1267724983 large Powerful Analysis of the Weaknesses in the Environmental Movement

The Nation’s Johann Hari writes a must read called, “The Wrong Kind of Green.”

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Harvard professor and author Juan Enriquez gives a terrific TED talk on the economy and emerging technologies.  The economic analysis is excellent.  In the first five minutes you will know everything you need to know about the global economy that The New York Times is not going to tell you.  The second part is disturbing and mind bending.  He predicts that advancements in our ability to engineer microbes, tissues and robots will, in our lifetimes, enable us as hominids to take direct control over the evolution of our species and other species, resulting in the ultimate reboot.

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Climate Solution: Plan B

by John P on February 2, 2010

c 02012010 520 Climate Solution: Plan B

I don’t think we are getting out of this structural recession until a whole new theme for economic development takes root on which to build the next long cycle.  I like using the Kondratieff Wave Theory to visualize this.  These waves are driven by big changes in technology (railroads, semiconductors) wars, etc.  The next big one should be alternative energy.  We’ve been on the cusp of it for decades but the old economic and political systems lock in the fossil fuel economy.

Still, I remain hopeful that we can get real Federal legislation to stop global warming.  I know it’s bleak politically in Washington, DC right now.  And the House bill on climate change (cap and trade) seems to be dying a slow death as people realize it is loaded with pork for the coal industry and is designed to create an ungovernable trading bubble in carbon emissions credits. We can do better.

There is a smart, bipartisan bill in the Senate to stop climate change, The CLEAR Act from Senators Cantwell (D-Washington) and Collins (R-Maine).  It puts a cap on on carbon entering the economy (the several thousand oil importers and domestic drillers, the same for coal and natural gas) and then auctions permits to these entities to pollute up to set limits.  The cap comes down over the years to get to what scientists say is ecologically sustainable for the planet. The revenues from the permit auctions are then distributed annually to every American with a Social Security number. It’s incredibly innovative policy architecture from writer and entrepreneur Peter Barnes.

There is a big policy fight around these two approaches in the environmental community but that seems useful.  A good debate will help the better approach thrive.

More coming.

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Economics Lesson From A Snake

by John P on January 4, 2010

story Economics Lesson From A Snake

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A little street theatre by Greenpeace to help us imagine how we might deal with global warming if we took climate change seriously.

