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Barney says...

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The Alliance of Religions and Conservation (ARC) have issued a Statement of Faith for the upcoming Copenhagen climate summit on behalf of nine of the world's major religions, which together reach out to 85 per cent of the world's population.

The eyes of the world are on Copenhagen this week as representatives of the world’s governments gather to negotiate a new climate treaty. The urgency of a comprehensive, fair and effective treaty to protect the living planet has never been greater.

The world's major faiths have already created their own 'climate treaty' which they presented to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon at the Windsor Celebration three weeks ago in the shape of long-term action plans on the environment.

On behalf of the nine major faiths - Baha'ism, Buddhism, Christianity, Daoism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, Shintoism and Sikhism - ARC invites the governments of the worlds to reflect on what the faiths are saying on the environment and invites them to join the faiths on the journey towards a more sustainable and just future.

Responding to the religions' commitment, Mr Ban said faith communities had a major role to play in mobilising people for change: "You can - and do - inspire people for change."

And UN Assistant Secretary-General Olav Kjorven said, joined together, the world's faiths could become the planet's largest civil society movement for change and "the decisive force that helps tip the scales in favour of a world of climate safety and justice for future generations".

Please see attached for more details of the faith commitments. And for further information, please call Victoria Finlay, ARC communications director, on 01225 758004, or Susie Weldon, ARC media team, on 01225 758004; 0797 0466 830.

--
Susie Weldon
01225 758004; 0797 0466 830
Media team, Alliance of Religions and Conservation
www.arcworld.org
www.windsor2009.org


 













Filed under: environmentalism

IronHelixx says...


San Francisco, CA
September 15, 2003

This was not the first discussion of environmentalism as a religion, but it caught on and was widely quoted. Michael explains why religious approaches to the environment are inappropriate and cause damage to the natural world they intend to protect.

Full Speech: http://tinyurl.com/2ylnvl

Filed under: Environmentalism

Today, the conservation movement all over the world is under attack.  Conservationists have made great strides in protecting and preserving animals and ecosystems but there is a new threat looming over the horizon.  The game has changed, but the players have not.  The same old companies are still up to their old tricks but this time on foreign soil.  No longer able to pollute like they used to they have set their sites on impoverished nations that have very little if any, environmental laws.  As many lose their jobs due to supposed outsourcing, I see something much more sinister and it’s not cheaper labor.  It seems that companies who have histories of complaints, fines and lawsuits have suddenly relocated.    

The big polluters seem to be migrating to China, Indonesia and Nigeria.  Just look at their websites, most of their facilities are now located very far from their headquarters.  About a year ago, CNN did a very telling series called:  Planet in Peril (which I highly recommend!) they did a story on several companies with histories of chemical spills, deadly air pollution, and forest destruction.  And what they revealed was many had not learned and refuse to.  Instead, they purposely set up shop in impoverished countries and dangle dollars in the faces of those who have no choice but to work in their factories.  All the while the cycle of pollution, cancer, and corruption continues unchecked.  But to the people in those impoverished countries these companies are seen as a blessing, not a curse.  It makes it hard for one to preach on the virtues of saving the environment to people who are starving and miserable.  In some situations it’s starve, or be killed by poisoning.        

I know what you’re saying, Christina, they donate huge sums of money to charities every year.  (They even addressed that in Planet in Peril!)  I’d say you’re right, now here’s a revelation; most charitable donations are tax deductable in the U.S anyway.  Meaning, they’re not giving away anything they won’t see back in lower taxes.  Those who are involved in the movement or just concerned about the planet’s future are in for another fight.  And this time the conservationists are fighting uphill.          

So do you think the conservation movement in trouble?  

Filed under: Environmentalism

  Kleenex anyone?

I love marketing. I love marketing almost as much as I love my guns, and I love my guns more than I love my children.

The only thing that keeps us from oblivion and lower phone bills is marketing. Without it, we’d be cavemen living in substandard caves without carpeting or decent furniture. Marketing helps us upgrade. Marketing helps us improve this thing we call a lifestyle. Marketing keeps us from being swallowed up by mediocrity. Marketing makes us all appreciate freedom. Marketing is love, and while it is true that all you need is love, if you have marketing instead of love, you’ll be fine for a while, until you get lonely.

