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By Wesley Joseph

Use the outside air to refrigerate our foods?

We hear it all the time about how much energy our refrigerators use, especially if using an older model.  But little attention seems to be given to the fact that we put refrigerators into buildings that, in the winter time, are heated, even though there is free cold air outside.  Some climates even have cold temperatures year round and could really take advantage of the cold air.

No, I’m not saying that we should store our cold items outside during cold months: much of it would freeze that is supposed to stay at refrigerator temperatures (aside from myriad other complications that need not be listed here).  But I am suggesting that we can and should take advantage of cold temperatures nationwide.

How do we do that?

Well, somewhere, whether built into a wall, a cabinet, or in a basement or utility closet area, an insulated chamber would be allowed to monitor and draw cold air from outside as needed.  The air could be pumped into the unit with a fan, filtered as it enters the home, mixed with indoor air or slowly released into the refrigerator or freezer in small quantities (the air would be piped into the unit) with the use of a thermostat controlling temperature so as to make sure correct optimal temperatures are maintained.

A thermostat would also be set to stop accepting air from the outside when it would be detrimental (meaning, too high of a temperature) to the operation of the refrigerator or freezer.  The refrigerator or freezer unit’s compressor could then seamlessly kick back into gear to keep the temperature optimal.  In this way, users would not have to watch for unexpectedly warm days or for change-of-season days with large temperature swings.

“But no one is going to go to that much trouble to save a few bucks on refrigerator operating expenses…”

Oh no?  What about icemakers in our freezers?  Those have grown to the point that the plumbing now comes almost standard in most homes, because it saves people so much time from filling and emptying ice cube trays and the frustrations of running out of ice.  The convenience is great!  But how much of a niche product and plumbing offering was that when it first launched?  Yeah, and now it’s pretty much standard.

If you tell people that for a few hundred dollars they can greatly increase the efficiency of their refrigerators and improve their envirohuman impacts, some certainly would do so.  It would become even cheaper as these units and the necessary infrastructure could be built into new and renovated homes.   Refrigerators could come standard with plugged openings that could be employed for such uses, much as they now do with ice maker capabilities.

It was not so long ago that refrigerators did not have ice maker potential built into the units and slowly it became the norm because homeowners had the ability built into their homes.  Many come with the ability to add an icemaker unit, and the same type of “add-it-if-you-want” option could be used initially for this technology.

Just imagine how cheap the feature could be if the refrigerators had a small chamber added onto the unit near the bottom or on the back of the unit for such operation.  All you would need is a pipe nearby that had access to the outside with a built-in fan and filter, and you would be in business.

Homeowners choose such options all the time: think about not only the ice makers most people now use, but also units to remove radon gas from basements.  They are increasingly choosing solar electric or water heating systems, as well as other greener options, that are often costly upfront but eventually payoff both financially and environmentally.  Wind turbines are becoming more common on peoples’ roofs and properties, and a box on the back of a refrigerator would seem like nothing to that type of consumer.

How about commercial refrigeration?

Yes, think about all of the meatpacking and cold products industries, not to mention restaurants and grocery stores, that use huge industrial refrigeration units for keeping large quantities of foods cold.  Wow, what a savings for both the country and those businesses, in terms of pollution, energy, and cost savings!  Yes, it depends upon the climate and the time of year, but for many businesses, this may be yet another way to cut costs by improving their envirohuman impacts.

Now, if we could just get a major appliance manufacturer to put the same genius marketing behind that which launched that time-saving icemaker found in so many homes.

By Wesley Joseph

Since we’re discussing the environment, it’s important to step back and take a look at some of the aspects of our daily lives that might receive little attention, yet potential changes abound that could have a huge positive envirohuman impact.

So, standardized reusable shipping containers?  Yes.  At your place of work, you likely see hundreds of boxes come in the door, get unpacked, broken down, and sent off as garbage, or, hopefully, shipped out for recycling (or maybe you don’t see them, but they’re there).

Let’s take, boxes of printer paper, for example.  We all likely do some printing or copying in our everyday lives, or at least use paper that someone has printed information onto in our meetings and correspondence.  Billions if not trillions of sheets are printed daily.  Boxes, like those at the left, are used to ship that paper to our place of work, and, once unpacked, most of them make their way to the dock of the building in which we work, again, hopefully at least for recycling.

Recycling is a good way to continue the lifecycle of usable material, but it is highly energy- and cost-intensive for the very reasons of shipping, water use, and chemical, manual, and mechancial processes that all go into continuing the cycle of that product material, like the paper fibers used in cardboard boxes.  A better recycling process is one in which the material is reused again and again, hundreds, if not thousands of times before it gets sent off for recycling in which it gets broken down into its raw materials for future reproduction of new materials and goods.

What the heck am I talking about?  At your place of work, you likely receive a good deal of mail, which, hopefully gets recycled when you’re finished reading it.  But have you noticed the bins that the U.S. Postal Service (USPS), the United Parcel Service (UPS), and Federal Express (FedEx) use to bring your mail?  It’s usually a plastic-, angle-sided, open-ended container with metal reinforcements, that make these containers so reusable.

You might also receive beverages, like bottled water and sodas, that might be shipped in reusable hard plastic trays, like those here from Pepsi-Cola, that also can be reused many times before needed to be broken down again for recycling.  Although I recommend you choose a better beverage option: water, served from a reusable water bottle, these trays prove that shipping materials can be made to withstand repeated use, abuse, sliding and slamming all over the country (and world!) and that disposable, one-use shipping containers need to become a rarity.