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Climate Negotiations Update

by John P on December 15, 2009

I have been carefully watching the news from the international climate meeting in Copenhagen and I have seen little that gives me hope.  Nevertheless a friend forwarded me the following email message and I think it tells the whole truth honestly and sincerely.  He asks us to call the White House switchboard to urge the President to lead the climate negotiations out of the quagmire.  What can you say, he’s a student (University of Oregon School of Law) probably young, idealistic, naive, and inexperienced in the realities of global negotiations.  For all these reasons I love his letter and am going to make the call he asks us to make.
From: Tim Ream <timream@gmail.com>
Date: December 15, 2009 10:06:40 AM PST
Subject: Hopenhagen or Nopenhagen?
Hopenhagen or Nopenhagen?           
All,
As I write this, we are down to three days here at the Copenhagen climate talks. And I am afraid to say that there is almost no reason to be encouraged. Everybody has card to put on the table but no one is playing.
Actually, not everybody has cards. The Least Developed Countries, the poorest of the poor, and the Association of Small Island States, also mostly poor, have little to offer beyond their presence. Their emissions are so small they can offer little in the way of mitigation. They come asking for help to adapt as weather patterns change, storms grow and seas rise. They are being offered a tiny fraction of what economists say they will need. The only card they have to play is to pack up and leave, refusing to sign on to a national suicide pact. Their presence here is now on a hair trigger.
To gain some influence in the talks, they are aligned with a large group of developing countries that goes by the name of the G77. Other than the poorest countries, this group includes what have become known as the BASIC countries. Those letters (kind of) stand for the names of the biggest of the emerging economies: Brazil, South Africa, India and China. These countries have emissions profiles that are distinctive for a combination of four factors. They represent a significant portion of current global emissions and a large portion of future emissions growth, but they do not represent a significant proportion of historic emissions and their per capita emissions levels are far below the developed world. Each of these countries has made significant pledges to slow the growth of their emissions, but refuse to set absolute limits on growth for economies that includes hundreds of millions of people that still live below income levels of two dollars per day.
Distinctive among this group is China, now the world’s largest emitter, right behind the U.S. China is the largest emitter and greatest source of emissions growth, but relatively small in terms of historic emissions and per capita emissions. Chinese emissions are still one-quarter of the U.S per person. The U.S. has made China the prime target of these talks. China has proposed to reduce its emissions intensity – the amount of carbon emitted per unit of economic activity — by 40-45% by 2020. That is a significant contribution. If implemented and assuming the U.S. gets one of the bills now before Congress passed and implemented, China will still have emissions less than half per U.S. person in 2020. But the U.S. is pushing measurement, reporting and verification of that promise. China is resisting throwing its economy open to outside review. I hope China will move on this issue, but it is certain they will not move before others, especially the U.S. puts more on the table.
There is one last group of G77 countries. They are largely oil producers led by Saudi Arabia. For the most part they are here to stop anything from happening to the oil industry. They are not afraid to take undisguised action to slow or stop the process. In the end though, they don’t have enough power alone to sink these talks.
First among developed countries is the European Union. The EU is perhaps the most transparent group here. But their pledge of 20% reduction from 1990 levels is not what it seems. The EU moves as a bloc of countries and includes Eastern European countries that had high post-Soviet emissions in 1990. Many of those countries are significantly below those levels now, allowing other EU countries higher emissions while still claiming overall reductions. But the EU is likely to move to a 30% reduction if other developing countries move further.
Of course the meaning of 30% depends on how you count. The biggest factor on counting is international offsets. Those currently come in the form of financing projects in other countries for the benefit of emission reduction credits at home. A new deal could significantly expand these offsets while also including a bunch of new credits from forestry projects in developing countries. My biggest worry for the last month has been that some kind of weak forest deal will get done here and be sold to the public as saving the forest to save the climate. So far what is on the table on forests is largely a greenwash for covering up general inaction.
After the EU comes a group of developed countries called the Umbrella Group, including Japan, Russia, Canada, Australia. These countries are a mixed bag. Canada is horrible and claims it is horrible because the U.S. is horrible. Russia is sitting on a load of hot air. That is the term for the emissions credits based on those higher 1990 levels that I talked about earlier. Russia can claim to reduce emissions about 40% below 1990 levels while nonetheless actually increasing emissions and selling that hot air to polluting countries. Japan under its new government might have a reasonable plan on the table but has been obstructive in negotiations. Australia embraces the general lack of ambition.
So it is clear, given this lack of action on the part of the rich countries that caused the climate problem in the first place, why developing countries say they need to see the rich countries move before they do.
Which brings me to the U.S. We are now proposing to reduce emissions a miserable 3-4% below 1990 levels. We have put no solid financing numbers on the table to help developing countries mitigate their emissions or adapt to the climate problem we helped create. We generally advocate for the biggest loopholes in the rules. Sometimes we even block proposals that everyone except OPEC supports. And we seem to be saying that we won’t pledge anything more, especially without China doing more. It is embarrassing to be an American at talks like these. I am incapable of defending my country’s actions.
What is especially frustrating is that about half of the biggest, richest environmental groups from the U.S. continue to back the U.S. negotiating position. They are like a broken record that argues that we can’t take strong action in Copenhagen because then the Senate will be scared off from passing a climate bill in the U.S. Arrgh! People used to say we needed a strong bill in the Senate to get a strong deal in Copenhagen. Now we are hearing we need a weak agreement in Copenhagen to get any bill in the Senate at all.
So it is easy to see why I say there is almost no reason to be encouraged. Almost no reason. Let me point out the cracks of light. First, other than the elites that run the show here, the world largely supports strong action on an international climate deal. The hundred thousand or so in the streets here on Saturday were just one example. Next the people I work with everyday are tireless, fierce and refuse to take no for an answer. It is almost impossible of believe that this level of dedication can fail. And finally, a solution lies in the hands of one man who can change everything.
President Obama could come here and unlock a deal that is fair, ambitious and legally binding. He could instruct negotiators to stop creating loopholes and blocking honest progress. He could commit to go beyond the weak levels proposed in the current bills before Congress. He could pledge to raise funds to help the world’s most vulnerable adapt to a problem that was created by our American lifestyles of consumption. He could sign up to a deal that has real consequences for the failure to meet commitments.
The amount of goodwill that would be unlocked in the world from the result of such action would be like a flood. So many people are waiting for leadership. There is a vast ocean of positive action held back by a dam of fear and self-interest. The kind of deal the world needs is all on paper right now in brackets; it simply needs to be released from those brackets, to be agreed. The leaders of 110 countries are arriving already. Everybody necessary to tackle this greatest of all problems head on will be in the same city on the same day with the same purpose. This can still happen.
When so many people all want the same thing and their leaders fail to deliver, it rocks my faith in democracy to the core. But I am not a quitter. Let me try one more time. Let’s give this guy one more chance to really be different. We effectively have three more days there in the U.S. to ask for what we want. So I am going to ask you to help.
I know, it seems like such a weak response to such a big problem, but let’s at least try. Let’s try everything we can to get the message to Obama that we want real leadership on this issue. Many of you have been asking me if you can share my emails. I am not only giving you permission to share or publish this email anywhere you want, I am asking you to please do so. Please share this email with anyone you think might care.
Then I am asking you to make that one phone call a day until this deal is done – White House switchboard – 1-202-456-1111. “President Obama, please show real leadership on the climate issue, not just a greenwash deal. Deepen our cuts, put long-term funding on the table and stop waiting for other countries to go first. Prove that America is the world leader we always claim.”
Again, I know it is a small effort on such a big problem, a forwarded email and three one-minute phone calls. But don’t let its small nature stop you. The Earth needs people who care more than ever. Rare moments in history arise when the way forward appears as a fork in the road. We’ll never know what might have or failed to have tipped the balance.
Please give a little push with me.
Tim Ream
Copenhagen
15 December, 2009