I had to go to the store and buy Kleenex (yes, it was invented to keep soldiers in World War I from inhaling mustard gas) because I’m afraid that the four extra large boxes we have at the house would run out if someone got a snotty nose before Friday. While calmly and rationally shopping and comparing, I noticed a clever bit of marketing.

This Kleenex box is tastefully decorated, but square. Square. Boring!

  Square box of Kleenex. [Yawn]

Now, I love Squarespace, but things that are square are dullsville, sir. Oatmeal and Orrin Hatch boring.

I shopped a bit further down the aisle and noticed something sexy. Something exciting. Something oval:

  OVAL box of Kleenex! Get some! Bang! Awooooooooogah!

Oval things make me want go bang! Ker-pow! Ker-splat! Yowza! And then do a leap in the air and do a quick tap of one shoe sole to the other.

Whoa!

Here’s why marketing is love: the square box has 90 tissues and costs $1.57. The oval box of tissues has 82 tissues and costs $2.64. That’s an entire $1.07 predicated on the fact that we’re buying ourselves into an endless cycle of spiralling debt and environmental catastrophe. And, of course, much, much higher phone bills.

Now, do I feel like an idiot because I bought both boxes? No, because, after opening them both and discovering that they contained the identical tissue, which is the two-ply white, sized 8.2 by 8.4 inches, I realized just how wonderful this world really is.

Consume, my children. Consume, spend, buy and enjoy. Build a pyramid of your possessions that only you can guard with live ammunition, live for today, forget about what the world might be like in a few months or years, and let the heavens shower down upon you with consumer goods and free samples. We can live like this forever.

Forever. 

Filed under: Environmentalism

Fish inside of a caulking tube

If you have spent time on the water in the blue water part of the oceans on this Earth, you'll know what I'm talking about when I speak of debris. I have never seen what is described here, but it sounds awful:

In this remote patch of the Pacific Ocean, hundreds of miles from any national boundary, the detritus of human life is collecting in a swirling current so large that it defies precise measurement.

Light bulbs, bottle caps, toothbrushes, Popsicle sticks and tiny pieces of plastic, each the size of a grain of rice, inhabit the Pacific garbage patch, an area of widely dispersed trash that doubles in size every decade and is now believed to be roughly twice the size of Texas. But one research organization estimates that the garbage now actually pervades the Pacific, though most of it is caught in what oceanographers call a gyre like this one — an area of heavy currents and slack winds that keep the trash swirling in a giant whirlpool.

Scientists say the garbage patch is just one of five that may be caught in giant gyres scattered around the world’s oceans. Abandoned fishing gear like buoys, fishing line and nets account for some of the waste, but other items come from land after washing into storm drains and out to sea.

Plastic is the most common refuse in the patch because it is lightweight, durable and an omnipresent, disposable product in both advanced and developing societies. It can float along for hundreds of miles before being caught in a gyre and then, over time, breaking down.

These giant whirlpools are where the garbage itself becomes encrusted with organisms and turned into floating carriers. As the organisms grow and multiply, their weight sinks the debris slowly, causing it to go down far enough to kill what it is on it and shed what is on it and then pop back up to the surface to do it all over again:

There are researchers trying to do comparative analysis of this problem:

Charles Moore found the Pacific garbage patch by accident 12 years ago, when he came upon it on his way back from a sailing race in Hawaii. As captain, Mr. Moore ferried three researchers, his first mate and a journalist here this summer in his 10th scientific trip to the site. He is convinced that several similar garbage patches remain to be discovered.

“Anywhere you really look for it, you’re going to see it,” he said.

Many scientists believe there is a garbage patch off the coast of Japan and another in the Sargasso Sea, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.

Bonnie Monteleone, a University of North Carolina, Wilmington, graduate student researching a master’s thesis on plastic accumulation in the ocean, visited the Sargasso Sea in late spring and the Pacific garbage patch with Mr. Moore this summer.

“I saw much higher concentrations of trash in the Pacific garbage patch than in the Sargasso,” Ms. Monteleone said, while acknowledging that she might not have found the Atlantic gyre.

Ms. Monteleone, a volunteer crew member on Mr. Moore’s ship, kept hoping she would see at least one sample taken from the Pacific garbage patch without any trash in it. “Just one area — just one,” she said. “That’s all I wanted to see. But everywhere had plastic.”

