Time for Upgradeable Cell Phones?

Quote of the DayArt not Oil

Mobile (cell) phone manufacturers continue to heavily market new products with new features so that the average person keeps their phone for only 18 months, said Zeina Alhajj, a toxics expert with Greenpeace International.

And that ‘lifespan’ is getting less with each year which is making a serious demand on natural resources..

“The next huge challenge is to stop this marketing and get the companies to make products that are both green and upgradable,” Alhajj said.

— See story on the Greening of the Cell Phone.

Questions, story ideas, potential assignments, speaking engagements contact: writersteve AT gmail . com (no spaces)

PlayStation 3 vs Global Warming

Stephen Leahyart not oil

Dec 18 (IPS) – This was the year that most people in the U.S. and Canada began to take climate change seriously and express hope that their governments would take action to reduce emissions — but it is unclear if they will take action themselves.

Last month, thousands of people stood outside electronics stores for three, four and more days and nights to be the first to spend 600 dollars for the latest electronic video game console, but how many would spend two hours protesting the inaction of their governments on climate change?

“There is increasing public support for action but I’m not sure there’s a willingness to do anything,” said Eileen Claussen of the Pew Centre on Global Climate Change, a U.S. environmental think-tank working with business leaders and policymakers.

Public opinion polls conducted last fall show that Canadian and U.S. citizens are clearly worried about the impact of climate change on their children and grandchildren. And they know their governments aren’t doing much to reduce emissions, the polls show..

The recent film “An Inconvenient Truth” by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, in which he systematically lays out the enormous body of evidence that the world is becoming dangerously warm due to human-generated greenhouse gas emissions, is the third-highest-grossing documentary in the United States ever and has been screened around the world.

But experts caution that simply raising public awareness of the problem is not nearly enough.

“The most important action needed is to establish a national policy to reduce emissions,” Claussen told IPS. “Cities, states, industry and business all agree we need a national policy.”

For example, the U.S. retail giant Wal-mart is both insisting that its 30,000 plus suppliers reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, and also informing people who shop in their stores about the issue, she said.

“But there won’t be a U.S. national emission reduction policy for at least two years and more likely four,” she added — in other words, long after the George W. Bush administration has left office.

Full story “The Climate Change Tipping Point?”

Contact: writersteve AT gmail . com (no spaces)

Organic Agriculture Reduces Climate Change, Poverty and Hunger

An Organic Recipe for Development

Organic food from Kenya

Stephen Leahy

Dec 18 (IPS/IFEJ) – Organic agriculture is a potent tool to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, but also to alleviate poverty and improve food security in developing countries, many experts now believe.

Organic agriculture’s use of compost and crop diversity means it will also be able to better withstand the higher temperatures and more variable rainfall expected with global warming.

“Organic agriculture is about optimising yields under all conditions,” says Louise Luttikholt, strategic relations manager at the International Federation of Organic Agriculture (IFOAM) in Bonn, Germany. IFOAM is the international umbrella organisation of organic agriculture movements around the world.

For example, a village in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia that had converted to organic agriculture continued to harvest crops even during a severe drought, while neighbouring villages using conventional chemical fertilisers had nothing, Luttikholt told IPS.

Because compost is used rather than chemical fertilisers, organic soils contain much more humus and organic carbon — which in turn retains much more water.

“They can also absorb more water faster which means they are less likely to flood,” she said.

It took more work to make the conversion to organic but it paid off when the drought stuck in the third year, according to Tewolde Berhan Gebre Egziabher, director general of the Environmental Protection Authority of Ethiopia.

Full story on how organic can reduce climate change, poverty and hunger.

Part of a series on sustainable development for IPS and IFEJ (International Federation of Environmental Journalists)

Related Stories:
Overweight? Hungry? Blame “Hollow Food”
Organic Provides 3X More Food Per Acre in Poor Countries – podcast
Food Additives Make Kids Hyperactive – Organic Better?
New Studies Back Benefits of Organic Diet

Contact: writersteve AT gmail . com (no spaces)

Thousands Lined Up for PlayStation 3 – Will Anyone Protest Government Inaction on Climate Change?

Larsen B Ice Shelf Collapse - Antarctica

While thousands of people stood outside electronics stores for three, four and more days and nites last November to be the first to spend 600 dollars for the latest electronic video game console, how many would spend two hours protesting the inaction of their governments on climate change?

“There is increasing public support for action but I’m not sure there’s a willingness to do anything,” says Eileen Claussen of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, a US environmental NGO working with business leaders and policy makers.

