Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

Gore on Energy Redux

I wrote one week ago about Al Gore's important speech setting a very high bar indeed for renewables. I have believed in 100% renewables for many years but, to tell you the truth, never thought the stars would align as they have to make that vision perfectly realizable. Well, if you've read the many posts […]

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Micro and Macro

China , This article from RenewableEnergyWorld.com, talks about the continuing explosion in China's deployment of windpower and its rapidly growing manufacturing capacity. China was in fifth place worldwide in installed base at the end of last year with 6 GW, heading to 20 GW by 2010, and 100 by 2020. The current global wind installation […]

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Australia in the News

The big news from Down Under from last week was Pope Benedict XVI's visit.  The Vatican has elevated climate change as a concern recently.  See this from the "Voice of America."  (For something a bit more substantive from The Holy See, see this speech from February at the UN.) The Pope would be preaching to the […]

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Wind

Wind

I wrote about all the huffing and puffing by the "Alliance to Save Nantucket Sound" in my recent look at the great book, Cape Wind.  One of their arguments is that the windfarm will destroy the view.  Here's the thing:  I am among a number of folks who think the view of offshore (or onshore) […]

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Gore on Energy

Al Gore made an important speech today in Washington:  In it he challenged the US to become carbon free in its electricity production in ten years time.  See this from CNN.  Regarding surface transportation, the article quotes him as saying "The way to bring gas prices down is to end our dependence on oil and […]

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Some More Transportation Bits

Further to my last post, here are some more looks at transportation issues. Air Show , This article from the "NY Times" today, The Wild Green Yonder, describes some of the initiatives of the airline industry I touched on the other day:  new materials, new engines, new fuels.  The article refers to a series of […]

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Some Transportation Bits

Some Transportation Bits

As you no doubt know by now, transportation accounts for about 13% of worldwide GHG. Figure SPM.3. (a) Global annual emissions of anthropogenic GHGs from 1970 to 2004.5(b) Share of different anthropogenic GHGs in total emissions in 2004 in terms of carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2-eq). (c) Share of different sectors in total anthropogenic GHG emissions […]

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Bits and Bobs – July '08 Edition

Energy and Commerce Committee – We all seem agreed that substantive federal legislation addressing climate change will emerge from the 111th Congress. It seems entirely likely that the new Congress will have a measurably higher Democratic component than now, in both houses. (See this from PollingReport.com and this from the “NY Times” which reports that […]

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The G8 , Part Deux

I didn't want to leave the impression from my last post that I am wholly cynical about progress on confronting the climate change crisis.  On the contrary, I am entirely bullish.  I think my posts over time here have very often been about some of the truly extraordinary breakthroughs , politically, socially, and economically , […]

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The G8

I'm not going to lie to you and say that I've followed these meetings with particular interest.  There's nothing binding about what the G8 leaders decide.  So, they've come up with a commitment, of sorts, to cut GHG by 50% by 2050.  They don't tell you what the baseline is though.  How seriously am I […]

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Good Grief, More Efficiency

As this blog and everybody else and her cousin have been saying for some time now, we can do so much, and faster and cheaper, by optimizing our energy use.  The granddaddy of much of this eminently sensible, sober and smart thinking is Amory Lovins.  I have directed you to his good works and the work […]

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Tales from a Few More Important Countries

Sorry, folks, for not writing sooner, but we were away for a long July Fourth weekend.  Here are some interesting bits now, though.  I'll have more tomorrow.  Denmark , My favorite journalist, Elizabeth Kolbert, has another minor masterpiece, at the "New Yorker" this week, The Island in the Wind.  She's writing about a nearly zero-carbon enclave […]

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Big News from Big Countries – Page Three

China – You will have noted that the PRC surpassed the USA this past year in total carbon dioxide emissions. I referenced this here a couple of weeks ago and referred to the “NY Times” article that fleshed out the whys and the wherefores. Much of the Chinese inventory of emissions, not surprisingly, is a […]

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Big News from Big Countries – Page Two

India – The second-most populous country in the world is rapidly industrializing. That means its GHG output has been rising inexorably, as more heavy industry serves the country’s burgeoning economy, and roads fill with cars. India is intricately and inextricably involved with the ongoing UNFCCC negotiations leading to a post-Kyoto international agreement. It has also […]

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Big News from Big Countries

We looked the other day at some key initiatives from some of the states of the USA.  There's recent news of not-inconsiderable import from some of the bigger nations.  UK , Prime Minister Gordon Brown unveiled a plan last week for renewables that would commit £100 billion over the next dozen years.  It's a comprehensive […]

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