Friday, July 2, 2010

Energy Independence Day Postponed In Sunshine State - Again

by dantilson

If you live in Florida, get ready for your electric bills to skyrocket. And if you're thinking maybe you'll go solar, don't count on any help from the government.

Recent events serve as a sad reminder that the State Of Denial is still stuck in the grips of corrupt and outdated energy policies and politics.

This past week, the Public Service Commission (PSC) responsible for regulating the energy industry fell victim to the business of politics as usual - or the politics of business as usual, same difference, as in none.



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About those New EPA Dispersant Tests

by jamess


Perhaps you heard about the recent EPA Press Release, regarding latest Toxicity Testing results for Dispersants.   Depending on which sound bite you heard, it almost sounded like Corexit got a clean bill of health.

Confused?  I was too.   And since I had previously written a well-received diary,

Corexit Toxicity Tests not so hot, When Mixed with Oil
by jamess  -- May 30, 2010

which dove into the Toxicity Data, that the EPA originally cited as credible only 2 months ago, I figured I should try to figure out what was up with the 'New and Improved' Dispersant Testing.

What follows is my assessment of what's happening now, including some relevant links.

I'll try to keep it brief. (I hate long diaries, lol)



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the 1st ekos independence earthship

by eKos

Please rec the BP Gulf Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership!

PhotobucketWelcome to the eKos Earthship, your one-stop-shop for green diaries and series.

Beneath the fold, find news and notes, community announcements, and our eco-diary roundup.

Peruse the eKos Library to find previously listed diaries. You can also follow eKos on Twitter.

Tonight's editor: boatsie

All views expressed by today's editor do not necessarily represent those of eKos or eKos listed diarists.



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Event Horizon: Mining copper & gold under the Deep Blue Sea

by worldforallpeopleorg

Photobucket

"The Chinese are hoping to recover valuable metals such as copper, nickel and cobalt – used in mobile phones, laptops and batteries – as well as gold and silver, in an area of currently inactive "hydrothermal vents", underwater geysers driven by volcanic activity."



Mining the seabed, thousands of feet below the surface of the ocean, is man's next move - in the search for materials for cell phones, automobile dashboards, countless other consumer products.



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After 11 Weeks of Distaster, Time for Freedom From Oil (PHOTOS)

by Phil Radford II Greenpeace

Eleven weeks ago, BP's Deepwater Horizon oil platform exploded into the Gulf of Mexico, killing 11 workers. Since the explosion thousands upon thousands of barrels of oil have spewed into this precious ecosystem, hundreds of wildlife have been affected, the fishing industry has been decimated, and an entire culture is being threatened.

Greenpeace scientists and volunteers have been in the Gulf since week one collecting data and exposing the largest environmental disaster of our time. Using our boats, planes and expertise we've helped reporters gain access to hard to reach areas and documented the disaster ourselves every step of the way. Here are some of our most powerful photos, along with those of others, to share with you what we've seen in the past 11 weeks. On Independence Day this weekend, let us remember that we have yet to achieve energy independence from dirty and harmful fossil fuels.



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Creator of Oil-Spill Videos Makes Us Proud to be from Alabama

by RogerShuler

Cross Posted at Legal Schnauzer

It's not often that a progressive gets to say, "I'm proud to be from Alabama."

But we had an opportunity to feel that way Wednesday night when environmentalist John Wathen appeared on Countdown With Keith Olbermann to discuss his dramatic videos of damage from the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

On issues of national importance, the most prominent Alabama voices usually belong to Larry (U.S. Senator Richard Shelby), Moe (U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions), or Curly (Governor Bob Riley). I hate to tarnish the Three Stooges' comic legacy by linking them to conservative Alabama politicians, but it's the best comparison I can think of.

So it was indeed refreshing to see a progressive Alabamian make heart-felt and intelligent comments on national television--even if it was about an ongoing environmental catastrophe.



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A Fracking Mess!

by thinkingblue

After viewing this documentary, I was mortified and ashamed of what our species is capable of. If you think this is a free country... THINK AGAIN! The Bush/Cheney administration did everything in their power to take away as many freedoms as possible so doors could be opened to allow THE CORPORATE "BEING" to have free reign on getting at any type of resource no matter who or what was in the way. I know it's hard to believe that they would go so far as to ruin our planet if only to make another buck. But with every dollar they get a nickel’s worth of power. The Power to Destroy. If you haven't seen Avatar I recommend you rent it. It is a chilling glimpse into the future of what can happen to Mother Earth when all her natural resources are depleted. Think it a fairytale? Another... THINK AGAIN! Watch the trailer of Gasland below and The Daily Show featuring the filmmaker of Gasland, Josh Fox. Stay enlightened, information may be the only weapon we have to help save our planet against The Corporate World who will kill every living creature upon it, if they are allowed. thinkingblue



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Introducing the Sustainability Studies blog.

by Nuisance Industry

My job's taken me away from writing on the internet much of the past year, but I drop in with online news.  Much of my past year has been spent developing an new undergraduate degree program.  It is now up and running, and (as of early June) Roosevelt University's Sustainability Studies program has a new Sustainability blog with regular updates about food, energy, water, waste, biodiversity, policy, and courses.  