Inter-office mail systems often reuse envelopes within a building several times before discarding them, which goes to show that there are many ways in which we have built the idea of “reusability” into our daily habits.  That’s something we need to take to the next level and push toward doing on an even larger scale.

On and off of postal and parcel trucks, beverage trucks, and others, we receive shipments of items from both reusable and those deemed throwaway, one-use packages.  But back to those boxes of printer paper.

Printer paper typically is packaged in reams of 500 pages, wrapped in paper, and placed ten to a box.  Because large businesses (and small ones, too) use so much paper, this results in millions of boxes being used for the purpose of packaging paper (only one of very many items packaged in this way) and then being tossed shortly thereafter.  Why not mimmick the boxes used by our postal deliverers?

We could have plastic ones made from recycled plastic product with straight sides, metal reinforcements, and a corresponding lid that would cover the box (just like the cardboard ones have).  In this manner, the boxes could be picked back up by those delivering the paper, be it OfficeMax or others.  The point is that reusable packaging for such industrial products, where the packaging does not even matter to the consumer, are a great place to start with reusable packaging.  USPS and Pepsi are already doing it, now how about others?

Certainly, the boxes may weight slightly more than the cardboard, however the fact that they are reusable will be a net monetary savings to the companies using them, and a net savings to the environment as our methods of shipping move toward clean, renewable fuel sources of the next decade or two.  Also, the fact that less paper will be used on packaging boxes would be even more helpful.

By Wesley Joseph

T. Boone Pickens, formerly an oilman, if you can formerly be one, is pushing forward with his plan to move most of the U.S. natural gas currently used for electricity over to the transportation sector, using it instead for cars.

It is a cleaner fuel, he says, plus, he says the fuel that is taken from electricity production (the natural gas) can be replaced with wind farms.  Pickens also notes that the U.S. has a great deal of natural gas, and even Al Gore has said (at least in his recent Meet the Press appearance) that he likes Picken’s plan and that the natural gas would be a good fuel for the intermediary between carbon-spewing gasoline burners and sustainable, all electric or hybrid vehicles.

On his site, Pickens lines out in about a 5-minute video (the text can be viewed here) that is one of the best short videos I have seen a while.  It succinctly tells, in layman’s terms, the problem he’s trying to work toward a solution on, and what the steps in his plan entail.

Matthew Phillip sent me a link to the Honda Civic GX you can buy that runs on natural gas.  Just make sure you have access to natural gas filling stations before you buy!

And how do you do that?  Check out this handy tool for seeing if you have accessible compressed natural gas fueling stations nearby.  Just enter in your location for a map of fueling stations in your area.

I like Pickens plan because on the economical and the environmental levels, it’s much better than what we’re currently doing and is a big step in the right direction.

By Wesley Joseph

It’s campaign season again, and voters have a hard time picking out fact from fiction among all of the different ads, articles, talking heads, and political supporters, not to mention a who’s who of lobbyists and industry insiders the public never sees directly (though we’ll often see the effects of their string pulling).

This article is another follow-up on the issues surrounding energy costs, oil supply, and alternative forms of energy, with a focus on how that may affect the environment as well as the economy.  The main focus the public has is on the economy and how $4.00 per gallon gas is impacting their pocketbooks.  But the focus is also on the political implications and the fact that we are also facing a broader problem in global warming.  To follow along, you may want to read back on this past article, as well.

Luckily, the two don’t have to be exclusive, and policies abound that can help these two issues.  We can reduce consumption through conservation measures, find plenty of clean alternative energy sources (looking at you, wind and solar), and reduce our need for fossil fuels altogether in the process.  These measures will help reduce the cost of energy as well as help reduce the chances of catastrophic climate change.

False Debates, and One Healthy Debate to Have

  1. Whether or not we should drill is not a good debate.  We should not drill because it would not impact prices for a long time, nor add oil to market.  The impact would be insignificant and after that impact, we would still be dependent.
  2. Whether or not we should give more tracts to oil companies who aren’t using all of the current tracts available is a ridiculous debate.  Let them use the available oil fields first and we’ll see how that impacts the market.
  3. Whether or not drilling is going to fix our problems is a false debate.  It will not impact oil and gas prices this year (though oil companies and mostly, OPEC, can manipulate prices to make it look as if it did) it would not bring more oil to market for about a decade and would not impact prices for at least as long, and then, just barely.  Meanwhile, we have to worry about global warming’s massive impacts worldwide, if we fail to give up our carbon spewing ways.
  4. There are better alternatives than oil in wind and solar power, and that is the debate we should be having: how much money should we invest in such projects?

Obama Giving Credibility to False Debate

Let’s start out with Democratic Presidential Nominee, Barack Obama’s, recent swaying on this issue in saying that he would consider allowing environmentally safe oil drilling if it were part of a compromise to pass a bill for more alternative fuels.  We’ll talk more about why that position is bad public policy soon, but first, let’s discuss how this pander is harmful.  And Senator Obama, “Environmentally safe”?  Like safe nuclear power plants and clean coal, these oxymorons do not exist.

Is it a pander?  Well, maybe he’s trying to give some room for the idea to fall apart (the offshore drilling proposal is flimsy at best).  Maybe he’s calling the bluff of his rival.  But this position seems to be an attempt to garner more votes or to help standing in the polls, because public opinion is currently in favor of drilling for oil.  So give some ground with out going back on the original position.  Some say he’s calling McCain’s bluff, but more on that later.

McCain, following in the disastrous footsteps of Bush, Cheney, and Co., is all out supporting more drilling, so his position is worse, but Obama lends their position some credibility by saying he might accept it as part of compromise, even though his position still is that he is against it.

