• Cheap human-powered generator brings light to East Africa

    Updated: 2011-05-30 21:51:53
    A few months ago, I took a look at the difference micro solar systems were making for people in the developing world: a small system that provides enough energy to charge a light and a cell phone can change these people’s standard of living immensely. As you might imagine, companies like Barefoot Power aren’t the... Read More...

  • Cartoon guide to biodiversity loss XII

    Updated: 2011-05-30 03:42:12
    The latest six cartoons… (see full stock of previous ‘Cartoon guide to biodiversity loss’ compendia here). – Filed under: biodiversity, cartoon, climate change, conservation, economics, environmental policy, logging

  • More New Zealanders forced to look overseas to adopt

    Updated: 2011-05-30 00:55:29
    More and more New Zealanders are looking to adopt babies from overseas, largely due to falling domestic adoption opportunities. Read more...

  • UN and Ageing

    Updated: 2011-05-28 04:43:58
    The UN World Population Ageing 2009 Document. Read more...

  • E-Waste Management: The Big Picture (infographic)

    Updated: 2011-05-27 20:42:15
    Electronic waste (or e-waste) presents a number of challenges: its growth, its toxicity, unethical approaches to recycling… the list goes on. And while it’s a big issue in the United States, it’s not limited to us: the rest of the world is also trying to figure out what to do with all of those discarded... Read More...

  • Biofuels For Transportation: Been There, Done That

    Updated: 2011-05-27 16:56:28
    There is a great deal of controversy about the wisdom of diverting a significant percentage of the US corn crop into the production of ethanol to fuel cars.  Something like 25-30% of the crop will probably be used this way in 2011 which sounds alarming in the face of global food supply issues that have... Read More...

  • Memorial Day, 2030

    Updated: 2011-05-27 16:40:33
    The three worst direct impacts to humans from our unsustainable use of energy will, I think, be Dust-Bowlification and sea level rise and ocean poisoning:  Hell and High Water.  But another impact — far more difficult to project quantitatively because there is no paleoclimate analog [...]

  • Water wars? Thirsty, energy-short China stirs fear

    Updated: 2011-05-27 16:24:32
    Thanks to Don Wilkin and Fred Stanback for this article.  See http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42630131/ns/world_news-world_environment/t/water-wars-thirsty-energy-short-china-stirs-fear/ Water wars? Thirsty, energy-short China stirs fear By DENIS D. GRAY Associated Press BAHIR JONAI, India (AP) — The wall of water raced through narrow Himalayan gorges in northeast India, gathering speed as it raked the banks of towering trees and boulders. When [...]

  • Stop the Presses! Climate Progress is getting an Extreme Makeover, home-page edition

    Updated: 2011-05-27 16:14:43
    I believe a blog should get a big shakeup every two or three years, so Climate Progress is due.  The change-over will occur this weekend. On Tuesday, the new, improved Climate Progress will debut — fully integrated with my (big) sister blog, Think Progress, which itself is getting an extreme makeover. Here are some details: The blog is [...]

  • Report: Gas price spikes tax American economy to benefit oil companies

    Updated: 2011-05-27 11:27:44
    The struggles of families and businesses over the past seven years are linked directly to high profits for oil companies due to high energy price volatility. A new report from the Center for American Progress finds that families and businesses are exposed to massive price swings for the vast majority of their [...]

  • Join us on Facebook (and Twitter)

    Updated: 2011-05-27 11:00:41
    Climate Progress is now on Facebook. Help build our community of people like you who are passionate about climate and energy issues — “like” us and pass the word onto your network of friends and colleagues. Also, you can connect with us on Twitter and join the nearly 14,000 people who get a steady stream of [...]

  • Transportation Funding for Bicycling: an Economic No-Brainer?

    Updated: 2011-05-26 22:53:32
    Even the most die-hard supporter of our current personal transportation infrastructure (essentially, roads and bridges designed for cars) will likely admit that bicycling (and walking) has some fundamental benefits: a very low environmental footprint, a lot of saved money for those using bikes for at least some of their transportation (though just how much savings... Read More...

  • West Texas sees worst drought since Dust Bowl - Climatologist: "Along with the U.S., France, and China all are experiencing some pretty nasty drought that is going to have a major global impact on commodities, wheat in particular."

    Updated: 2011-05-26 21:30:19
    Parts of West Texas, Oklahoma and adjoining states are suffering from a drought that rivals the Dust Bowl of the 1930s.  Some scientists say this is a kind of “global weirding” heralding climate change. Were it not for the Biblical flooding of the Mississippi River and, well, Biblical whirlwinds slamming the Midwest, the “hellish” side of [...]