Some sample topics below the fold.



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Scenes from a whale watch

by juliewolf

One of the major highlights of our trip was a large school of Atlantic white-sided dolphins following in the boat's wake.  I've never managed to get decent pictures of them before, so these were a particular treat.To start, a note: all these are thumbnails, pointing to photos over twice their size (just click on them to visit my web site).

Fair warning: I'm not going to include a lot of comments about the trip.  I just want to say that this is something I very much needed and I'm glad we made it, despite the universe's attempts to thwart us (I had to call Newburyport Whale Watch to ask them to wait for us, since we were delayed by traffic and construction).

After the other photos, I've got a couple comments, some personal, some political.



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BP Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership: 38

by Gulf watchers

Please rec the new Mothership #39 here. This one has expired.
The current ROV DIARY: Gulf Watchers ROV # 169 -  BP's Gulf Catastrophe - Gulf Watchers Overnight / Peraspera

  • We take volunteers for subsequent diaries in the sub diaries or ROV's as we have playfully coined them.
  • Please rec this mothership diary, not the ROVs.
  • Please be kind to fellow kossacks who may have limited bandwidth and refrain from posting images or videos.

PLEASE visit Crashing Vor and Pam LaPier's diaries to find out how you can help the Gulf now and in the future. We don't have to be idle! And thanks to Crashing Vor and Pam LaPier for working on this!



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A Day In A Dying Empire: An intimate fable on current events

by Phil Rockstroh

We stare at our glowing appliances while exquisite things are extinguished, forever ... mistaking configurations of pixels for the breath and brilliance of the world



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Green diary rescue & open thread

by Meteor Blades

Remember Michael Mann? He is the renowned paleoclimatologist and Pennsylvania State University professor who originated the much-criticized hockey stick temperature graph that appeared in the Third Scientific Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The graph, based on ice cores, tree rings, and other gauges, reconstructed thousands of years of climate fluctuations that showed we are in a helluva mess, with temperatures hotter than they've been in 2000 years.

Subsequently, Mann and some colleagues were defamed in the so-called Climategate affair, when hackers published emails supposedly showing that the scientists' calculations had been doctored with a "trick" to create a climate-change hoax. Much of the mainstream media and the right-wing global-warming denial industry rubbed their hands in glee. And they went to work on the scientists, calling into question three decades of climate work.

However, on Thursday, in the final act of an investigation completed nearly a month ago, Pennsylvania State released a complete exoneration of Mann. The panel that investigated him was unanimous in its findings:

The Investigatory Committee, after careful review of all available evidence, determined that there is no substance to the allegation against Dr. Michael E. Mann, Professor, Department of Meteorology, The Pennsylvania State University.

More specifically, the Investigatory Committee determined that Dr. Michael E. Mann did not engage in, nor did he participate in, directly or indirectly, any actions that seriously deviated from accepted practices within the academic community for proposing, conducting, or reporting research, or other scholarly activities.

End of controversy. Full stop.

Well, not quite. As Joe Romm points out at Climate Progress, there are some newspapers and other media outlets who owe Mann retractions and apologies. These include Newsweek, CBS and Wall Street Journal reporters Jeffrey Ball and Keith Johnson.

But, of course, the deniers just keep at it. They're aided by newspapers like the Washington Post, whose record on accurately covering climate change is tainted by its editorialists, columnist George Will and some reporters. In a Post story about Mann's exoneration, a prominent global warming denier was given space for rebuttal:

Myron Ebell, a global warming skeptic who directs Energy and Global Warming Policy for the libertarian Competitive Enterprise Institute, noted that the Penn State ethics review only interviewed one of Mann's critics, MIT climate scientist Richard Lindzen.

"It has been designed as a whitewash," said Ebell, whose group accepts contributions from the energy industry. "To admit that Dr. Mann is a conman now would be extremely embarrassing for Penn State. But the scandal will not be contained no matter how many whitewash reports are issued. The evidence of manipulation of data is too obvious and too strong."

Ebell is a professional liar with zero scientific credentials. Including his industry-funded bullshit in the same section of the newspaper is an affront to decent journalism. But then that is not a unique occurrence at the Post.

• • • • • • •

Green diary rescue appears on Thursdays and Sundays. Inclusion of a particular diary does not indicate my agreement with it. The rescue begins below and continues in the jump.

• • • • • • •

Haole in Hawaii showed us his dazzling photos of Lionfish and Other Amazing Critters, including Imperial Nudibranchs.

environmentalist described an exciting project in The Food Forest - Part I: Strategies for Green Urban Infrastructure: "As we all know, our development practices have created urban and suburban communities that are, for the most part, vast areas of paved surfaces, hot streets, dark roof tops and barren soil that contributes to despoiled water, polluted air and an alienation of people from nature.  And an alienation of people from food. Many diarists here on Dkos have brought forth exciting examples of urban agriculture, urban homesteading and other ways to bring green, clean and liveable to urban centers.  I would like to add to that library by proposing the creation of food forests (forest gardens) in urban public spaces."



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