Playing Politics with Oil

Sure, I realize he’s in a presidential race here, but Obama also needs to stand his ground on this issue.  The fact is that the oil companies already have leases on land that have predicted amounts of undiscovered oil in the neighborhood of 34 billion barrels of oil. This is nothing more than a last frantic grasp for tracts of oil before the Bush boys leave office and while this situation is ripe for public opinion to be behind.  If Obama is calling McCain’s bluff and sees this as a way to let the idea be aired and to break, well then he has even greater political skill than is evident.  But I’m suspicious that he’s giving too much ground, giving too much credibility to what amounts to a stupid debate, all facts considered.

That Shame Blame Game

While I’m blaming and shaming, I’ll go ahead and blame the mainstream media for not questioning McCain’s parroting of the oil industry’s lines (manufactured to get their hands on public lands).  For not informing people of the caveats related to drilling, for not digging into the numbers and disseminating it.  For paying more attention to ridiculous political ads designed to distract from the issues, than they do on the actual issues themselves.  Blame and shame!  Shame for not seeing that these debates don’t stand up to the basic numbers and facts.

Shame on the American people who are not doing their reading on the subject and are weighing in on an issue they think they know about just because they know how much gas costs now and because they heard that more drilling will decrease the cost of gas.  Obviously, they want to believe that because of the mess their bank accounts are in.  The politicians and mainstream media won’t want to point their finger at you — you’re the customer, and you’re always right.  Wrong.  Get it together and do some analysis.  The public is smart enough to deal with the cold facts, and you deserve to have them.

The housing crisis, the inequality gap that has steadily increased under Bush, the cost of energy, commodities, and food, all increasing in price has put the economy on the brain.  However much the state of the economy is hurting your situation, if you’re going to cast your vote in a public opinion poll, you should make it an informed decision.

The False Debate of Offshore Oil Drilling

McCain wants to help the oil industry get their land for future drilling, handing out tax breaks, easy leases on land that they don’t intend to drill on anyway.  Obama may put strong restrictions on it and allow it if it can garner a bill that includes large support for renewable energy sources.

But why would the oil companies drill?  If they already have land and ocean tracts that they could drill on, they have been given the a-okay to drill, why would they not?  I really don’t have an answer on that one, but I can say that it does not look promising for them drilling in other offshore areas, when they have land-based oil fields (again, looking at around 34 billion barrels here) where drilling is easier and cheaper and less hazardous.

It’s a false premise, folks!  They’ll say they’re going to drill, and then get the ocean rights, and then maybe they drill on some of it, maybe they hedge and say they didn’t find oil then later, when they want to drill, by golly, there’s oil down theyahh!

We Simply Should Not Drill.  Yes, Simply.

Even if, and it’s a big “if” here, they were to actually go and drill on the new offshore spots some want to open up, should we not demand that they drill in those places where there is no holdup to drilling at the current time?  No.  Yes, the fact that they have land they could drill on but are not drilling on it renders this a false debate, but no, they still should not drill on even that land, because it continues the use of oil (and the dependency that comes with it) and pushes the world closer to the brink regarding global warming.

We should not drill at all.  Simple point is that it would take about a decade, according to experts, to actually get any of that new oil to market.  And, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), it would take until about 2017 for it to make even a small dent in the price of oil and gas, if at all, because it is such a small amount of oil, when compared to consumption.  And they’re saying (the EIA) that it may not make a dent until closer to 2030.

To paraphrase a great commentary on this issue: Obama has come out and said that if Americans inflated their tires to appropriate amounts, we could each save about as much on gas as if we drilled.  It actually would save about 12 cents per gallon on gas (for those who have not already done it), which is more than the six cents it is estimated the new offshore drilling would save per gallon (perhaps) ten years down the road.

Yes, Obama said this and people jumped his case, as if this were his energy plan.  Conservatives handed out tire guages at an Obama event, as a jab at his oh-so novel idea.  That the current president’s EPA and Energy Department both list this supposedly wild haired idea as one way to increase fuel economy, and is supported by many McCain supporters, as well as the fact that it is a real way consumers can help themselves immediately with the most basic of elements, known as “air” seems beyond those making fun of the idea.

Pundits acted all dismayed, even though Obama’s plan, which calls for 10% renewables by 2012, one-million plug-ins by 2015, and efficiency right now, when compared to McCain’s, “more dirty oil, more dirty nukes,” his plan is far ahead regarding reason and environmental and economic security.  Investing $150 billion over ten years into these measures will help spurn public investment as well.

Still, at least one writer believes Obama’s position is calling Bush and McCain’s bluff on drilling, saying that the oil companies don’t really want to drill, esepcially if tax breaks they had been banking on are removed, if it has to be done in an environmentally friendly manner (hello, more costly!).  They already have offshore tracts and on land that they could drill on but are not.  Bluffing…  Maybe Obama isn’t pandering so much as giving the other idea room to fall through the floor.

What’s the Plan, Then?

Obviously, some efficiency would help in both the transportation and building sectors.  But for energy?  I gotta hit back on the Gore plan to shoot for 100% renewable energy in ten years.  Lofty goal, we’ve discussed it here before, but it’s the type of big thinking the country needs.

People start seeing cheap, clean electricity, more available and able to be dispersed than ever before, you think that more and more stuff (like cars and light trucks) are not going to start taking advantage?  Of course they would use it!  And unlike with oil and coal, the more renewable clean energy comes onto the grid, the cleaner our economy becomes, the less dependent we become on foreign oil and fossil fuels, the more secure our energy infrastructure becomes.