  • The Easiest Way to Grow Your Own Potatoes

    Updated: 2011-05-26 18:06:08
    I gotta admit, I’m something of a lazy gardener. I will always seek out the easiest way to plant vegetables and grow my own food. But I have some good excuses, too: I don’t like tilling soil because it disrupts the soil life, and why would I spend all that time weeding when I can... Read More...

  • Rohrbacher suggests trees cause global warming - With politics at play, will the U.S. commit to a climate fund?

    Updated: 2011-05-26 17:58:30
    Rep. Dana Rohrbacher (R-CA) was “one of President Reagan’s senior speech writers” from 1981 to 1988.  Reagan, of course, famously said “Trees cause more pollution than automobiles do.” So it is perhaps not a complete surprise that at a House hearing on UN climate talks chaired by Rohrbacher, he actually asked: “Is there some thought being given [...]

  • No man is an island, but thanks to record Mississippi flooding, lots of homeowners now are

    Updated: 2011-05-26 17:40:41
    File this under Annals of Adaptation or The Damn Bell is Tolling, people! Popular Science has posted an amazing collection of photos, “Amid Floods, Dwellers Turn Homes Into Islands.” They cry out for captions — and I welcome reader suggestions.  “Fortress America” comes to mind. Here are more photos, with captions courtesy of John Dunne: No man is an [...]

  • GE sees solar cheaper than fossil fuels in 5 years

    Updated: 2011-05-26 17:09:00
    Solar power may be cheaper than electricity generated by fossil fuels and nuclear reactors within three to five years because of innovations, said Mark M. Little, the global research director for General Electric Co. (GE) Of course, being cheaper than new nuclear isn’t hard when cost curves are moving in opposite direction (see “Does nuclear power [...]

  • Behind the Abortion War

    Updated: 2011-05-26 14:24:16
    From the New York Times.  See http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/14/opinion/14collins.html?_r=2&ref=gailcollins Op-Ed Columnist Behind the Abortion War By GAIL COLLINS Published: April 13, 2011 Part of the price of keeping the government operating this week is another debate over the financing of Planned Parenthood. Whoopee. At least it’ll give us a chance to reminisce about Senator Jon Kyl, who [...]

  • Why UN claims can be Dangerous

    Updated: 2011-05-26 01:58:23
    The UN's population predictions are being used to agitate for policy change in Nigeria. Read more...

  • Cancer Now Leading Cause of Death in China

    Updated: 2011-05-25 17:59:14
    By Janet Larsen Cancer is now the leading cause of death in China. Chinese Ministry of Health data implicate cancer in close to a quarter of all deaths countrywide. As is common with many countries as they industrialize, the usual plagues of poverty — infectious diseases and high infant mortality — have given way to... Read More...

  • Sustainable Wheat Production Through Intensification

    Updated: 2011-05-25 16:48:35
    Last week I had the honor of meeting Dr. Jason Clay, Vice President of the World Wildlife Fund.  We were on the same panel at CropLife America’s second annual National Policy Conference.  Jason got the opportunity to promote his main project which is influencing major commercial entities in the food chain to promote intensification of agriculture... Read More...

  • Humanity Can and Must Do More with Less: UNEP Report

    Updated: 2011-05-25 14:36:20
    Thanks to Eric Rimmer for this article.  See http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=2641&ArticleID=8734&l=en Humanity Can and Must Do More with Less: UNEP Report New York/ Nairobi, 12 May 2011 - By 2050, humanity could consume an estimated 140 billion tons of minerals, ores, fossil fuels and biomass per year – three times its current appetite – unless the economic [...]

  • The Best Vegetarian Friendly Ballparks

    Updated: 2011-05-24 23:15:55
    While we all may sing about “peanuts and Cracker Jack” during the seventh inning stretch, when we head to the food vendors at baseball parks, we’re more likely to go for hot dogs, burgers, bratwurst, etc. Unless you’re vegetarian, of course… and, in that case, you may just assume you’re going to go hungry during... Read More...

  • Dear Mr. Beck: We Are All Hookers

    Updated: 2011-05-24 14:36:27
    In case you missed it, Glenn Beck referred to Planned Parenthood clients as “hookers.”  Here is a response from RH Reality Check.  See http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2011/04/11/dear-beck-hookers Dear Mr. Beck: We Are All Hookers by Jodi Jacobson, Editor-in-Chief, RH Reality Check. April 11, 2011. Dear Mr. Beck, I understand it is your contention that “only hookers go to [...]

  • Faithkeeper Onondaga Council of Chiefs Says First, Do No Harm to the Earth

    Updated: 2011-05-23 14:16:29
    Many thanks to Oren Lyons, professor at State University of New York at Buffalo and Faithkeeper of the Onondaga Council of Chiefs – and a chief with the Iroquois Nation – for this paper he gave me when we met on May 6, which he had delivered in a talk at a Department of Energy’s [...]

