Dedicated to expressing views on issues relating to climate change and energy.
Monday, October 16, 2006
Recent Books on The Threat to the Planet
• Field Notes From a Catastrophe:Man ,Nature and Climate Change.
Elizabeth Kolbert, Boomsbury 2006
Meet some of the world’s leading climate researchers who explain the dangers in non- technical language without sacrificing scientific accuracy.
• , Thin Ice
Mark Bowen,Henry Holt.
The story of the heroic work of Lonnie Thompson in extracting information on climate change from some of the most forbidding and spectacular places on the planet.
• The Weather Makers: How Man is Changing the Climate and What It Means for Life on Earth,
by Tim Flannery, Atlantic Monthly Press.
Emphasizes the effect of man- made climate change on other life on the planet. Continuing with business-as-usual could l cause 60% of today’s species to become extinct.
• An Inconvenient Truth, The Planetary Emergency of Global Warming and What we Can Do About It. Al Gore
A beautifully illustrated and extremely exciting discussion of the critical issues in global warming and a program of action for citizens concerned with reducing the impacts of the human contribution to the crisis.
New Childrens Book on Global Warming:
• The North Pole Was Here:Puzzles and Perils at the Top of the World
Andrew Revkin, NY Times eco-journalist, (Kingfisher Books,2006)
Many full color photographs, archival reproductions and photos of previous excursions make for a dynamic layout. Recommended for grades 6-9.
Global Warming in the News
Compiled by Hedvah Shuchman, BCAS
U.S. Supreme Court Gets Arguments for EPA to Regulate CO2.
Science, September 8,2006
The Supreme Court will consider the question this term whether greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide should be regulated as pollutants. EPA has used the Clean Air act of 1970 to regulate smog and other pollution from cars ---not greenhouse gasses. In 1999 a nonprofit organization petitioned EPA to change its mind. EPA declined and in 2003 a number of states and nonprofit groups sued. That case, Massachusetts v.EPA, is now before the Supreme Court and last month 12 states and a number of cities and nonprofit groups filed
Arctic Research Hints at Future Warming
by Patrick Tucker, The Futurist, Sept-Oct 2006 p 8
The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program has succeeded in taking core samples from the floor of the Arctic Ocean, a first for science. The samples contain the remains of animal and plant life several million years old. By analyzing the fatty substances in the cells’ membranes, researchers can determine the average temperature that prevailed during the organisms’ life. At some time during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum period (PETM) the earth released a great abundance of greenhouse gas (possibly methane or carbon dioxide.) into the atmosphere, resulting in a greenhouse effect and accompanying global temperature rise of 5 degrees C. This shows that if you pump a bunch of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere, the planet warms. This is a good analog for today’s greenhouse gas emissions.
Climate Change May Destroy Coast Fishing
National Wildlife Federation
Fishing as we know it could disappear in a few decades. Flooding of bays and estuaries on Florida coasts as a result of global warming. Predicted fallout of global warming will be increased disease among marine life, more outbreaks of harmful algal blooms, fiercer hurricanes and more extreme rainfall patterns.
In addition to the effect on commercial fisheries, sport fishing will be affected and that could mean a big dent on the state’s economy. In 2005 recreational fishers spent $3.3 million and supported nearly 60,000 job. Among the game fish species most likely to be affected are flounder, gray snapper, tarpon, bonefish , redfish and snook.
Feds Say Yes to Bio-based Products
by Kimberly Palmer, Plenty August/September 2006
In April 2006, Congress requested the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to start a program requiring federal agencies to buy bio-based products, which are made from renewal sources such as soybean oil instead of petroleum. The department says the program will help boost the industry and encourage the creation of more bio-based products. The USDA has a compiled a list of petroleum-based products that should be replaced with bio-based counterparts, including hydraulic fluids, roog and water tank coatings, diesel fuel additives, lubricants and linens. Hand-cleaners, sanitizers and germ-killers will probably be phased in. The USDA’s Beltsville Agricultural Research Center in Maryland, one of the first places to embrace bio-based products, already uses bio diesel fuel in its tractors, soybean oil as a lubricant for machinery and bio-based soap in its bathrooms.
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