Public and private investment is needed, as well as efficiency spending.  The jobs that could be created by this would also help put people back to work, and make for a stronger economy.

A Call to Action

The most important aspect here is an informed public.  If the public can get up to speed on this issue, if they can share what they know with one another, if they can demand that the mass media disseminate the information and that candidates state real facts that are not just industry talking points, we can have an informed debate about how to solve these major issues.  Share this article and others you come across with your friends and other contacts, using the email and other functions found below.

By Wesley Joseph

“You, you, you – Ought-ah know!”


Local Newspapers Move Digital

Local papers are now being found on more and more mobile devices and services.


Now May Be the Moment for L.E.D. Bulbs

Light Emitting Diodes have been used for years in traffic signals.  Now, they may begin to see widespread use, especially in industrial applications.


Greener Hotel Rooms

Discussion of the hospitality industry in the U.S. and its efforts to make the industry greener, though (from the article) they’re unsure how ready American consumers are for such measures.  I would say that we’re definitely past ready for anything that helps.


States Sue the EPA

Some states are suing the Environmental Protection Agency for failing to set regulations to reduce pollution from ships, aircraft, and off-road vehicles.


Relevant Commentary from this week, applies directly to this week’s article on EHI, Removing the Fossil Fuel Blinders:

Costs of Oil Subsidies

A New York Times editorial regarding oil subsidies from other countries.


Can This Planet Be Saved?

Paul Krugman, columnist for the New York Times and professor of Economics and International Affairs at Princeton University writes about the current state of politics with regards to the environment and whether our politicians are ready to take the issues on directly.

By Wesley Joseph

This past week, I published an article about renewable realists, and how they should remain strong, in fact, vigilant, in the pursuit of clean, renewable sources of energy for a sustainable future. Here, I will outline some interconnected stories to the issues of energy, climate change, and national security. We need well informed citizens to keep these issues in the public focus, with an eye for new, real answers that solve our problems rather than pushing them off for a later time.

Let’s start out with a summary of current circumstances.

Main Problems of the Current Energy Situation:

  • Energy hurting the economy: Prices have gone up for oil, gasoline, coal, and electricity, to the point that both customers businesses of all walks of life are feeling the pinch at the pumps and the costs of manufacturing and transporting goods have gone up along with energy prices. The demand for energy continues to increase, and with it, costs.
  • Climate Change: Our carbon-intensive collective lifestyle has pushed the world’s atmospheric concentration of greenhouse gases toward a tipping point, after which we may see no chance of turning back, with melted icecaps, rising sea levels, flooding, millions of climate change refugees, the consensus of scientists worldwide is that life as we know it would be greatly negatively affected by the resulting rises in worldwide temperatures. Imagine great increases in flooding, ecosystem collapses, societal collapses, and even diseases that may be spread by pathogens able to live in warmer climates moving on to people who never had faced and built immunity to them. Scientists are predicting that there is great potential for the Earth’s poles to be iceless in summer months within the next five years.
  • Global Security: The above two situations are compounded by their implications on national/world security. Being so dependent upon oil in general and foreign oil more specifically limits the options for how our nation acts diplomatically and militarily. Basically, it forces our leaders to act a certain way because their hands are tied by governments who control large amounts of oil. Add the implications of impending climate change over the coming decades, skyrocketing costs from higher fuel demand and dwindling supplies, the addition of climate change refugees, and border problems throughout the world — you will see a monstrous problem has emerged. When these constraints are placed on a great many world leaders, the problem is multiplied and all the more complex.

To see marked improvement on these interwoven issues, we need large energy sources that are renewable, very low or basically no-pollution, much cheaper than oil and coal (which have dramatically increased in price over the last decade), and something that improves the economic and security of the U.S. and the world at-large. The world is waiting for an economy able to take on the huge expansion of the available technologies of wind and solar power to make them more cost effective for smaller economies. Mired in expensive, dirty energy sources, it’s time for the U.S. to step up to the plate and meet that challenge.

Let’s discuss some news stories from the past weeks that are shaping these issues, ones that may have a significant impact on how the policy debates regarding these issues are shaped over the coming months, and try to find common trends and possible solutions.

Governments Subsidizing Oil

Matthew Philip discussed this issue in an article a while back, here on EHI, regarding the environment and oil, but the New York Times just published a story regarding other countries subsidizing oil (and its fuel products) for their citizens. This has a mixed effect for the U.S. the world. On the one hand, it allows people to continue to consume, because they can still afford the gas, diesel, and other fuels, because of the subsidies.

Therefore, their consumption does not decrease as prices increase, because their governments are cushioning the impact of those higher prices (the citizens don’t feel the full effect of those price increases). This is good in the sense that because it continues to keep demand for oil high worldwide (and leads to even higher demand), it forces policymakers, companies, and individuals in the U.S. to look at other alternatives, like electric cars or hybrids, running mostly off of a clean energy grid, powered by wind and solar. As the costs of contemporary fuels increase, those alternatives are literally more cost effective and overall more attractive.

This is bad in the short-term, and potentially long-term. As demand increases, costs go up, but because those people are able to increase demand relatively independent of price increases (because of subsidies), the demand continues to increase, increasing pollution and making even more dire national security situations, as unstable countries and political leaders who own large oil supplies and can control the flow through transportation channels as well, gain more influence in world affairs.