Yes, it is everywhere. It sounds like the Pacific Ocean truly has a problem with this trash. Finding a way to clean it up and turn the plastic into something that can be safely disposed of is a problem we could try to solve with better technology. An organization called Project Kaisei, cited in the article, is looking for a viable way to study this debris and use the material positively and wisely.

Filed under: Environmentalism

Oil Rig Fire, Timor Sea

In case you haven't heard, there's an oil rig on fire in the Timor Sea:

An oil spill disaster that could rival the impact of the Exxon Valdez is playing out tonight off the coast of Australia. For 10 weeks, a crippled deep-water oil rig has been leaking millions of gallons into the ocean between Australia's northwest coast and the islands of Indonesia.

It is bringing to light the possible environmental impact when offshore drilling goes wrong, as CBS News correspondent John Blackstone reports.

With explosive gas spewing into the air and thousands of gallons of oil pouring into the water each day the spill began claiming sea snakes, birds and dolphins.

The blowout is thought to have been caused by a fracture in a pipe 8,000 feet beneath the sea floor. Again and again over two months the Thailand-based company that owns the rig tried and failed to plug the well.

"We remain committed and resolved to achieve our goal," said Jose Martins, chief financial officer of the company, Pttep Oil. "That may require a few more attempts."

Just how much has spilled is uncertain. Environmental groups say satellite photos show its spread across more than 9,000 square miles and estimate some 9 million gallons have poured into the ocean - nearly as much as the 11 million gallons that escaped from the Exxon Valdez in Alaska.

While there may be some use of this symbolic image to try to slow down offshore drilling, you have to remember that the defenders of offshore drilling are going to attack this issue in several different ways. First, they may point out that the state of the art technology used by the oil rig is different from the state of the art technology we might be using off the coast of Florida or Texas. Second, they may point to it as an isolated incident, blown up out of proportion to how safe and reliable offshore drilling really is. Third, there is always the fact that oil and natural gas has always leaked into the ocean naturally, through deep fissures in the ocean floor. Even though I'm not a geologist, and I have never had occasion to pretend to be one to get a government loan, I do know that you can certainly fudge the amount of oil that it is possible to extract from a site. That might be another argument against banning or slowing down the expansion of offshore drilling.

Then there is an entirely different angle that I am afraid they might use, and that's the angle nearly everyone uses to attack anything Australian, and that's the "drunk Aussie" angle. This is so wrong, I hesitate to bring it up. The image of smash-drunk Aussies, dancing around a neglected bonfire, shooting guns and throwing fat girls into the ocean springs to mind.

Let's be brutally honest--the Australians are a bunch of drunken louts. They're not as bad as the Russians, but, bear in mind, a lot of Russians emigrate to Australian because their livers can't take the vodka anymore, and they move on to that weak Australian beer they serve down there. There's a term for this type of individual by the way, and it's "yabbo." When you think of a drunken Australian, dropping his freshly-trimmed short pants and howling into a rolled up sheet of aluminum like it is a ten dollar megaphone, think of the hateful implications of assuming that a rollicking yabbo party on the main deck of the oil rig, complete with Radio Birdman songs and sex dolls cavorting with wallabies, caused this disaster. Don't give in to the hate. Incompetence is a disease, and, brother, that disease has taken hold in Australia.

Filed under: Environmentalism

    Peat Moss

I'll bet you didn't know this, but, in Ireland, they use something called peat moss to generate electricity. They dig it out of the ground, chop it into bricks, and that's not all--they burn it and it actually works. It actually does what it is supposed to do, and that's no lie.

Well, it used to work. Now? Now it's a waste of time and energy, if you'll excuse the pun:

Ireland will stop using peat to produce electricity by about 2025 to 2030 as it moves toward renewable sources, although it faces infrastructure and financing hurdles, the state-owned peat energy company said.

Production of peat, partially decayed plant matter which is also used in gardening and often called turf, has long been a traditional feature of the boggy Irish countryside, making the country one of the top industrial producers along with Finland.

State-owned company Bord Na Mona, the only industrial-scale producer in Ireland, is not planning to open any new bogs however as it shifts its profile to renewable energy sources, and existing bogs will run out in about two decades.

"It's an important part of our history," Bord Na Mona Finance Director Michael Barry said in an interview. "It's not the cleanest fuel."

Bord Na Mona, which operates a 128 MW peat-fired power plant in Edenderry, west of Dublin, is increasingly focusing on renewable sources of energy such as wind and biomass as it phases out peat.

