Foreign Policy Blogs

Energy & Environment

Hotspots

Hotspots

The venerable World Resources Institute has a terrific new source for data and information – EarthTrends.  I’ve been using some of their charts in my class on climate change at NYU. Further to my posts from Andalusia and the Algarve on concentrated solar power (here and here), EarthTrends has a terrific graphic on solar radiation […]

read more

Tom Friedman's Strange Call on China

I wrote a letter to the “NY Times” in response to Tom Friedman’s column last week, Our One-Party Democracy, in which he says, essentially, that because the Chinese have an autocracy they are better at promoting renewable energy.  The “International Herald Tribune” had my letter forwarded from the “NYT” and I had hoped they would […]

read more

China's Investment

I know China’s economic philosophy is different than America’s but was it ever so glaring as a week ago, when it was reported that China “loaned” China National Petroleum Corp. $30 billion for yet more overseas projects? Can you imagine Uncle Sam doing this for Exxon? (Okay, maybe GM, but the terms were a lot […]

read more

"Father of the Green Revolution" passes away at 95

Norman Borlaug, credited as the “Father of the Green Revolution,” passed away at age 95 on Saturday.  Borlaug, a plant pathologist, developed the use of high-yield wheat seeds  in the 1960’s, instantly impacting supply of food globally, but particularly in drought-stricken areas such as Mexico and India. Borlaug’s contributions were cited by his many colleagues […]

read more

Norway's Elections and the Alberta Tar Sands

What’s one got to do with the other?  Fair question.   I wrote about this relationship in May here. Statoil, the Norwegian oil company, has a big stake in the tar sands, and a number of leading Norwegian politicians and their parties want them out.  Many, if not most Norwegians, infinitely to their credit, want to […]

read more

Biochar at "The Economist"

The good folks at “The Economist” went to the North American Biochar Conference 2009 in August.  I’ve been bitten by the biochar bug.  See my post here, plus the article I wrote for Grist.  The virtues of biochar – A new growth industry? has some good insights, many of which were gleaned from the papers […]

read more

Natural Gas in the Senate

I wrote recently about some solid policy analysis that would move the US off its massive dependency on coal for electricity toward a greater reliance on natural gas – until renewables fully kick into their potential.  (Limitless, not incidentally.)  A few days after my post, there was a depressing article in the “NY Times” about […]

read more

Wine at Risk – and Sustainability in the Vineyards

We were over in Europe in the summer of 2003, just a few days after the heat wave broke.  It was plenty hot even then.  In this article from the “FT” from last weekend, the experience of the proprietors of a famous French vineyard, returning early from their holiday, is recalled.  “Instead of rows of […]

read more

Reality Check

I like it when things line up. Syzygy, they call it. What do Mongolia, Iraq, and Venezuela have in common? (Hint: it’s not oil.) It’s that they have all recently bumped into the sharp edge of resource reality. There is something about the discovery of  valuable resources that make people and countries take leave of […]

read more

When crisis becomes "calamity"

Natural phenomena are causing severe conditions in many countries around the world, causing and in some cases, exacerbating, food shortages that are affecting large populations. The BBC reports that in Guatemala, President Alvaro Colom has sprung into action, declaring a “state of public calamity” and seeking to aid 54,000 Guatemalans whose access to food has […]

read more

A Vision of Climate Catastrophe

One of the scenarios that Gore discusses in “An Inconvenient Truth” is the triggering of a massive cooling in the Northern Hemisphere as a consequence of the altering of the “Great Ocean Conveyor.”  NASA scientists, among others, have looked closely at this “chilling possibility.” The freezing of the North, the warming of the South, and […]

read more

New registry to combat food-borne illness in U.S.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has set up a new registry for food and animal feed companies to report any instance of contamination in their facilities, reports The Wall Street Journal.  The incidence of several high profile cases of food-borne illness in the United States, especially in the last two years, have led […]

read more

China, Rare Earths, and Green Technology

While I am not a specialist in green technology, I could not help but be depressed by an article in the New York Times Tuesday about China’s rare earth minerals and metals.   The Times and many other papers announced Tuesday that China which “currently accounts for 93 percent of production of so-called rare earth elements” […]

read more

Natural Gas – to Cut GHG Emissions

Barry Commoner wrote The Politics of Energy in 1979.  In it, he called for a transition to renewables – with natural gas as the bridge to the future.  30 years later this still sounds pretty good.  One difference, of course, is that we’re so much farther along on renewables than perhaps even Dr. Commoner could’ve dreamed.  A […]

read more

Chevron vs. Ecuador

Oil giant Chevron says that it had obtained video recordings — and has posted them on its website —  that appear to show an Ecuadorean political operative seeking $3 million in bribes, in connection with a $27 billion lawsuit the company. It is the latest wrinkle in the on-going class action lawsuit brought by dozens […]

read more