Friday, June 13, 2008

Oh What a Tangled Web We Weave When First We Practice to....

…conceive.



Bio-diesel reduces the cost of food by reducing transportation energy costs, but adds more to the carbon footrpint than fossil fuels

Nuclear energy is clean with virtually no greenhouse emission, but what are we to do with the spent fuel.

Immigration allows for less fortunate, impoverished neighbors from the South to carve out a decent life for themselves, but drains over $21 billion dollars out of the economy as it sends it south to subsidize families in Mexico. This doesn’t account for the overhead increased social service and law enforcement costs.

The new “electric” cars to be released will reduce the greenhouse emissions at the tailpipe, but increase emissions at the power plant smoke stacks.

It’s so hard to do the right thing,...


... without doing something else wrong. (Continued below)




It’s enough to make an activist curl into a fetal position and the average person to retreat from the glut of facts and turn to “real” TV where bikini clad beautiful people struggle for survival with the luxury of being able to eliminate those in their society they deem not pulling their weight. Wouldn’t that be nice if we could all get together and eliminate those we think drawing down our economy. But wait, haven’t we seen attempts for that sort of thing? And isn’t the memory of those episodes enough to make one suck in their breath, aghast? Think: Holocaust. The Death March of China. Rawanda.

The one thing that very few are acknowledging is that none of our problems with food supply/costs, global warming, the demand for oil that drives us to war would be a problem if the demand on resources was so much less than what it is. That means too many people demanding too much from the planet.

Not A New Theory

In his 1968 book “The Population Bomb,” Paul Erhlich predicted exactly what we are seeing happening these days with food riots and sky-rocketing food prices resulting in food shortages impacting people at epidemic levels. Before him, going back as far as the late 18th Century.Thomas Malthius noted the lowering infant mortality rates an increase in birth rates as a result of the Industrial Revolution. He predicted with a rather accurate time line, that population would outstrip the planets ability to grow food. Since the Industrial Revolution, the population has doubled every forty years.

Surprise!

What had not been predicted had been the impact of population on Global Warming and how that would in fact accelerate the issues of food costs and distribution. Too many people emitting greenhouse gases faster than the planet can re-oxygenate and farmable land being lost to housing, not to mention the vicious cycle of land lost to flooding as a result of global warming.

What can we do?

Like “reality TV,” do we vote people off the planet who we deem detrimental to our survival. Of course not!

Thoughts like that are so horrendous, that I can only even consider it in the context of humor to show what no-win situation we may have. James Lovelock, author of “The Gaia Movement” thinks we are already 15 years too late and in the next 100 hundred years all the surviving population of the world will be living above the Artic Circle. The rest of the planet will look like Mars. What makes this frightening is that Lovelock is not a fanatical writer, but a scientist. Much of the studies of the International Planetary Committee on Climate which comprises of over 500 independent scientists and agencies including NASA, have indicated that much of Lovelock’s science is correct.

Can We Talk?

Well, we can take a “let’s move forward” approach and possibly mitigate the worst case scenarios. In the U.S. the birth rate peaked in 2002 and has slowly began to drop. However, with the immigration influx our population is still increasing and with less than 4% of the Earth’s population, we contribute nearly 24% of greenhouse emissions. We can do what each of us can do personally to reduce our carbon footprints (Click here for list) and food consumption. (We are the most wasteful population).

What is needed is to become aware and act.

Perhaps we can reduce our own contribution to the population explosion. At least limit to two children to stem the population growth rate, But what would be wrong with a single child as a mitigating factor. Right now it is easy to pass off these considerations. We in the U.S. are not paying the costs. The costs are being realized in Tivulo which no longer exits do to rising sea waters and Bangladesh due to losing 20% of its farmable land or, Haiti or Central Africa where there are riots for food.

And we need to educate.

The largest contributors to the issues of population are those who are the least educated in the issues: impoverished societies of third world countries. However, look around. If you look in both urban and rural areas you will see large families of impoverished, disenfranchised and sometimes ethnic families who have a number of children due to their cultural or religious beliefs. Many of these groups of people live lifestyles far removed from the concerns of carbon footprints and contribution to global warming. Because of their culture and sometimes the struggle of their low socio-economic status, we don’t tamper with their child bearing lifestyles. Fact is we don’t speak to them about issues of population and adverse impact on the planetary whole simply because it is a hard topic and they are too locked in their personal strife to care about other. However like the family with an alcoholic member, or inappropriate abusive behavior, it is the Ecological Elephant in the Global Living. And as members of the Planetary family, we might have to broach the hard subjects with those least willing to listen.