"We have one of the best wind regimes in Europe, the wind blows a lot here," Barry said. "One of the key obstacles is to do with the electricity grid and the resilience and ability of the grid to absorb new wind energy."

If you think of the craggy coast of Ireland, and the winds that blow in off the Atlantic Ocean, it's hard not to envision a powerful wind farm that could power much of Ireland. This is the kind of renewable energy that we need in this country, wherever there are ideal locations for wind farming. The Irish example is a good one--things are running out. Peat moss is running out. Oil is running out. Some other things are running out. It would behoove us to find the things that aren't going to run out and make better use of them.

Yes, yes I do have a blog...

Filed under: Environmentalism

   Dutch Windmills: Bat Killers? You Decide

Environmentalism and green energy technology--a collision best described as interesting:

Workers atop mountain ridges are putting together 389-foot windmills with massive blades that will turn Appalachian breezes into energy. Retiree David Cowan is fighting to stop them.

Because of the bats.

Cowan, 72, a longtime caving fanatic who grew to love bats as he slithered through tunnels from Maine to Maui, is asking a federal judge in Maryland to halt construction of the Beech Ridge wind farm. The lawsuit pits Chicago-based Invenergy, a company that produces "green" energy, against environmentalists who say the cost to nature is too great.

The rare green vs. green case went to trial Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt.

It is the first court challenge to wind power under the Endangered Species Act, lawyers on both sides say. With President Obama's goal of doubling renewable energy production by 2012, wind and solar farms are expanding rapidly. That has sparked battles to reach a balance between the benefits of clean energy and the impact on birds, bats and even the water supply.

At the heart of the Beech Ridge case is the Indiana bat, a brownish-gray creature that weighs about as much as three pennies and, wings outstretched, measures about eight inches. A 2005 estimate concluded that there were 457,000 of them, half the number in 1967, when they were first listed as endangered.

"Any kind of energy development is going to have environmental impacts that are going to concern somebody," said John D. Echeverria, a Vermont Law School professor who specializes in environmental law and isn't involved in the suit. "This has been an issue for the environmental community. They are enthusiastic; at the same time, they realize there are these adverse impacts."

We should find a way to switch to green technology without endangering a species--that's why Poindexter runs around with his pith helmet and his clipboard, trying to record the sounds of bats making sweet love in the air while they fly through the churning rotors of a working windmill. You cannot escape the conclusion that, if we don't switch to green technology, virtually all species are threatened with something worse than turbine blades, however. This is where you put aside your bias and try to reach a compromise.

The Endandered Species Act brings out a lot of controversy, however, and environmentalist vs environmentalist is nothing new. The first place to start is to try to find good statistics and see what the problem is:

To most experts, though, there's a problem with the bird-mortality argument: The vast majority of research shows that wind turbines kill relatively few birds, at least compared with other man-made structures. The statistics are shocking if you consider just how many people are crying out against wind power for the birds' sake:

Man-made structure/technology

Associated bird deaths per year (U.S.)

Feral and domestic cats

Hundreds of millions [source: AWEA]

Power lines

130 million -- 174 million [source: AWEA]

Windows (residential and commercial)

100 million -- 1 billion [source: TreeHugger]

Pesticides

70 million [source: AWEA]

Automobiles

60 million -- 80 million [source: AWEA]

Lighted communication towers

40 million -- 50 million [source: AWEA]

Wind turbines

10,000 -- 40,000 [source: ABC]

­

­Collisions with wind turbines account for about one-tenth of a percent of all "unnatural" bird deaths in the United States each year. And of all bird deaths, 30 percent are due to natural causes, like baby birds falling from nests [source: AWEA]. So why the widespread misconception that labels wind turbines "bird-o-matics"? I­t all starts with California, raptors and the thousands of old turbines that make up the Altamont Pass wind farm.

Fair enough, I guess. Methodology being what it is, I wouldn't just accept these numbers because I really question the accuracy--as in, how do you really know? There are multiple sources listed above--do they all use the same methodology? Does the AWEA reallycount how many baby birds fall out of nests? Why do I suspect that ABC's citation of 10,000-40,000 deaths from wind turbines is based on a different methodology than that of the other two organizations? That data seems to come from an assessment done several years ago to figure out what impact the aforementioned Altamont Pass site was having on birds of prey:

After years of study but little progress reducing bird kills, environmentalists have sued to force turbine owners to take tough corrective measures. The companies, at risk of federal prosecution, say they see the need to protect birds. "Once we finally realized that this issue was really serious, that we had to solve it to move forward, we got religion," says George Hardie, president of G3 Energy.