The solution is to move forward with clean energy supplies (wind and solar) and infrastructure necessary for both energy transmission and hybrid or all-electric cars to be traveling our highways or even becoming energy storage devices that charge when they are idle and can resell energy back to the grid during times when the sun is not shining as much or there is less wind in a certain area. Then, once that techonology is widespread and made cheaper by economies of scale, it can be distributed further, transforming the world’s economy and future status (by reducing the emissions of greenhouse gases).

Politicians for Offshore Drilling

Many politicians have recently called for offshore drilling, most notably President Bush, who lifted the federal moratorium on offshore drilling (though Congress would have to do the same for it to happen) and Republican Presidential Nominee, John McCain, who is also in favor of offshore drilling.

What’s wrong with this picture? It’s irresponsible and is irrespective of what experts have said about the situation. Experts have said that it would take about a decade before any of that oil would come to market. Beside that fact, more oil wells have come online under President Bush, only to see the price of oil triple. No, I’m not pinning the blame of increased prices on Bush per se, but I’m pinning him with pining to the oil industry and potential voters for McCain who are antsy for even a sign of relief at the pumps. The very same goes for McCain, who we’ll discuss in more detail momentarily.

Such shortsightedness is not far from becoming actual policy, if, for example, McCain were to win the presidency and push for such a policy. His calls have led to a big boost in campaign funds from the oil industry, by the way. But Republicans are not the only ones pandering for votes; Harry Reid is facing a split in the Democratic Party on the issue, as he tries to make sure the issue of high gas prices doesn’t hurt Democrats in the coming election. Such pandering show the opposite of the leadership that is needed on this issue, one that has been shown greatly of late by former Vice President, Al Gore.

John McCain’s Lies Regarding Offshore Drilling

McCain is flat out lying about the offshore drilling situation or is repeating someone else’s lies and should get his facts straight. Given McCain’s recent historical misstatements (read: lies) about how the Iraq war has unfolded, I’m not holding my breath on him getting his facts straight.

First, he states that oil drilling and transportation are safe, even though he himself had to cancel a campaign photo opportunity on an oil rig just last week because of (depending upon who you talk to) either an oil spill in the Mississippi River or bad weather (Hurricane Dolly). Safe? More on that later. McCain touts that not even Hurricanes Katrina and Rita were able to cause any spills even though, according to Grist, the hundreds of spills, collapsed rigs, and damaged pipelines, due to these very storms, could be seen from space. By no stretch of the imagination has this proven to be an industry that is safe for the environment.

Second, McCain has stated, first that drilling would bring some psychological relief (this amid the ridiculous claims of one of McCain’s former top advisers, Phil Gramm, who stated that the U.S. was in a, “mental recession,” and that we had become a “nation of whiners”). After that didn’t fly as a credible assertion, McCain just started either lying or being played for a fool by repeating the oil industry’s lies about how quickly the oil would be able to come to market.

McCain has said that in some instances, within a matter or months, he is told by industry insiders, there could be more oil to market. Why does McCain get away with stating such lies, when the Energy Information Administration, under the current administration, has said, offshore drilling “would not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production or prices.” McCain, it seems, is full of it himself, played for a fool for repeating others’ lies on this issue, or both. It puts him in lockstep with Bush and Cheney on this issue, that is on the side of oil companies, who will lie to perpetuate an industry that is out-pricing itself against other, cleaner technologies.

Liars will be called what they are. We do not endorse one party or another on this website, and this should be a non-partisan issue, but has been highly politicized by folks in both major parties. On this issue, John McCain is a liar.

Gore’s Big Challenge

Al Gore has done a lot since leaving public office in early 2001. He has emerged as a strong voice to combat global warming, earning a Nobel Peace Prize and an Oscar for his activism. But he’s not satisfied with having boosted public awareness and support of better environmental policy regarding global warming. Now, he’s going further, enlarging the political space, as he says, so that politicians in office can discuss real solutions to these problems. Shame on both parties’ leadership for not taking bigger, better steps than calling for more oil.

Sure, Barack Obama, the Democrats’ Presidential Nominee, is not calling for offshore drilling, and is planning to spend $150 billion over ten years for clean energy sources, but where are his colleagues on this, and where are such ideas as a “Green Corp,” or other ideas. It’s a start, but it will take trillions, experts say, to create the infrastructure needed, and while the private sectore can and should kick in some of that total, more government funds will need to be shown to push forward the needed changes quickly.

Gore’s proposal, that is to change the U.S.’s electric grid over to 100% renewables in ten years, is buttressed by the situation we find ourselves in, which he succinctly states:

“When we look at all three of these seemingly intractable challenges at the same time, we can see the common thread running through them, deeply ironic in its simplicity: our dangerous over-reliance on carbon-based fuels is at the core of all three of these challenges — the economic, environmental and national security crises,” Mr. Gore said. “We’re borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to burn it in ways that destroy the planet. Every bit of that has to change.”

So why are politicians in power not willing to talk about anything beyond cutting emissions a measley few percentage points to 1990 levels by some certain year (what a horrible argument to be having) or as that overachiever-in-chief, President Bush’s policy has been, to slow the rate of growth in emissions? Well, for McCain, it means pandering to a group of voters for votes and to an industry for money, and for some Democrats, like Reid, it’s failing to call Republicans on this bad policy that exacerbates an already burdensome problem, have a national discussion about this problem, and try to find a bipartisan way toward a solution. Both sides doing their share of pandering on this issue provides a lack of leadership for the country. Obama seems to be one of the leaders in his party willing to see through offshore drilling for what it is: a non-solution.

Gore has taken on the risk of opening up this big idea, and now that many say it is a great idea (though maybe overly optimistic) it is up for grabs for any politician or group of politicians to lock onto as a policy goal and take it all the way to reality.

