Foreign Policy Blogs

Energy & Environment

Being Really Cool

Being Really Cool

Maybe, just maybe, one of the lessons learned from the economic crisis of the past few years is that folks in post-industrial societies need to live within their means better and more.  Credit card debt in the US has decreased by over $167 billion since its peak of $957.5 billion in 2008.  It stood at […]

read more

Quebec's Charest May Find His Legacy in the Far North

It seems that politicians spend most of their time trying to get elected and re-elected. After a few terms in office, though, they start to focus more on their legacy – less on what the voters think of them, and more on what historians will think of them. For some, their legacy is changing the […]

read more

Nuclear Renaissance (Not)

Nuclear Renaissance (Not)

The bad news keeps rolling in for the “nuclear renaissance” that has been much touted in recent years.  The relentless, heedless proponents of more nuclear have tried to bull their way forward, even in the aftermath of Fukushima.  Well, thankfully, and perhaps predictably, the democracies, at least, are saying no more, thank you, it’s well […]

read more

Can Aquaculture be made more Sustainable?

Can Aquaculture be made more Sustainable?

Aquaculture, according to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), is “the fastest growing food production system in the world.”   It accounts for nearly 50 percent of the world’s food fish, according to the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), and more than 1 billion people rely on fish as an important source of animal protein.  With this […]

read more

The Big Lie (Again)

The Big Lie (Again)

In an op-ed last week at the NY Times, Robert Bryce of the Manhattan Institute, reiterated the same old tired and tiresome nonsense about renewable energy:  It’s not good enough to get the job done.  As I’ve noted here a number of times, that particular Big Lie is easily refuted.  See 80% Renewable – The […]

read more

Italy Votes against Berlusconi by Voting against Nuclear Power

Italian voters cast ballots Sunday and yesterday in referenda on four questions: two on privatization of water services, one on criminal procedure (which would exempt the prime minister from prosecution) and one on a return to using nuclear power. More than 57% voted, surpassing the 50% +1 needed for the referenda to be binding. Of […]

read more

Glorious Food

I wrote last week about some of the ins and outs of food insecurity relative to climate change.  (Forgive me, not incidentally, for not writing so much or so often in recent weeks.  I’ve been finishing up a big writing project and I’ve been pretty focused on that.  It’s done, finally, as of this past […]

read more

OPEC Meeting Ends without Consensus

OPEC’s meeting in Vienna a couple days ago ended without the cartel agreeing on a production level. This hasn’t happened in years (if memory serves, the last time was during the Iran-Iraq War), and it has left many questioning the organization’s future. After 5 hours of talks, the Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said, […]

read more

MyPlate serves new nutrition guidelines

MyPlate serves new nutrition guidelines

Both children and adults in the United States seem to do their best to avoid eating as many fruits and vegetables as they should, and the recent deadly E. Coli outbreak in Europe gave them an added excuse to leave these items off of their plate.  Against these odds, the USDA released its new nutrition […]

read more

FPB Roundup: Global Food Security

Read recent posts from the Foreign Policy Blog network that also relate to food security issues. Food Insecurity in East Africa from the Africa blog Changing Climate Driving Food Shortages from the Climate Change blog Enjoy!

read more

Bean sprouts again targeted as E. Coli carrier

Bean sprouts again targeted as E. Coli carrier

Bean sprouts have had a roller coaster week in the ongoing investigation into the source of E. Coli contamination which has claimed 31 lives and sickened 3,000 around the world.  After being identified as the source for contamination earlier in the week and then being exonerated, German officials have once again tapped bean sprouts as […]

read more

Brazilian Government Vows to Boost Ethanol Industry

Brazil has relied on sugar cane-derived ethanol for much of its auto fleet for years. However, the industry has hit a soft patch in investment. Since 2005, the country has built 117 ethanol mills, but after the five currently coming on line are finished there are no plans for further expansion. When you consider that […]

read more

Changing Climate Driving Food Shortages

Changing Climate Driving Food Shortages

There was a very important bit of reporting in the NY Times yesterday:  A Warming Planet Struggles to Feed Itself.  Among the most important things it does is illustrate quite clearly how the extremes of temperature and precipitation that are becoming the norm are negatively affecting agricultural production.  Productivity losses generate higher prices which, in […]

read more

Confusion compounds Europe's E. Coli outbreak

Now that a recent outbreak of a deadly strain of E. Coli that hit Europe in late May has been contained by stepped up screening, governments and consumers are questioning how the outbreak of such a deadly bacteria emerged and how can future outbreaks be prevented. First, what is known: At the time of this […]

read more

Environmentalist to Commerce

Environmentalist to Commerce

It appears to me that President Obama has made another excellent choice for his administration for advancing the cause of clean tech and living up to the responsibility of fighting the climate crisis.  He has named John Bryson, a founder of the seminal environmental organization, the Natural Resources Defense Council, as the new Secretary of […]

read more