Foreign Policy Blogs

Energy & Environment

Two Million Euros Pledged by Irish to Fight Hunger in Africa

Irish Aid, the Government’s programme for oversees development managed by its Department of Foreign Affairs will expand funding to subsidize seeds, pesticides, and fertilizers and increase maize production for families at risk of hunger in Malawi.  The Belfast Telegraph states, “The cash will also improve infant and maternal nutrition by supporting research to provide high-quality, […]

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Beef processing procedure questioned

Michael Moss wrote in The New York Times about the production of ground beef made by Beef Products, Inc., a supplier of ground beef used mostly used in many popular fast-food chains and school lunch programs across the United States.  The article highlights BPI’s production method for ground beef which includes treating beef trimmings with […]

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China, Climate and Trade

If you know me or have been reading this blog with any regularity, you know I’m a skeptic.  Not about climate change but about China.  I made an analysis several years back that, in retrospect, seems mistaken.  I perceived that the economic and political pressures of the liberal democracies would push and pull China toward […]

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A New Environmental Standard

Just under the wire, the EPA has given its official “comments” in response to New York State’s draft plan for drilling for shale gas in the upstate Marcellus field. The EPA found the mammoth 800+ page draft does not adequately address issues of wastewater, air quality, land impact and several other problems. It urges the […]

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Financial crisis causes shortage in UN funding to Nepal

World Food Program (WFP) officials have stated that UN cutbacks in food aid funding to Nepal have been caused by the drastic financial market downturns and global financial crisis. The UN estimates that it would need roughly $20 million to feed approximately 600,000 people for the next three months – a quarter of the number […]

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Rainforests

I am sorry for having been off the air for a week.  The “holiday season” has been, as you likely have experienced, in full swing.  Among other activities, we entertained on Christmas Eve and Christmas, so there were kids and adults, presents to be wrapped and opened, and lots of cooking and eating.  (I specialize […]

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Eritrea goes its own way on food aid

The BBC recently reported on the recent Eritrean government’s decision to reject international food aid in an effort to promote self-sustaining measures for domestic food growth and measures for prolonged self-sufficiency/sustainability. Eritrean ambassador to the EU, Girma Asmerom, stated quite matter-of-factly “Food aid demonizes the local population and makes them lazy.” The current government strategies […]

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Share and Share Alike in Iraq

Last week, in a December 22th Wall Street Journal op-ed, Ibrahim Bahr Al-Uluom, a former Iraqi oil minister and current member of the Iraqi National Alliance (a political party), lamented the recent Iraqi oil lease auctions and suggested transferring as much of Iraq’s oil wealth directly to its citizens in the form of shares in […]

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The New Scramble

If natural gas is so cheap right now, limping along between $2.50 and $5.50 per thousand cubic feet, why did Exxon pay the equivalent of $41 billion for natural gas giant XTO Energy? There is a global glut of natural gas, which won’t be disappearing any time soon. I can think of a couple reasons. […]

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Post-Copenhagen Coverage

There is a blockbuster piece at Salon.com that looks at Five common mistakes in the coverage of the Copenhagen Accord.  It punctures some of the fallacies that have abounded in some quarters such as that there could have been a better Accord voted on by the delegates, that the smaller developing nations rejected the Accord, […]

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Climate Change: Year in Review

Overview – There were critical developments, breakthroughs and some setbacks in 2009 in the policy, politics, business, economics, science, and technology of climate change and energy.  There were moments of high drama in Copenhagen and Washington as well as low comedy.  The landmark Waxman-Markey bill passed in the US House of Representatives, the Obama Administration […]

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Copenhagen Should Not Surprise

Everyone seems shocked and discouraged by the outcome in Copenhagen. They shouldn’t be. We must control emissions. So why wasn’t there a deal that made everyone happy? Because that’s the nature of multilateral negotiations, with scores of parties with scores of interests. They are always, always like this, as anyone who has studied them knows: […]

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"The Copenhagen Accord"

This is the document that has taken many years and much blood, sweat, tears and toil from thousands of people to produce.  Yvo de Boer, head of the UNFCCC, described the accord as “politically important.” It provides an “architecture for a response to climate change.” The “LA Times” had this story this morning:  Climate summit ends […]

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First Cut on the Deal

AP had this late tonight.  The deal “…requires industrial countries to list their individual targets and developing countries to list the actions they will take to cut global warming pollution by specific amounts. Obama called that an ‘unprecedented breakthrough.’”  AP further reported “German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a leading proponent of strong action to confront global […]

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OT in Copenhagen

We’re in overtime in Copenhagen.  ABC – that’s Australian Broadcasting Corp. for those Americans who might think otherwise – reports “US President Barack Obama has launched intense after-hours diplomacy with China, hoping to salvage a new world climate pact after warning that an imperfect deal would be better than no pact at all.”  (See this.)  […]

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