  • Indians Join Fight for an Oklahoma Lake’s Flow

    Updated: 2011-05-23 14:11:26
    Thanks to Jack Martin for this article.  See http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/12/science/earth/12water.html?_r=2&scp=7sq=water&st=cse This article is the first in a series about struggles over dwindling water supplies across the United States. Precious Waters Indians Join Fight for an Oklahoma Lake’s Flow By Felicity Barringer Published: April 11, 2011 TUSKAHOMA, Okla. – Sardis Lake, a reservoir in southeastern Oklahoma young [...]

  • Jared Diamond: The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race

    Updated: 2011-05-23 14:05:31
    Thanks to Peter Goodchild for this article.  See: http://www.sacredlands.org/jared_diamond_01.htm Jared Diamond: The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race (Originally published in the May 1987 issue of Discover magazine, found at Iowa State University Agronomy 342 course materials, Ricardo J. Salvador, Associate Professor.) To science we owe dramatic changes in our smug self-image. [...]

  • 59 years old - the new young?

    Updated: 2011-05-22 21:23:37
    The pension’s minister in Britain is trying to convince the nation that 59 is not “old”. Read more...

  • Chaos, Collapse, and Survival

    Updated: 2011-05-20 14:46:52
    Thanks to Peter Goodchild for this article.  See http://www.countercurrents.org/goodchild130311.htm Chaos, Collapse, and Survival Peter Goodchild Systemic collapse, the coming dark age, the coming crash, overshoot, the die-off, the tribulation, the coming anarchy, resource wars — there are many names, and they do not all correspond to exactly the same thing, but there is a widespread [...]

  • Another Friday, another declining European power.

    Updated: 2011-05-20 05:08:50
    Lithuania's population has shrunk by 10% in the last decade. Read more...

  • Over-estimating extinction rates

    Updated: 2011-05-19 06:11:13
    I meant to get this out yesterday, but was too hamstrung with other commitments. Now the media circus has beat me to the punch. Despite the lateness (in news-time) of my post, my familiarity with the analysis and the people involved gives me a unique insight, I believe. So a couple of months ago, Fangliang He and [...]

  • Deconstructing the Dangerous Dogma of Denial

    Updated: 2011-05-18 14:47:20
    Thanks to Tim Murray for this article by Madeline Weld.  See http://candobetter.net/node/2373 Deconstructing the Dangerous Dogma of Denial: The Feminist-Environmental Justice Movement and Their Flight From Overpopulation Population growth, development, and stability: Egypt as an example Reports on the upheaval spreading like wildfire across the Arab world overlook a crucial factor underlying the collapse of [...]

  • Someone at the UN is not going to be happy…

    Updated: 2011-05-18 04:18:12
    Germany is planning to increase its funding of IVF. Read more...

  • The evil sextet

    Updated: 2011-05-17 18:30:48
    This post doubles as a Conservation Classic and a new take on an old concept. It’s new in the sense that it updates what we believe is an advance on a major milestone in conservation biology, even though some of the add-on concepts themselves have been around for a while. First, the classic. The ‘evil [...]

  • United Nations releases population projections to 2100

    Updated: 2011-05-16 22:01:25
    For the first time, the United Nations has projected population figures as far ahead as 2100. Read more...

  • 生态学 = ‘Ecology’ in China

    Updated: 2011-05-13 08:23:55
    I’m just heading home after a very inspiring workshop organised by Fangliang He at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, China (I’m writing this from the Qantas Club in the Hong Kong airport). Before I proceed to regale you with the salient details of the ‘International Symposium for Biodiversity and Theoretical Ecology‘, I am compelled to [...]

  • Youth are no Longer the Future

    Updated: 2011-05-13 05:46:53
    Statistics in NZ and the US show how these populations are ageing. Read more...

  • Charting Happiness

    Updated: 2011-05-10 02:30:11
    The Boston suburb of Somerville wants to become the first in the United States to systematically track people’s happiness. Read more...

  • Save the Children Fund’s Mother’s Survey 2011

    Updated: 2011-05-06 06:26:43
    New Zealand has been ranked the 6th best country in the world to be a mother according to the Save the Children Fund’s 2011 Mother's Index. Read more...

  • Japan’s Earthquake and the Politics of Demography

    Updated: 2011-05-05 03:16:54
    Japan is scaling back its child-subsidy program after the March earthquake and tsunami. Read more...

  • Tropical forests cooking their biodiversity

    Updated: 2011-05-05 01:30:30
    Another ‘hot’ essay by Bill Laurance recently published online by Yale Environment 360 (a publication of the Yale University School of Forestry & Environmental Studies). Bill asked me to relay it on ConservationBytes.com, so here it is in full: – Much attention has been paid to how global warming is affecting the world’s polar regions and glaciers. But [...]

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