What Else Contributes to the Problem?

  • Voters may not be attuned to the long period of time before oil is actually pumped from the ground and that experts are saying that it takes years to even get to exploratory drilling. This makes this a situation ripe for pandering, which has happened, and then the other party has to decide whether or not to risk taking on the leadership needed, or also pandering to some voters, who the media are allowing to be lied to about the facts of offshore drilling, by a major party candidate for President (John McCain). This is a complex issue, hence the need for complex analyses.
  • People get trapped thinking about being able to stick with their old economy, of burning gas for transportation, of wasting electricity, of using coal for energy, if only carbon can be sequestered or safely stored underground. Ethanol, which has had a backlash, still persists as a mandated additive in many states’ gasoline. Democratic Presidential Nominee, Barack Obama, is very supportive of ethanol, more so than John McCain, who changed his position from the 2000 election to now support ethanol. Obama’s stance is obviously likely due to his close ties to the ethanol industry, even having campaign staff who lobby on behalf of the industry. Breaking peoples’ feeling of sticking with the old is difficult, but necessary if we’re going to move the economy to a clean fuel future. Ethanol has its current problems, but should certainly be looked at as an alternative fuel, if it can be derived from non-food sources, like garbage or crop refuse.
  • With the report last week stating that about one fifth of the world’s undiscovered oil and natural gas reserves are likely under the arctic ice cap, and near the edges, which may soon be accessible (ironically due to global warming) people may stick with the attitude that drilling more will solve the problem, because there is more oil. In reality, it postpones the eventual end of oil supplies for the problems to exist longer and to worsen before they improve.
  • The cost of oil is down to about $120 from it’s peak of almost $150 a few weeks ago. While the price is still high and is unlikely to dip below $100 anytime soon, it tends to break the momentum toward more sustainable fuel solutions because people may see some relief, or hold out hope for such relief on the horizon.
  • High prices of oil also can lead to even more drilling, often in areas where it was not worth it to do so before because of the associated high costs, so now oil companies are drilling in places that were previously not profitable to drill in (like parts of the Canadian tar sands).
  • Oil is not safe, and oil companies do not follow proper precautions. One of our worst ecological disasters ever, the Exxon Valdez oil spill, recently had its punitive damages reduced from what once totaled $5 billion to $500 million. And such pandering to an industry that can afford to pay for the damage they have done, even over a twenty-year span, if not within a year, should have to do so, as this would deter future careless hiring practices and other precautions not taken, both of which contributed to this disaster. And don’t forget Grist’s note, above, of the hundreds of instances of damage from hurricanes (which come by every year, by the way). The oil industry is more confident that they can get off easily when they make mistakes, and are therefore less likely to take necessary precautions.

The conglomeration of issues against the use of dirty fossil fuels, like coal and oil, can also work the other way, compounding issues that might favor drilling in the public’s eyes, these above points, taken together, may move public opinion toward more drilling, even though drilling in fact is detrimental to the main problems listed at the beginning of this article, the energy and the economy, global warming, and national security.

Solutions

There is no simple solution to the problems listed here, but there are examples of promising proposals, like Mr. Gore’s, mentioned above, to reach a sustainable future that could hold promise of solving parts of this issue.

For starters:

  • Mr. Gore’s proposal to move to a 100% renewable electricity grid is realistic in its optimism, because the technology exists and we need the political clout and financial means of conquering this task. Energy transmission, smart grid technology, the harware for producing the energy, all would take trillions of dollars to produce over that decade, but we’re already paying similar amounts into other economies for oil. Transforming our fleet of cars to electric or hybrid electric is a large way to move toward this future. The prevalence of political cowardice is the main hurdle for this proposal.
  • Fuel from garbage is a fledgling start-up arena full of small companies trying to commercialize the process. Because this would add little carbon to the atmosphere, it may be part of a future or a transition fuel, similar to the role natural gas could play.
  • Boone Pickens, an oilman from Texas, has begun a plan and even spending millions on advertisements to buttress support for his billions of dollars invested in both wind farms and transmission lines to move electricity in Texas from rural areas to urban ones. Texas State is slated to spend about $5 Billion on transmission lines, as well, further moving the state toward a sustainable future, and showing that this can be done with both public and private investment. Look for Texas to be an example for other states, or the nation on a whole, to follow, on the energy crisis.
  • Opportunities abound to transform our transportation, from having more electric or hybrid cars to increasing public investments in public transportation infrastructure, making it safer, faster, more accomodating, and available to more customers.

From reading this article, you may be more distressed because of the complexity of the issues here. But, really, that is only because it is a lot of information with a great deal of confounding factors and players, some of whom add to the confusion with disinformation campaigns (I’m looking at the coal and oil industriees, and their political lackeys). Even Mr. Gore said, from the quote above, that the situation is, “deeply ironic in its simplicity: our dangerous over-reliance on carbon-based fuels is at the core of all three of these challenges — the economic, environmental and national security crises.”

“Deeply ironic in its simplicity.” Yeah, it is. And what does it come down to? Try to separate those who want to do something new from those who want to do more of the same. More of the same is using more oil, drilling for more oil, and not putting the necessary political support behind drastic measures needed to alleviate the problems listed above. If you undermine the need for oil by finding other sources of energy for growing economies, the influence of those polical actors, large oil companies and nations controlling huge amounts of oil, is also undermined, and that is one of the greatest benefits to look forward to in a attaining a more sustainable future. Those nations and oil companies can transform and earn a seat at the table, also, by becoming active partners in moving toward renewable sources of clean energy. Just look at Boone Pickens.