Too hot in the global kitchen!

Certainly, no one is keen on the idea of population control, but it is the tendency of our society to enforce what we can't seem to come to concensus over with discussion. We have enforced laws for parking to keep order in our cities. So what is going to prevent enforcement of population control. And given the nature of pride in heritage what is going to stop ethnic minorities from becoming targets? Perhaps “discussion” as hard as it may be, is the lesser evil.

Click here for things you can do to reduce your own carbon footprint.

Monday, May 19, 2008

It Won't Be Easy To Be Green

With all the purveyors of the "green" industry hyper-hyping their greenness,it won't be simple to actually be green, though you can easily think that you are.

The not-so-green Green Festival

I can't even begin to imagine the carbon footprint left by the Green Festival this past weekend at Navy Pier, but when I put on my emerald colored glasses and gave the festival the green inspection, everything sort
came out brown, carbon emission brown. (continued below)



The first thing to strike me was the City of Chicago exhibit, which was comprised of about a hundred white cardboard boxes stacked to surround an area of the floor. If I recall, cardboard is made of paper, one of the greatest contributors to the accelerating carbon cycle. Not only does the processing of paper release greenhouse emission, but so does the transportation, then adding to that, it requires the wholesale harvest of trees, which diminishes the Earth's ability to re-oxygenate the carbon emissions.

The second thing I notice, because it is a 40 foot bus, is a climbing wall for children attached to the side of a . What isn't so noticeable is the sign on the back that indicates that is "soy" fueled. Hasn't Organic Valley, owner of the bus, been paying attention to the common media lately. The carbon footprint for creating bio fuels exceeds that of burning just plain old gas. But hey, if "the kids" can climb up the side of it, it must be green -- right?


In the category of Can't-See-the-Forest-for-the-Trees, was the massive psuedo-food industry presence. You know "psuedo food", that food that was brought to us by the marketing geniuses who figured out how to cheaply appeal to the granola minded. You can tell by the packaging that it is organiic, and healthy, until you read the back of the wrapper. I'm talking about the fruit and granola bars that are in reality carbo-sodium delivery systems, filled with rice and gluten (starch) like the ones you by at the healthy grocery store. If you open up one of these healthy fruit bars,
you'll find a ribbon thin layer of fruit compote wrapped in a thick wheat-gluten-carbohydrate cocoon. Then there's the sodium benzoate and potassium benzoate and the calcium casseinate.


Here's an example: The Bumble Bee bar. One of these 2 1/2 inch by 3 1/2 inch by 1/4 inch thick bars has 13 grams of fat, and 60 to 70 grams of sodium. That's more sodium and fat than and eight ounce bag of potato chips or Fritos and it's less than three ounces. The carbon footprint for producing, packaging and transporting psuedo-food is the same as junk food, so how is this green?


Well, everyone knows that if it looks organic, smells organic and tastes organic, it must be "green." Think again, Organic doesn't equate to green, though the organic and psuedo-food industry would like to think it is. Take Organic Valley dairy products. It may be organic, but with the carbon footprint required to transport, refrigerated, from California, hardly makes it eco-friendly. However, Organic Valley wants to position themselves in your mind as being green. They had no less than three booths at the festival.


I asked one hawker of an enzyme cleaner, sold through a well known chain of "wholly" good, green and organic products, what made his product so green. He said because it was "fermented" from natural ingredients. Now the word "ferment", generally means some process that does not require heat, such as distilling would. But, I asked and he said, heating was required, which means, carbon footprint, just like every other product on the market. Plus, it came in a disposable plastic bottle, the latest eco-villain to come under media attack for having a massive large carbon foot; so large that the city has put a drinking water bottle tax to dissuade us from buying [roducts in disposable plastic bottles.


The all time chuzpah product has to be Bliss Cleaner, touted as being a "green" cleaner. ignore that it too comes in a disposable plastic bottle and just look at the ingredients, as I did: carbonated water and various fragrances -- that's it!


