Solutions & sustainability - June 13
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
The piece about Lewes was very positive, and featured interviews with, among others, Adrienne Campbell and Keith Ellis singing his oil song accompanied by a ukele! There was then a discussion with James Hartfield of audacity.org who argued that Transition Towns were about a return to the 18th century, and that the white van has been such a great invention that statues should be erected in its honour. A healthy dose of sanity and reality were brought to the proceedings by Jeremy Leggett, who argued that what was happening with Transition Towns is essential and that we no longer have the luxury of inaction. Give it a listen, but don’t wait too long!! Go to the You and Yours site at BBC.
Sharon and Miranda call their initiative the Riot for Austerity 90% Emissions Reduction Project. They choose the 90 percent mark because climatologists now generally agree that we need to reduce manmade greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by the year 2050 in order to prevent the melting of the icecaps and Greenland ice sheet that would cause irreversible change to the climate. Because American's emit way more greenhouse gas than most of the rest of the world's peoples, we must reduce our emissions by 94 percent in order to meet the planetary target of 80 percent. Sharon and Miranda rounded from 94 percent to 90 to make it easy (joke!). They have a Yahoo discussion group, where people who want to attempt the 90 percent reduction-or even less stringent targets-can discuss. The rules for the Riot for Austerity are based on the average US consumption in each of seven areas. The project targets are calculated as a 90 percent reduction on those averages. I've summarized the targets for each of the seven areas below. Added since I first posted: I want to emphasize that what I like about this project in particular is the community of people working together towards the goals. I really do believe that each of can only do what we can. These stringent goals are definitely not for everyone. I just thought it would be interesting to show you what some people are working together to accomplish. A community of people who supported each other in the single step of not using plastic bags or to go cups would be equally inspiring. Takers? Sharon Astyk rejoices at Today "We" is One More.: ...I never dreamed we'd have 500 people [in the Riot for Austerity proejct]. Now I'm starting to dream even bigger. What about 1,000 people? What could they do? How many people would they tell, speak to, influence? We could make music, video, art. We can speak out with a collective voice, and say not only "We can. You can" but also "We're here and we won't go away. This is too important." Less than 1,000 people began the march across India in Gandhi's revolution.
Measuring climate change is an act of science. Setting targets is an act of leadership. Our aim for this presentation is to establish a basic set of arguments that local planners and decision makers can adopt when advocating for local goals. The nested set of arguments, each with their own assumptions, are presented in order from global to local (with Canadian cities used as an example). 1. A global target for emissions reductions. 2. An equitable national contribution to global reductions. 3. An equitable distribution of reductions by large cities vs. small cities. 4. Within each city, an equitable contribution of federal & local efforts. As the global dialogue evolves, individual assumptions will change. Our interest here, however, is in creating a framework that will remove some of the arbitrariness of current targets while allowing for a degree of unity and benchmarking between cities. BA: Compelling graphics, but it would be very helpful if there were accompanying text or audio file to explain what we are seeing.
Called the "Climate Savers Computing Initiative," the new program has signed on computer makers Dell Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co., IBM, Lenovo Group Ltd., software maker Microsoft Corp., the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and more than 25 environmental groups, companies and universities for the energy savings campaign. The program will set new efficiency goals for computers and software tools that manage power consumption. It comes at a time when Silicon Valley has made clean technology a priority as it seeks to play a greater role in reducing the harmful effects of climate change attributed to global warming. |
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