— see complete PlayStation 3 vs Climate Change story

Whales Worth More Alive Than Dead

Quote of the Day:

“There is no market for whale meat,” said Beatriz Bugeda, the International Fund for Animal Welfare’s Director
for Latin America regarding the Japanese whaling expedition underway in the Antarctic ocean.

 

“Whales are worth far more alive than dead,” Bugeda said in reference to the enormous whale-watching industry.


— see Sushi or Tourism: What are Whales For?

Blue whale, courtesy IFAW

Organic Agriculture Best Solution for Hunger, Poverty and Climate Change

Quote of the Day:

food-basket-austria.png

“Organic brings a wide range of social and economic benefits making it a much better and more efficient way of farming,” says Volkert Englelsman, CEO of Eosta BV, a European distributor of organic fruits and vegetables.

— Story on how organic agriculture helps the poor and climate change now available.

Plumbing the Secrets of the Ocean Depths

By Stephen Leahy

Dec 10 (IPS) – Incredible new forms of life have been discovered around super-hot 400new-species-of-squid-coml.jpg degree C seafloor vents, as well as under 700 metres of Antarctic ice, by the 20th scientific expedition of the Census of Marine Life of 2006 now underway.

For the next few weeks, scientists aboard the German research icebreaker Polarstern will explore the Antarctic seafloor, which has been hidden by thick layer of ice for more than 5,000 years. It is an unprecedented opportunity brought about the unexpected collapse of the Larsen B ice shelf along the Antarctic Peninsula four years ago. Now 3,250 sq kms of sea floor is accessible.

“Preliminary research shows there is a huge amount of diversity of life there,” said Ron O’Dor, a senior scientist with the Census of Marine Life (CoML).

“This is our first chance to take a good look at a region no one has explored before,” O’Dor told IPS.

The CoML is a global partnership of 2,000 scientists from 80 countries with a 10-year mandate to investigate life in the seas until 2010. Earlier CoML expeditions to the Antarctic have uncovered an astonishing community of marine life shrouded beneath 700 metres of ice — 200 kms from open water.

“We’re finding more new species than known species,” O’Dor said.

The great Southern Ocean is the least explored but perhaps the most important, as it is the link between all the other oceans of the world.

Climate change is warming the Southern Ocean and ice is melting in many parts of the Antarctic. Census scientists are trying to determine how the warming will affect marine species in the region, O’Dor says.

The Polarstern, the research flagship of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Bremerhaven, Germany, is the 20th Census expedition of 2006. It is also the first of 14 Antarctic expeditions being launched as part of the International Polar Year 2007-2008.

Complete “Plumbing the Secrets of the Ocean Depths” story here

Kyoto Gets a Slap in the Face from Canada

The withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol of one of the world’spicture-2.png leaders in fighting climate change could weaken a new agreement far beyond the 2012 scope of the treaty.

By Stephen Leahy

TORONTO, Dec 2 (Tierramérica) – Much to the surprise of most Canadians and the world community, Canada is reneging on its international commitments under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which could weaken an international agreement to fight climate change after Kyoto expires in 2012.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, elected early this year, and the new environment minister, Rona Ambrose, have dismissed Canada’s Kyoto commitments for reducing greenhouse gases as impossible to achieve.

They have also cancelled a five-million-dollar pledge to help least developed countries adapt to the impacts of climate change and have withdrawn Canada’s participation and funding of the Kyoto Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).

“That’s totally irresponsible… It’s a slap in the face to the people of small island states and Inuit people of the North,” said Enele Sopoaga, permanent representative of Tuvalu to the United Nations. His small island country in the South Pacific is experiencing flooding due to rising sea levels.

“I am extremely frustrated by the double standards of industrialized nations. Canada criticizes other countries about their human rights policies or about the death penalty while they are playing with the lives of island people and the Inuit,” Sopoaga said in a Tierramérica interview.

— Complete “Kyoto Gets a Slap in the Face from Canada” story at Tierramerica

 

Radio Ecoshock — Podcasting Latest Talks by Top Environmental Thinkers

Radio Ecoshock — Podcasting Latest Talks by Top Environmental Thinkers

Hear the latest speeches and interviews with leading environmental thinkers such as Amory Lovins, David Suzuki, George Monbiot along with environmental news and features at Radio Ecoshock. Vancouver’s Alex Smith trolls the media world to find the best enviro talk and puts it together in a slick, professional format. And Smith’s enviro newscasts serves up latest enviro news with a light touch and silly sound affects.

Check it out here.