Creating community progress through cooperative solutions.
This is about the future of San Diego, we focus upon renewable energy technologies, and our shared environment: food, water, and land use issues.
For the first time in six years, National Public Radio has aired episodes about global warming without excuse or apology. The new book "Global Weirdness", by Michael Lemonick, makes no bones about it, we are going to see rough seas ahead.
According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the past year through June 2012 has been the hottest year in the continental U.S. since modern record-keeping started in 1895.
"While it's true that the primary effect of carbon dioxide buildup is to warm the Earth and to change the climate, some of that carbon dioxide is absorbed by the oceans, and when water absorbs carbon dioxide, it becomes more acidic. ... That has some implications for sea life, especially organisms that form shells: In an acidic environment it's harder to form a shell, and because a lot of these organisms are at the very base of the ocean food chain, there could be some real disruptions to that part of our food supply. "
Severe Storms, Deadly Heat Waves, Relentless Drought, Rising Seas, and the Weather of the Future.published by the nonprofit research organization Climate Central
I love sushi, but high priced fish is often mislabeled. One of the biggest problems I run into with food is that I can't know for sure what I'm eating. There have been studies that show that most of what we eat in Sushi Restaurants is mislabeled. This is fraud, they are tricking the consumers into eating cheap or endangered species instead of the expensive premium fish they are charging you for. In Japan, using species substitution, fishermen sell illegal dolphin meat, labeled as whale, for school lunches, dosing kids with mercury, a known neurotoxin. Read more at Oceana.org ...
Now EarthSky reports that a clever team of scientists is planing to use cell phone bar-code readers to give consumers more of the information they need to make good choices for the environment.
David Schindel said: “The image that some people have in mind is being
able to sit down to a restaurant meal and take out your smart phone and
scan a barcode on the menu and find out more about how the dish is
prepared, but also about the species. Where was it fished? What
fisherman caught this? When it was caught? Was it tested? Does this
fisherman have a good record of authentic labeling? And all of that
could be on your smart phone while you enjoy a glass of wine and you
wait for your meal to be served.”
KQED's California Report notes that about 20% of all California Energy is used to provide water to our residents.
Check out the full story at the Climate Watch Web Page.
You might call that report, entitled California’s Water-Energy Relationship, as The Great Wake-Up Call. The idea that so much power could go into this one vital activity—moving and treating and using water—is both stunning and captivating. See the illustrated guide to how water and energy are connected.
Those who know Amory Lovins of the Rockey Mountain Institute know that he was one of the first to speak up about climate change and challenge the existing economy. I first learned about Lovins and RMI in 2007 watching a TED video in which he claimed "The whales were saved by profit seeking capitalist and technological innovators" (perhaps he spoke too soon). He offers a unique scientific vision of how business and industry should transition to a post oil economy, a synergistic model that claims that our entire energy economy can be replace through innovative efficiency and new energy technology with minimal infrastructure investments. Download his "Oil Endgame" here.
The Eight Guiding Principles of Rocky Mountain Institute
Advanced Resource Productivity: Using natural resources much more productively — efficiently — is both profitable and better for the environment.
Corporate Transformation: We view the corporate world, which environmental groups often dismiss as "the problem," as an essential part of the solution.
About Amory Lovins - Lovins has been a visionary leader in sustainable technologies and soft energy paths since 1976, when Foreign Affairs published his landmark essay, Energy Strategy: The Road Not Taken?" As the co-founder, chairman, and chief scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute, Lovins has briefed heads of state, consulted with CEOs, and worked with environmentalists to create an alternative energy strategy---and he contends his vision can be achieved with no new acts of Congress or government regulation, and no major shift in our lifestyles. A prolific author and entrepreneur, Lovins has received honorary doctorates and awards around the world for his inclusive and broad-based approach to creating a sustainable economy. In 2009, Time magazine named Lovins as one of the 100 most-influential people in the world.
Clean Tech San Diego and The California Center for Sustainable Energy welcome Amory to San Diego.
How Cleantech Innovation in San Diego is Lighting the Way to Economic Prosperity
Reinventing Fire:
Amory Lovins Talks Energy Strategy
Wednesday April 11, 2012, 5:00 – 7:30pm
Energy Innovation Center
4760 Clairemont Mesa Blvd.
San Diego, CA 92117
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Amory Lovins is reinventing fire, and CleanTECH San Diego and the California Center for Sustainable Energy are bringing him to San Diego to explain how it can be done. In his latest book, Reinventing Fire: Bold Business Solutions for the New Energy Era, Lovins argues that it is possible to run a U.S. economy that is 2.6 times bigger by 2050---without oil, coal, or nuclear power---and in ways that will make the economy much stronger.
Named by TIME magazine as one of the “World's 100 Most Influential People” in 2009, Amory Lovins is the co-founder, chairman and chief scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute – a nationally recognized, non-profit think-and-do tank in Colorado. He has been active at the nexus of energy and environmental resources and development in more than 50 countries for over 35 years, and is among the world's leading energy authorities.
Mr. Lovins will join CleanTECH San Diego President & CEO Jim Waring to discuss Reinventing Fire and how San Diego entrepreneurs and innovators are already applying some of his strategies for actionable solutions for the four energy-intensive sectors of the economy: transportation, buildings, industry and electricity. The event will highlight a number of clean technologies being developed in San Diego, and explore how they can be broadly applied to revolutionize markets around the world. The evening will conclude with a book signing and reception.
Reinventing Fire will be sold at the event at the discounted price of $30 (cash only). Reserve your copy here.
CleanTECH San Diego is a private, non-profit member organization formed in 2007. As one of the nation's premier cleantech cluster organizations, its mission is to position the region as a global leader in the cleantech economy. CleanTECH San Diego serves as a catalyst for a diverse group of stakeholders to advance a common agenda.
The California Center for Sustainable Energy ( CCSE) is an independent, nonprofit 501(c)(3) corporation that helps residents, businesses and public agencies save energy, reduce grid demand and generate their own power through a variety of rebate, technical assistance and education programs. CCSE also provides the community with objective information, research, analysis and long-term planning on energy issues and technologies. The California Center for Sustainable Energy promotes change for a clean energy future. www.energycenter.org
Wired reports yet another tragic use for tabaco is the manufacture of neonicotinoids like Imidacloprid. This popular toxic pesticide, imidacloprid, is a systemic insecticide which acts as aninsectneurotoxin and belongs to a class of chemicals called the neonicotinoids which act on the central nervous system of insects.
"Researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health '...have re-created the mysterious Colony Collapse Disorder in several honeybee hives simply by giving them small doses of a popular pesticide, imidacloprid.' This follows recently-reported studies also linked the disorder to neonicotinoid pesticides. What is really interesting is the link to when the disorder started appearing, 2006. 'That mech...anism? High-fructose corn syrup. Many bee-keepers have turned to high-fructose corn syrup to feed their bees, which the researchers say did not imperil bees until U.S. corn began to be sprayed with imidacloprid in 2004-2005. A year later was the first outbreak of Colony Collapse Disorder.'"
Now off patent, you can buy imidacloprid under many trade names: Admire, Advantage (Advocate) (flea killer for pets), Gaucho, Merit, Nuprid, Prothor, Turfthor, Confidor, Conguard, Hachikusan, Kohinor, Optrol, Premise, Prothor, Provado, Intercept, Winner, and Xytect.
(Note: You may want to sell your stock in Bayer, the Aspirin pharmaceutical company that created imidacloprid neurotoxin pesticides, they will likely be sued for all the damage to food crops, cooperate farms, and by starving nations for loss of production.)