Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Floods, Heatwaves, and Oil Spills... Oh my! {eKos Earthship Wednesday}

by eKos

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

Beneath the fold you will 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: Hopeful Skeptic

 Please remember to rec the BP Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership: 78

Also please support today's Gulf Recovery Blogathon Diaries and check out Pam's amazing diary on How to Help.

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



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US Offshore Oil Drilling Began Late 1800s

by War on Error

Early 1900s Off Shore Drilling, California
http://www.pennenergy.com/...

Never underestimate the USA's long-term planning abilities.   Off shore drilling is living proof of the private/public sectors long-term marriage made in heaven, well (no pun) if you are an oil Baron and/or their heirs.

I am beginning to understand Revelation's reference to seas turning red and fish being dead.



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Gulf Recovery: BP Worker Exposes Truth of Working Oil Spill Cleanup

by Project Gulf Impact

Project Gulf Impact wants to use its diary in the Daily Kos Blogathon for the next three days to allow residents of the Gulf to be heard. Project Gulf Impact is down in the Gulf right now conducting interviews and launching preliminary relief efforts to give the citizens of the Gulf a voice, a chance that is long overdue for Gulf residents.



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Gore: Cutting renewable energy program a bad decision

by Jed Lewison

Al Gore is speaking out against the decision to fund the $26 billion state aid package in part with $1.5 billion in cuts to renewable energy programs. From his blog:

US: Wrong Way on Renewables

As Reuters reported today, China is unveiling a $739 billion “new energy plan” which includes wind, solar and biomass as well as smart grid and distributed energy.

At the same time, Politico’s Morning Energy reported, the House of Representatives is returning this week to pass a bill that will slash $1.5 billion in renewable energy loan guarantees to help fund FMAP, a bill that will avert teacher layoffs and pay for Medicaid. Although this is an important measure, this $1.5 billion dollar cut is on top of the $2 billion dollars taken out of the renewables fund to pay for an extension to the Cash for Clunkers program. Taken together this is more than one-half of the $6 billion dollars allocated to the Energy Department for the Renewables/Transmission Loan Guarantee Program under the Recovery Act.

These rescissions put into jeopardy the green jobs that the administration have touted as part of our clean energy future and put us further behind the rest of the world.

This is really a perfect example of chasing the spiral downwards -- and it makes no political sense at all. Spending on alternative energy development is just about the most popular type of spending you find, and for good reason -- everybody understands that it's an investment in our nation's future, and it will pay off many times over, both because it will save us the expense of recovering from damage to our environment and because it will sustain economic growth in the future.

The litmus test this election isn't about which party can do a better job of managing the near-term budget deficit (which is going to be a disaster no matter how you look at it). The litmus test is which party can do a better job putting Americans back to work. Instead of cutting from renewable energy programs, we should be expanding them -- by an order of magnitude, if not more.

Talking about building a new energy economy and backing that talk up with new investments is a winning strategy. It will capture the public's imagination and inspire hope for a better future. Cutting those investments will do just the opposite.



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Gulf Recovery: Art to the Rescue

by Patriot Daily News Clearinghouse

Reports have discussed whether BP's use of dispersants simply transferred damage from the more visible onshore wildlife to underwater critters to hide the disaster. Add into the deadly oil mess the methane, methanol, and the "drilling fluids [that] add their own frightening recipe to the disaster: arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, barite, fluoride, chrome lignosulfonate, vanadium, copper, aluminum, chromium, zinc, radionuclides, and other heavy metals."  The EPA estimates that drilling fluids will remain a "threat to the seafloor and surrounding waters for up to 40 years."

BP has been quite successful in covering up so much of the environmental damages by restricting media access, buying scientists, and fudging/hiding/nondisclosing the facts. But the Smithsonian Museum has the data to prove some of the unseen underwater damages and a means to monitor recovery.



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Gulf Recovery: Who Cares About Health Effects?

by mogmaar

This diary is part of the 3 day Gulf Recover blogothon.  Thanks to all participants!  Enjoy!

BP has given $1.3 million to candidates and members of congress since 1999.  That's not even that much, compared to the $3.9 million that Exxon has given, or the whopping $4.4 million that Koch has given in that time. (Check the amazing dirtyenergymoney.com that launched yesterday for more juicy details.)

These are direct contributions, not including money funneled into 501c3 'educational' efforts or to libertarian think tanks.  That's before Citizens United opened up the gates.  This is normal operating procedure in Washington, and what does it buy the oil companies?



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Gulf Recovery: Ending the Age of Oil

by danieljkessler

With each passing day, the images of devastation from the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico demonstrate the incredible price we are paying for our addiction to fossil fuels. The reality that the wealthiest nation on earth was for months powerless to stop the gusher must be seen as evidence that world needs a commitment to ending the global dependency on fossil fuels.



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Gulf Recovery: Invisibility Cloaks & Time Warps

by boatsie


Meerkat Beam Up by rmanoske

Scene. Berkeley, CA. Backyard of Energy Secretary Steven Chu, April 21, 2010. 2:59 AM. PST.

Energy Secretary Steven Chu's red iPhone rings as he completes a metaversal portmanteauvian pole vault in the yard outside his Northern California home. The Nobel-prize physicist has been expecting the call.

"Mr. President."

"Chu. We're waiting for you. Bring the names. Every name associated with that that damned $500-million energy deal you Beserkerly guys signed with BP. Now."

Just seconds later Chu, dressed in his B-Dry 7 tie-died mesh shorts and "Nothing But Air" tee, vaults into  his  fluorescent resonance energy transfer unit, punches the polymer optical tweezer app on his iPhone and shouts the password.

"Meerkat"

He's gone.



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Gulf Recovery (I): Introduction

by noweasels

Good afternoon.  Welcome to the Gulf Recovery blog-a-thon: a three-day series about what we can do to assist the citizens, wildlife and eco-systems of the Gulf Coast.  Through diaries on a wide range of subjects –- by an incredible team of writers -- we hope to promote awareness of the continuing crisis caused by the devastating deluge of oil that has overwhelmed the Gulf since the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig on Tuesday, April 20, nearly four months ago.  

Hundreds of thousands of Gulf Coast residents have seen their livelihoods, if not their generations-old ways of life, threatened or extinguished.  Thousands –- perhaps tens of thousands -- of shorebirds, reptiles, amphibians and marine mammals are dead or suffering.  An entire eco-system is in danger.

It would all sound at least marginally hyperbolic, were it not all true.

There is so much to do.  And, as a community, we can accomplish so much. Please join us by reading, recommending, commenting -- and by taking action through the links provided.  



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Innovation of the Week: Handling Pests with Care Instead of Chemicals

by NourishingthePlanet

Read about Integrated Pest Management - a method of growing crops with minimizes the use of pesticides.



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BP Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership: 78

by Gulf Watchers

Please rec the new Mothership #79 here. This one has expired.
The current ROV DIARY: Daily Kos Gulf Watchers ROV #291 - BP's Gulf Catastrophe - Lorinda Pike

Gulf Blogathon diary is up: Gulf Recovery: BP Worker Exposes Truth of Working Oil Spill Cleanup - Project Gulf Impact

Rules of the Road

  • 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 Pam LaPier's diary 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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Life in Little Texas

by Miep

This is a crosspost mix from this on La Vida Locavore.

(crossposted from Right of Assembly)



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