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Climate Solutions Orthodoxy Challenged

by John P on December 5, 2009

Something important happened this week within the community that is fighting to stop climate change. Two longtime and highly trusted environmental leaders threw sledgehammers through the orthodoxy that decreed a policy of “cap and trade” is what is needed to get climate change under control. Daphne Wysham, see above, crashed the orthodoxy with her piece in the Huffington Post:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/daphne-wysham/cap-and-trade-should-go-t_b_374255.html) and Annie Leonard’s just released second mini documentary, for which Wysham served as an advisor, this one showing the massive flaws of the proposed cap and trade proposals to avert climate change:http://www.storyofstuff.com/capandtrade/

Here’s why I think Wysham and Leonard’s 11th hour, Hail Mary pass may be saving the environmental community from what now looks like a colossal error. Trading has been part of the discussion from the outset within the international negotiations. Most environmentalists viewed trading with suspicion but believed these were small compromises to get the industrialized nations on board. I certainly did. The environmental community’s best lobbyists would get assigned to keep these loopholes as small as possible in the international negotiations. The argument from the polluters was that the industrialized nations could never get all the emissions reductions domestically, and needed to be able to trade for easier pickings from the developing world.

When Vice President Al Gore flew to the international meeting in Kyoto, Japan, 1997, one of his top conditions was for major trading provisions. Further, when the Clinton team blew the negotiations in den Hague, Netherlands in 2000 and the European negotiators walked away, it was because the US team was demanding an unseemly level of offsets for the US agricultural sector. While it gets complicated, the essence of it is this: a variety of schemes have been built into the Kyoto Protocol, carbon trading, carbon offsets and joint implementation, each of which allows continued global warming pollution for the promise of greater reductions elsewhere. Think of the Popeye character Wimpy who says, “I would gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.” The evidence so far is overwhelmingly bad, emissions up, financiers enriched, polluters gaming the system, even some early architects of pollution trading saying that it can’t work for a carbon market. Here’s an extremely well done report on all this that shows Leonard and Wysham are not talking about some small problems that need tweaking. Carbon trading itself is fatally flawed:

http://www.carbontradewatch.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=322&Itemid=292

Doubling our problem is the fact that many of these same schemes are included within the Waxman-Markey climate bill in the House (ACES).

