Foreign Policy Blogs

Climate Change

"The Convenient Solution"

In my post from March 29 on the "State of the Planet "08" conference, sponsored by The Earth Institute and "The Economist," I talked about a close encounter I had with the gentle Chairlady of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority.  We talked about nuclear power and I said, among other things, that societies needed […]

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Tom Friedman and the Candidates

The outspoken "NY Times" columnist, Tom Friedman, takes some serious shots here, Dumb as We Wanna Be, at two of the three Presidential candidates for their recommendation on suspending the 18.4¢ a gallon federal excise tax on gasoline during the heavy summer driving season coming up.  "The McCain-Clinton gas holiday proposal is a perfect example […]

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Black Carbon and Solar Cookers

Black Carbon and Solar Cookers

I touched on an important subject here earlier in the month when I mentioned a new study purporting that the spread of black carbon , or soot , from industrial and transportation sources, and from developing world cooking practices, is having a significantly more potent impact on climate change than previously thought. This release from […]

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Businesses in the "Danger Zone"

KPMG is a global network of auditors and business consultants operating in 145 countries.  According to the new Climate Changes Your Business report from them, six industries in particular have to watch out because they are not sufficiently aware of and ready to manage the risks of global warming.  The winners (or potential losers) are:  […]

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Future Car

Future Car

I just finished watching a truly terrific Nova special, Car of the Future, with the thoroughly irrepressible Tom and Ray Magliozzi, known to their adoring public as Click and Clack from Car Talk, the NPR supershow.   Along with the laughs, you get a look at lightweight materials to revolutionize car manufacturing , the same materials […]

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Quick Political Note – Coal and the Candidates

We’ve seen a couple of great documentaries in my climate change class recently: Fighting Goliath and Burning the Future: Coal in America. I’m particularly excited that we’re having Burning the Future’s director in next week. We’re also reading the outstanding Big Coal. So, we’re into coal, in a big way. More about the documentaries and […]

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Bits and Bobs , April '08 Edition

MEM in Paris , The two-day Major Economies Meetings (MEM), talks among major carbon emitting nations, took place last week.  The economies of these 16 countries account for around four-fifths of global output of greenhouse gases.  The meetings aim to put these countries into some sort of unified trajectory as the world heads toward coming […]

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Green News for Earth Day

Earth Day is this coming Tuesday, April 22. There's an awful lot going on all over the world. Dating myself, I can tell you that my buddy, Donald, and I went to the first Earth Day in 1970 when we were teenagers. He claims it was primarily to meet girls. My rejoinder is "That's natural." […]

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Plus ça change, …

… plus c’est la meme chose.  Well, much to probably nobody's surprise, the present President of the United States has once again distinguished himself by being just about the only top political leader in the industrialized democracies who doesn't subscribe to the belief that climate change is upon us, will overwhelm us if we don't […]

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Tax Breaks, Finally, for Renewables

Energy Boost is the title of the article from yesterday in the "Washington Post."  The Senate has agreed to " extend solar and wind energy tax breaks as part of a housing bill that is likely to win approval in the House."  This article keys in on some businesses that are happy about the tax […]

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A Gaggle of "New York Times" Articles

"No good times, no bad times, There's no times at all, Just The New York Times"  Here's some good, recent stuff from the venerable "New York Times." The "Business of Green" is a special section from a few weeks ago. (I wrote at some length over a year ago on their special of the same […]

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Krugman on Food Prices and Biofuels

I've written about the growing evidence that biofuels are becoming increasingly recognized as a menace to the environment, not the boon they were once thought to be.  In Are Biofuels A Bummer? in February, I reported on a couple of recent studies showing how pressure on land use from biofuel production was creating the deleterious […]

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"This is the way the world ends …

… Not with a bang but a whimper."* I revisited congestion pricing in New York City recently.  (See Congestion Pricing Redux from April 1 below.)  Well, after having been recommended by the NY City Council, with the support of scores of municipal good government, environmental, labor and business groups, it sailed up the Hudson River […]

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The News Via The Blogosphere

I'm killing two birds with one stone here (even though I'm a vegetarian).  I'm going to highlight some of the more important recent stories I've not gotten to while pointing out some of the blogs I consider to be in the top tier. Gore kick starts sweeping program to slash U.S. carbon emissions is a […]

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"Earth: The Sequel"

A truly classic quote, as reported in the Year in Review, came from Fred Krupp, influential president of the Environmental Defense Fund, in referring to the White House talks on climate change in September: "It was a lost opportunity. America needs to lead, and we can lead, but now the spotlight shifts to the Congress […]

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