What is most mind boggling about the festival is a phenomenon like looking at the stars in the sky. We do it all the time, taking it for granted, until you stop and think about the number of stars there are in the sky. Standing on the mezzanine and looking down into festival hall, the realization of the massive amount of paper required to put on the festival and relating that to the number trees cut, milled, processed and transported and will have to be transported away, recycled and transported back, ad infinitum. There is not only the information dissemination, but also the disposable paper required for the food services required to feed 30,000 green groupies.

So is anyone green at the Green Festival?



Yes, of course. There the Sri Lankan company that makes paper out of elephant Dung! Now that's -- er, green? And it helps the elephant which is running out of places to poo in Sri Lanka.


I listen to and spoke with Sharif Abdulla, author of "Creating A World That Works for All" who spoke of the need for everyone to become "mindful" of their own ecological behavior. We can't just pass it off to manufacturers and government to find a way to make us eco-friendly. But as he also pointed out that a crowd of less than fifty people who came to listen to him, how small they were as a gathering compared to the 30,000 people wandering the festival hall, eating free samples of organic-psuedo-food from disposable wrappers, climbing walls, or watching their children draw with crayons on paper and drink milk that had to be brought all the way from California. No one wants to hear what being green really means, since it may mean expectations from them


Majora Carter drew a somewhat more respectable crowd with her frank discussion of how a green economy could be coupled with the need for closing the gap in the economic disparity of the America diasporo. Something she is well well versed to speak about given her past successes in the Bronx. Too bad the hundred or so in attendance was a fraction of a percentage of those attending the festival in the name of being green. Of the truly green speakers I saw, Daniel Pinchback drew the biggest crowd, with his talk of apocalypse by 2012 and the use of psychotropic drugs. So there was green at the Green Festival

What is being Green



Based on what I saw, it was an "image" to be put on like a fashion statement. It reminded me much of the Hippy movement of the 60s, which I am old enough to remember. There were truly those who held the belief in
peace and the unification of humankind in love. Then there are those who just threw on the beads, hear band, tie-dye and dug the vibes of the Grateful Dead. I'll be curious as to who will emerge as the pop icons of the green movement, if there is a movement. I fear it might have been engulfed and absorbed by the Consumer Movement.

So what could have been done? As Sharif Abdulla points out, it does no good just to point out what is wrong. One has to have some suggested course of action. For starters, the food service could have been done with non-disposable dishes. Actually washing dishes doesn't cost more, it just redistibutes the cost back to the vendor, who can rely on the city for trash pickup costs. Parameters could have been set requiring exhibitors to use some greener medium of information dissemination than paper, much of which was thrown away unread. The event coordinators could have set up and vetted the exhibitors against a set of green parameters, meant to filter those who aren't really green and guide those who pass to be more green. I have to wonder, was there any real need for consumer products to be at this festival? Other than some textiles, I didn't see any consumable products that really were eco-friendly. Most all certainly sinned against nature in their manner of packaging.

So for those who really want to be green, best of it to you, but proceed with caution. Being green like anything good has become an industry from which opportunists will try to make money. And they know you want to be green

Friday, May 9, 2008

What No One Will Talk About: The Eco-Elephant in the Global Living Room

Overpopulation! Too many people for the Earth to sustain!


That's right! There are more people generating carbon footprints (greenhouse gas emissions)than the Earth can reconvert into oxygen (Continued below)





The curve of the population growth -- Hell, explosion -- exactly matches the the curve of the increasing global warming. And, no it is not a typical cycle of the planet. In the past temperature changes have related to cooling, not increased temperature (e.g. the ice age and the Dark Age). Neither of those correlate with population change so indentically.



Since the industrial revolution, world population has doubled every 40 years


The Global Warming - Population Connection

To learn more about the connection between population growth and global warming, click here

And we (the U.S.) are the worst contributors to greenhouse emission



Yup. We have less than 4% of the world population, but contribute to over 25% of the greenhouse emissions. But, you may be saying, China contributes more! On a person by person basis, no they don't. Each Chineses person's carbon footprint is 1/4th of each U.S. citizens carbon footprint. It's just that there is more than 4 times as many Chinese (1.6 billion vs 260 million). That means that whatever you do, eco-good or eco-bad, multiply it by 260 million. If you want to find out what simple things you can do to reduce your carbon footprint, click here


This message has been brought to you by The Council To Save The Planet!

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Global Warming, Population, Overpopulation, ecology, environment, speculative fiction, science fiction







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