Foreign Policy Blogs

Energy & Environment

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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Updates from the States

California , The Golden State has a population of 37 million folks or so. That's around Kenya's or Poland's population. According to which source you use, California, if it were an independent nation, would have the seventh, eighth, or tenth largest economy in the world. California is responsible for 13% of the United States' gross […]

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Cape Wind

What a great yarn!  A smart, successful, committed energy entrepreneur comes along with a solid project to provide enough zero-emission, renewable energy to supply, on a good day, all the stationary power needs of Cape Cod, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard, and, if you had plug-in vehicles, a good bit of the surface transportation needs as […]

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Jim Hansen

Jim Hansen

(photo courtesy of Kaveh Sardari) Dr. James Hansen is both an icon and a working scientist at the forefront of global warming research.  He's a world-renowned physicist and an impassioned activist.  He's soft spoken and hard hitting.  Hansen is the director of an important US government lab, NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and has […]

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Some Quick Hitters, June "08

As I said on Friday, there is so much going on. Here are some more salient items for you. Jim Rogers , I quoted the Duke Energy CEO here a while back. In the Sunday "NY Times Magazine," there's a profile of the head of the nation's third-largest emitter of carbon dioxide. Why has he […]

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Sunday Night Videos

Here are two videos I saw the other day at the estimable DeSmogBlog.  Have fun with these. [kml_flashembed movie=”http://www.youtube.com/v/PLZ-hvVVGmY” width=”425″ height=”350″ wmode=”transparent” /] [kml_flashembed movie=”http://www.youtube.com/v/snPdEl0Duoo” width=”425″ height=”350″ wmode=”transparent” /]

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Bits and Bobs – June '08 Edition

There really are a ton of stories out there. Here’s a sampling: Cars – I’ve written recently about electric cars and other exciting initiatives. There are more developments on the automotive front. Mitsubishi and Peugeot have entered into an alliance to supply key components for electric vehicles and may build their own as well. See […]

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McCain and Obama

I have to admit, back in December I didn't think that Barack Obama would be the nominee of the Democratic Party.  I predicted then, in my year in review, that either Hillary Clinton or John Edwards would be the nominee, and the eventual next President.  (I also predicted that Bill Richardson, a very good man […]

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CCS Continued

Okay, so a lot of scientists and engineers are working on CCS. That's clear. The question is: Will their hard work and expertise translate into a viable, affordable mechanism for eliminating, or even curtailing the massive, climate-altering impact of the carbon dioxide that spews inexorably, interminably from the world's thousands of coal-fired power plants? Remember, […]

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CCS – The Viability of Carbon Capture and Storage

I wrote a couple of weeks ago here on clean coal technology.  First of all, let me explain that I am not rooting against the possibility of finding some way to capture and sequester carbon dioxide from coal-fired power plants and other sources.  It's just that there is so much reliance on coal now, and […]

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National Science Academies

The leading scientists of 13 nations yesterday called for significant cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.  The science academies of the G8 plus those of Brazil, Mexico, India, China and South Africa issued a joint statement on "Climate Change Adaptation and the Transition to a Low Carbon Society."  See this from Reuters.  The statement targets the […]

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Business As Usual

I'm sorry to report that the backers of renewable energy tax credit legislation today failed to get enough votes to get a vote on the legislation itself, H.R. 6049, the Renewable Energy and Job Creation Act of 2008.  This is getting tired.  I reported yesterday on the continued blossoming of activity in renewables.  However, things […]

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Renewable Bits

Offshore in Britain , The UK's Crown Estate is looking to create up to 25 GW of offshore wind in the next dozen years. Okay. What is the Crown Estate? It is the British monarchy's real property and enterprises, and it is managed separately from government properties. Here's the story from CarbonFree. The Crown Estate […]

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