" on desalination:  Why don't we get our drinking water from the ocean by taking the salt […]

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Quick Hitters , August "08 Edition

Here are some items to begin to pick up some of the slack from the past two weeks.  We've been away , and there's some interesting stuff to say about that in a day or two.  For now, here are some morsels, I hope, for your delectation. More Renewable Stories , I wrote last week […]

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Renewables – Hither and Yon

The Ocean of Renewables – I came across this fascinating “Salon.com” post recently, Exajoules of Hope, by Andrew Leonard. Leonard writes “How the World Works,” a regular “conversation about globalization.” In the piece, we learn that “A joule is one watt of power for one second. An exajoule is 10 to the 18th power joules. […]

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Climate Change 101

If you want to step back and look at some of the basics, here are some good sources:  This from the Pew Center on Global Climate Change. From the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Summary for Policymakers of the Synthesis Report from the Fourth Assessment Report. From the United Nations Framework Convention on […]

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Engaging African Americans

The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a think tank devoted to "issues of particular concern to African Americans and other peoples of color," recently launched the Commission to Engage African Americans on Climate Change (CEAC).  "There is a fierce urgency regarding climate change effects on the African American community," according to the CEAC's […]

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Algae

I'm bullish on algae. I've written about it here, here and here since April. According to Valcent, you get 18 gallons of biofuel from one acre of corn per year, 700 to 800 gallons per acre per year from palm, but up to 20,000 gallons from algae , and that's in an open-pond system. It's […]

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MIT Breakthrough

MIT Breakthrough

People say that you can’t rely on solar because it doesn’t run at night, besides how are you going to store energy that you don’t need at a given time? Well the folks at MIT seem to have come up with what amounts to all the answers. “With today’s announcement,” reads the press release, “MIT […]

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Automotive Update + Hydrogen

Right up there with algae, I'm loving electric cars these days. See several recent posts here, here, here, here, and here. Now let's get a look at some news from Spain and France. Spain Sees 1 Mln Electric Cars in Energy Plan is the arresting headline from Reuters' PlanetArk service. When? By 2014! See also […]

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Plus ça change, plus c'est la meme chose – Part Deux

The last time I invoked this French lament, it was in reference to President Bush's attempted flimflammery on climate change when he announced ".a new national goal: to stop the growth of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 2025." Now the Republicans in the Senate have once again blocked the extension of tax credits for renewables. […]

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WTO Failure

One of the things I taught my international relations students was the importance of regimes.  There are critically important international environmental regimes such as the Montreal Protocol, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, and the Kyoto Protocol, among many others. I also really tried to emphasize to my students the importance of the post […]

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Some Studies and An Update

Costs , The Center for Integrative Environmental Research has been doing a series of studies on the economic impacts of climate change and the costs of inaction. Their release from Wednesday says: "Climate change will carry a price tag of billions of dollars for a number of U.S. states, says a new series of reports […]

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