The size of the annual body count — conservatively put at 4,700 birds — is unique to this sprawling, 50-square-mile site in the Diablo Mountains between San Francisco and the agricultural Central Valley because it spans an international migratory bird route regulated by the federal government. The low mountains are home to the world's highest density of nesting golden eagles.

Scientists don't know whether the kills reduce overall bird populations but worry that turbines, added to other factors, could tip a species into decline. "They didn't realize it at the time, but it was just a really bad place to build a wind farm," says Grainger Hunt, an ecologist with the Peregrine Fund who has studied eagles at Altamont.

Across the USA — from Cape Cod to the Southern California desert — new wind projects, touted as emission-free options to oil- and gas-fueled power plants, face resistance over wildlife, noise and vistas. The clashes come as wind-energy demand is growing, in part because 17 states have passed laws requiring that some of their future energy — 20% in California by 2010 — come from renewable sources.

Environmental groups, fans in principle of "green" power, are caught in the middle. "We've been really clear all along, we absolutely support wind energy as long as facilities are appropriately sited," says Jeff Miller, Bay Area wildlands coordinator for the Center for Biological Diversity, which took 12 companies to court.

Let's say that they're in the ballpark then, and that the actual number rests between 7,000 and 70,000. Is that still enough to justify denying someone a permit to operate a wind farm? In order to establish a wind farm, you have to find a geographic location suitable to it. I would add that you had better have a handle on migratory routes as well--and these routes probably follow the wind as well.

There is a site where this data is housed, and it is called, appropriately, towerkill.com. I don't think anyone who wants to put up a communications tower or a wind turbine should ignore efforts to determine whether or not that particular site is damaging an endangered species. It's all about balancing different needs and different threats, and if we can't figure out how to make that work, we're all going to die, boiled in our own juices and forced to leave this planet. I plan to be buried here--do I want my children to have to get on a spaceship and leave me here? As the kids say, hells no.

I got you right here, homeys, yes.

Filed under: Environmentalism

Gary DeMar's writings are always thought provoking.  He always gets me to think through what I believe and how I see the world. Here is a couple of excerpts.

What would Jesus have done if confronted with the new technology? Would He have endorsed the mass production of the automobile when it was first introduced to the American public knowing that it was a polluter? 

Sanitary experts in the early part of the twentieth century agreed that the normal city horse produced between fifteen and thirty pounds of manure a day, with the average being something like twenty‑two pounds. In a city like Milwaukee in 1907, for instance, with a human population of 350,000 and a horse population of 12,500, this meant 133 tons of manure a day, for a daily average of nearly three‑quarters of a pound of manure per person per day. Or, as the health officials in Rochester calculated in 1900, the 15,000 horses in that city produced enough manure in a year to make a pile covering an acre of ground 175 feet high and breeding sixteen billion flies.

Read the rest by Gary DeMar.

Filed under: Environmentalism

Garth says...

Interesting. A very similar thing has happened here in far north Queensland when aboriginal people realised that greenies liked trees more than people, and were quite prepared to stab them in the back by doing deals with the Labor government over the so-called wild rivers legislation.

Effectively, Labor put its political interests, ie its need for green voting preferences, ahead of the needs and rights of indigenous people.

The Wilderness Society was happy to tolerate aborigines in its precious wilderness as long as they stayed poor and didn't get in the way.

It was almost worth it to see aboriginal people protesting outside a Wilderness Society function in urban Brisbane full of the usual white inner-city living upper-middle class suspects. You know, your typical Greens voter
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. - The leader of the country's largest Indian reservation threw his support behind the neighboring Hopi Tribe, whose lawmakers declared environmental groups unwelcome on the reservation.

Navajo President Joe Shirley Jr. and Hopi lawmakers say environmentalists' efforts could hurt the tribes' struggling economies by slowing or stopping coal mining.
 
Shirley said Wednesday that he will stand in solidarity with the Hopi Tribe, and joined Hopi lawmakers in encouraging other tribes to re-evaluate their relationships with environmentalists.

Filed under: environmentalism