Again, I say, renewable realists, remain vigilant!

By Wesley Joseph

“Weekly Green News Blurb | You Should Know,” is our newest series that we plan to publish each week on Sunday so you can come to work Monday and catch up on all your needed environmental news — the biggest stories you may have missed last week because the mainstream media drones on about celebrity arrests or is still talking about the latest missing person.  Yeah, that’s a jab at sensational journalism!

If you want sensational journalism, we have a real sensation for you right here.  Let’s go!


The Life of An American is Worth Less Now

The “value of a statistical life” is worth about $1 million less than it was about five years ago.  It has dropped to $6.9 million, according to the EPA.  Important for environmental regulation: When writing regulations (such as those made on pollution), the comparison of the cost of human life that may be spared by it and the cost of the regulation is compared, and if the cost of regulation is more, it’s unlikely that the regulation will be made.


Georgia Judge Blocks Coal-Fired Power Plant

A Superior Court Judge in Georgia stopped construction of a coal-fired power plants because the plant must limit its carbon dioxide emissions.  Judge Thelma Wyatt Cummings Moore delivered the decision against Dynegy’s Longleaf power plant near Columbus, based on an April 2007 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said carbon dioxide is a pollutant under the federal Clean Air Act.  The plant had planned to emit 9 million tons of carbon dioxide annually, about equal to adding 1.3 million cars on the road.  Cheers to this decision!


Chemical Weapons Destruction is Behind on Schedule

The Pentagon is considering moving chemical weapons to military sites in four states, prompting outcry from many legislators whose states would have weapons travelling through them if the plan were to move forward.  The move is to comply with a 1997 Treaty banning chemical weapons; Congress has declared that the U.S. should be in compliance by 2017.  Fears of the munitions facing traffic accidents or becoming terrorist targets has raised fears chiefly for the safety of the residents of those areas, and might I add the environmental degradation that could make those areas uninhabitable potentially for years to come.  Ribble Rabble Ribble Rabble.


Ex-Aide Says Cheney’s Office had Portions of EPA Report Deleted

Fearing that references to global warming gases as threats to human health, Cheney’s Office reportedly had such reference removed from a report made to Congress because it would make avoiding regulating greenhouse gases more difficult.  Who’s surprised?  Rabble-rabble!


Are compact fluorescent bulbs still a bright idea?

The Chicago Tribune gets it wrong on this one, pointing out that “there aren’t many recycling centers available. At some county hazardous waste collection sites you have to pay about $1 per bulb to recycle CFLs,” while omitting the fact that Home Depot is offering CFL bulb recycling for free at all of its approximately 1,000 U.S. stores.  There were exaggerations in the story regarding how long it takes for the bulbs to warm up and that the light is of low-quality, even though the bulbs have come a long way and most models produce a similar light to that produced by the incandescent bulbs they replace.

The article overemphasizes the fact that CFL bulbs contain mercury while ignoring the fact that the net effect is less emitted mercury from power plants because of the use of these bulbs reducing the need for power production — and that coupled with the fact that they can now be recycled for free at Home Depot stores means much less mercury being released into our environment.  The overarching story here is that CFL bulbs are both an eco-friendly option and a way to save money — now even more true with the free recycling option at Home Depot stores.


That’s this week’s Green News Blurb! See you next Monday with another week’s worth of the news that you may not have picked up in the papers or from your cable news.  Let us know what you think about the stories posted above in our comments section found below.

By Wesley Joseph

We’re not here to talk about all of that junk, but all of that in your car’s trunk.  The advice herein will likely save you money and improve your envirohuman impact.

As is often the case with improving one’s envirohuman impact, the math required is not only addition but multiplication. Travel is another case where multiplying the effect of your actions will likely yield a better indicator of where you could easily trim your negative impact.

With travel, the big multiplier is often the distance traveled. Let’s say you travel an average of 300 miles a week in your car (you commute and use your car for errands). In addition to the normal gear found in your car, you have left your hiking bag in the trunk since last summer. You don’t need that space for anything (typically) and you never know when the mood will strike you to take a hike (you tell yourself).

Seems harmless enough, anyway. Simple calculation will show us that if you tote an extra ten pounds of gear in your car, that’s equal to unnecessarily moving 1.5 tons one mile each week (300 miles X 10 lbs. = 3,000 lbs moved). That’s equal to moving 78 unnecessary tons of gear one mile each year.

And that’s calculating by only having ten extra pounds in the car.  If you have fifty pounds extra (some of us are looking down at our stomachs) with gas prices at the highest ever in the U.S., you would do well to cut out extra weight in your vehicle — folding chairs, baseball bats, the tools and excess wood you left after helping a friend with a project — it all adds up to extra weight that you essentially are paying for your car to move.

And all that junk inside your trunk (your hump.  your hump, your hump, your hump) might be a place to cut corners, too — (Check it out!) it costs money to eat, it costs money to haul “that junk” around, and despite what some will tell you about the sight of having a little too much back there, it is in fact, “unhealthy” to be overweight.  All insensitive joking aside, if you find yourself a little overweight, losing a little by moderate exercise and slowly decreasing your caloric intake to a healthy level (discuss this with your doctor or a nutritionist) could help both your gas mileage and make you a healthier person, less likely to develop heart disease or diabetes.  Food production and transportation in most cases has a significantly negative envirohuman impact as well, so eating less helps in that respect, also.  As if you need one more reason, having healthier eating and exercise habits can also be better for the environment.