The tedious exceptions that were allowed in order to keep the biggest polluters at the negotiating table have now, to steal a lawyer’s phrase, “become the exception that swallows the rule.” In essence, if you allow enough exceptions to a rule (stop polluting) at some point you no longer have a rule.

We shouldn’t be grouchy that Wysham and Leonard dropped this news on us in the final hour before Copenhagen. We should be grateful that they exposed the hollowness of the cap and trade approach before we inadvertently cheered its passage, only to watch emissions keep rising in the future. We now have a chance to get it right, to actually get down to the scientifically sound 350 parts per million, this time without the influence of the money traders or the polluters. Which makes me think about how wonderful it is that Peter Barnes has been patiently waiting in the wings with an idea requiring a cap without a stinking trade, and giving a dividend back to people instead: Cap and cash back. Check it out.http://www.capanddividend.org/

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A batch of emails were stolen and climate skeptics claim that they cast doubt on the evidence for human induced global warming.  The fossil fuel industry’s paid skeptics are all over this.  Upon closer inspection the emails don’t undermine the science of the recorded temperature rises but they do make you wonder about the temperament of some of these scientists.  Jon Stewart captured it perfectly.

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Scientists Hide Global Warming Data
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Health Care Crisis

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Climate Train Wreck

by John P on December 1, 2009

At some point along the way, the solutions to climate change got away from us.  The fossil fuel industry, like an evil mastermind in a James Bond film (but without James Bond to stop him), successfully co-opted the earnest attempts by activists, government officials and scientists around the world to stop global warming.  The exceptions, loophole and giveaways of the Waxman-Markey climate bill (The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009) that passed in the House and the proposed measures of the international climate treaty now overwhelm the goal of real greenhouse gas emissions reductions.

Today we hit a tipping point as scores of activists began to reach this conclusion, lighting up their social networks and blogs to say what has previously been unthinkable: to solve global warming, we need to start over.  Some even took to protesting the environmental groups that worked most closely with the polluters. Throw the fossil fuel industry out of the halls of Congress.  Get the polluters out of the climate treaty negotiations.  They have enriched themselves with subsidies and thwarted solutions.  Here are the two thinkers who finally brought us this clarity:

Daphne Wysham writing in today’s Huffington Post explaining why we have to get rid of “cap and trade,” and

Annie Leonard, the genius behind The Story of Stuff with her latest, The Story of Cap and Trade, a ten minute narrated animation that simply explains why we need to scrap this approach.

The Story of Cap & Trade from Story of Stuff Project on Vimeo.

Read Wysham, then listen to Leonard for ten minutes.  Then don’t get all spleeny.  Get mad and then lets get back to work.

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3601294800 a0686756b8 m Climate Change State of Play or, Eisenhower Calls off the Invasion at Normandy

Bill McKibben pulls it all together today in his Washington Post essay explaining what’s at stake if President Obama sticks to his decision to let the coming climate meeting in Cophenhagen fail.

Try to re-imagine World War II in this context.  Just before the invasion of Normandy, General Eisenhower decides not to send the Allied forces into Normandy.  It’s too windy, too choppy, the risk of failure too great.  Instead he says, “I will work with Allied leaders toward a more modest interim invasion and I assure you that we will have a really big invasion next year.”  That is exactly where we are on global warming when it comes to US leadership.  The fossil fuel industry sets the agenda, the agenda is to delay action, and politicians from both parties dutifully follow.

I remain audaciously hopeful that my President could pull this off if he chooses to.  The question is, will he?

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