And the environment pays, too! Burning through extra gas hurts your pocketbook, but it contributes to global warming and pollutes our environment as well!  So if it totals fifty pounds of unneeded weight average in your car over the course of a year, it’s like moving 390 extra tons one mile every year.  Depending upon the efficiency of your car (and driving habits), that could represent a lot of gas money, but also a whole lot of carbon dioxide and other gases expelled from your tailpipe, into our atmosphere!

Another way to look at it? Think of it as driving one ton an extra 390 miles every year.  So it might be pretty close to you driving an extra week every year, if the extra gear totals 50 pounds.  Whatever your average gas cost for a week of driving would be close to the cost of driving that extra weight around with you every year.  That’s costly for both you and the environment!

Action item: clean out the extra gear in your car. No, don’t remove needed tools, flashlights, and other safety gear you might need if your car breaks down or if you have a flat, but that baseball bat, folding chair, hiking gear, or other stuff you leave in there as a matter of habit should all be asked of it, “do I really need this in my trunk?”  Check not only in your cargo area, but the inside of the vehicle might also have extra unneeded gadgets that you might do well to leave at home.

The best way to improve your envirohuman impact via your vehicle is to leave it at home more.  Consider walking, biking, and using public transportation more, or even giving up your vehicle completely and using a car share program when you feel you “need” a car for a task or errand.

By Matthew Philip

“It’s the most wonderful tiiiiime…” – wait, wait, wait!  Wrong song, but right sentiment if you’ve got that little bit of a pyro bug in you to blow some things up this 4th of July, or Independence Day, if you want to get technical.

Seriously though, Independence Day is a massive celebration of all things American from hot dogs and Coke-a-Cola to plain old blowing things up.  If you had your own fireworks display in addition to watching the city or town display you might be wondering “What should I do with all of the used fireworks?”

Are Fireworks Recyclable?

First, a little background information on fireworks:  Most fireworks are a lethal combination of various highly reactive and dangerous chemicals.  Once ignited, these chemicals burn and react with each other to form the incredible light and fire show in your driveway.  While pretty in your driveway, they’re not exactly pretty on paper.

A common ingredient in many large fireworks (read: city fireworks not driveway fireworks), potassium perchlorate, is reported to be one of the worst for both your health and the environment!  A study by the Journal, Environmental Science and Technology have linked the chemical to thyroid damage and high levels of contamination in bodies of water shortly after large fireworks shows.

Unfortunately, due to the nature of fireworks being highly dangerous chemical concoctions, you really can’t recycle them.  Until someone invents the next “green” firework display, we’ll be left just trying to minimize our use and carefully disposing of them where possible.

So what does this all mean for you shooting off a couple bottle rockets or lighting some sparklers in the backyard?  Try these:

  1. Always use fireworks in one specific area so that clean-up is isolated to one spot and not scattered randomly around the property (preferably in one spot on a driveway, street, or other hard smooth surface)
  2. Upon clean-up, make sure all fireworks are completely extinguished and no longer even warm
  3. Use a broom to sweep all remains into a single pile to be disposed
  4. Don’t let everything sit out over night as this allows the chemical dust and ash to blow away and scatter throughout your neighborhood
  5. Collect the debris into a paper grocery bag or garbage bag and contact your local city council or city hall to find out if they have any special methods for disposing of the used fireworks

For the hardcore greenits, here’s some “pure plays” for going green this holiday:

1.  Enjoy a personal fireworks show at a friend or family member’s home, one show is less pollution than two

2.  Just attend your local town or city fireworks display instead of having your own show

3.  If you insist on your own show, how about having it online at this cool fireworks generator

Have fun, be safe, and don’t freak out too much over your Independence Day pollution as ultimately, according to Chemical & Engineering News, “most experts think the level of pollution from shooting off fireworks outdoors a couple of times per year is actually pretty small.”

By Wesley Joseph

Recently, it was reported that there have been $1,000,000,000 (yes, that’s a billion dollars) donated to political campaigns for the U.S. Presidency this election cycle. What does that mean for the environment?

Well, we can wish that it would mean that the two main campaigns remaining — those of Senators John McCain and Barack Obama — would not spend so much of their piece of that money on polluting activities (FYI: much of the $1 Billion was donated to other candidates in the primaries).

Alas, much of that money will be spent on T.V. commercials, which while not eco-friendly, pale in comparison to the mailers sent out, the plastic and metal signs put up in yards and on street corners across the United States, and the jet and motorcade costs of the candidates’ campaign travel activities.  After all, chances are, those televisions are already being watched, but that charter bus or plane is not being flown on any one person’s behalf, except for the candidate using it.

What voters could hope for from the two candidates would be a little less talk about what he would do as President to green the country (both candidates have given major speeches regarding issues pertaining to the environment), that is, until they have outlined what it is his campaign is doing to green its activities.

Certainly, a long, grueling campaign includes much travel, paper advertisements, and signage on behalf of candidates.  But the near silence of the two campaigns pertaining to greener campaigning, including possible carbon offsets, signage and paper leaflet turn-in points at the polls (fat chance on that one!), etc. is regrettable.  What if the campaign volunteers near the polling places agreed to collect recyclable paper, bottles, cans, and other materials, especially campaign materials, to help make a statement and potentially counteract some of their campaigns’ negative envirohuman impact?  Targeting communities where recycling facilities currently do not exist would make an extra good impact.

Now is the time to set an example for how a leader would lead. Senator McCain and Senator Obama, how are you improving the envirohuman impact of your individual campaigns for the White House? The planet is dying to know!

Weigh in on this issue: what can we reasonably expect from candidates’ campaigns regarding making them more eco-friendly?