2008 12 05
CKF Film Friday No. 16: Remarkable Green Inventions

Given the amount of hot air wasted by Canada’s politicians this week we thought it would be a good idea to explore some new technologies that just may—or may not—revolutionize the way we produce energy. The first video comes to us from Australia where a local inventor and his partner have come up with a prototype home generator that runs almost forever and requires one fifth of the energy it produces to work. It may be the long dreamed about perpetual motion machine (physicists can skip this one).

Then there is the “Wind Belt” system that harnesses the power of wind in a completely out of the box way.

And for the conspiracy theorists out there who love to hear about great, energy efficient technologies that have been suppressed, here’s one from eastern Europe you’ll appreciate.


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2008 11 28
CKF Film Friday No. 15: Gwynne Dyer On Military Planning And Climate Change

Gwynne Dyer has just published a serious book on the geopolitical implications of global warming. If you have not read “Climate Wars“ you should. Dyer holds a PhD in military history. He understands the military establishment. According to Dyer, the West’s military establishments have already started to plan for what they see as the next big justification for their existence. Listen to Dyer in this interview:

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2008 11 21
CKF Film Friday No. 14: Who Killed The Electric Car?

With the imminent demise of the big three auto makers upon us, it is time to look at the alternatives. Ford, GM, and Chrysler have taken their first-place stature in automobile manufacturing and managed to make themselves obsolete. Could there be a better case study on how leading companies can fail when they lose sight of the big picture: building products people really want.

How do films cover the debacle that is the automotive industry? First, let’s look at Australia SBS TV Dateline’s take on “Who Killed the Electric Car?” Part one:

Part Two:

Part Three:


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2008 11 14
CKF Film Friday No. 13: The Obama Chronicles

More than a week has passed since Barak Obama was elected president of the United States. As historical and moving an event as that day was, we are still faced with a collapsing economy, polluting cars, CO2, and a global environmental crisis in slow motion. The world needs a leader, but I worry that the obstacles facing Mr. Obama are beyond any one person’s ability to set straight (well, of course they are, but rhetorically at least we want our heroes to take on the biggest monsters or most Herculean tasks, and win).

Where does President-elect Obama stand on the big environmental issues facing us? Let’s ask YouTube. This commercial promises a lot. How does it sit in the post economic meltdown, save the auto industry reality of today?

How about this playing up the super hero theme from ZapRoot:

Obama on February 25th, 2008 lists the top environmental issues facing the globe. “The next president can’t be someone who tells you what they think you want to hear, but rather what you need to hear.”

Obama on the Bali non-agreement and other policy positions regarding the environment:


[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 11/14 Comment Here (0)
2008 10 31
CKF Film Friday No. 12: Investing In Green

This week’s film Friday menu offers up some less emotional fare. OK, actually, it is really dry—but worth watching. I have dabbled in the green investment sector and in the last two months have seem my holdings drop by, well, too much. So maybe the topic is emotional after all. First is the U.K. video from Cantos TV: How to make green investments.

And from Clear Sky TV:

From the Green Business Summit we have that great Wall Street pariah T Boone Pickins (yes, that one) telling us how to invest in green. The irony doesn’t escape me on this one, but, on the other hand, he does know the markets:

If you are still up to it, here is part two of Mr. Pickins.


[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 10/31 Comment Here (0)
2008 10 24
CKF Film Friday No. 11: The Evils Of Coal

Crude Substitute: The Folly of Liquid Coal
Ready for some good old fashion “bait & switch” from the coal industry? Watch this video and be prepared for the next best thing from US energy producers. Can we reduce our carbon output by 80% in forty years? Not this way.

Here is something from britannica.com (yes that one) on coal produced acid rain.

Want to know what has powered China’s industrial revolution? You guessed it. An “ill wind is blowing . . . to the US.”

Al Gore on what new coal power generation must look like.


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2008 10 17
CKF Film Friday No. 10: The Carbon Tax Edition

Canada’s Liberal Party lost votes (not to mention the election) this week when its much-discussed Carbon Tax proved too much for voters to support. In order to further flame the passionate debate, this week’s Film Friday brings you the Carbon Tax story in video.

First, Al Gore on carbon taxes…

David Suzuki’s take on carbon and taxes…

Kenneth Green on revenue neutral carbon taxes… Does he manage to sell the idea?

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2008 10 03
CKF Film Friday No. 9: What Happens To Our Old Computers Anyway?

First, “green” recycling done right.

Computer recycling done the wrong way.

Africa’s digital divide.


[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 10/03 Comment Here (0)
2008 09 05
CKF Film Friday No. 8: Lush Uses Performance Art To Save Sharks

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Humans have a capacity for destruction that is truly frightening, especially when we believe we will get something from it. For a while now a social meme has made the rounds that shark cartilage prevents cancer. Of course, this has as much basis in reality as Rhino horns enhancing virility. Still, millions of sharks are being killed every year to support the market demand created by this vague hope (not to mention the demand for shark fin soup).

Lush Handmade Cosmetics staged a performance art piece to support the Sea Shepherd Society. Run by activist Paul Watson, the group is raising awareness that this mindless destruction of another species must be outlawed. The destruction of a key component of the ocean’s food chain will have consequences. Like global warming though, those consequences will take a while to manifest themselves.

Shoppers on Regents Street in central London likely got more than they bargained for this afternoon. In a dramatic illustration of how sharks are caught and killed for their fins, Alice Newstead, performance artist and former employee of LUSH Fresh Handmade Cosmetics, voluntarily had her skin pierced with actual de-barbed shark hooks and hung suspended from the ceiling in the window of one of LUSH’s busiest shops for all to see.

Today’s film Friday documents the Lush performance art campaign. Warning: If you are squeamish you might want to pass on viewing this video.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 09/05 Comment Here (1)
2008 09 02
New Wind Turbine Designs

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When you think of a wind turbine do you think of a oversized propellor on a tall stick? You are not alone. The world is being slowly land-marked by thousands of these wind power icons.

There are alternative though, especially when thinking about smaller, lower powered turbines in urban settings. One unique design is the Quiet Revolution “elegant” turbines. Shaped more like a blender blade and less like a fan, the QR5 design brings a number of advantages to the world of green power generation.


[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 09/02 Comment Here (0)
2008 08 12
Comparing Responses To Oil Crisis

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In August 9th’s New York TImes Thomas L. Friedman author of “The World Is Flat” writes about how Denmark faced down the last oil crisis. He then compares how the U.S. responded (and, by extension, how Canada is now responding). Big difference.

Unlike America, Denmark, which was so badly hammered by the 1973 Arab oil embargo that it banned all Sunday driving for a while, responded to that crisis in such a sustained, focused and systematic way that today it is energy independent. (And it didn’t happen by Danish politicians making their people stupid by telling them the solution was simply more offshore drilling.)

What was the trick? To be sure, Denmark is much smaller than us and was lucky to discover some oil in the North Sea. But despite that, Danes imposed on themselves a set of gasoline taxes, CO2 taxes and building-and-appliance efficiency standards that allowed them to grow their economy — while barely growing their energy consumption — and gave birth to a Danish clean-power industry that is one of the most competitive in the world today. Denmark today gets nearly 20 percent of its electricity from wind. America? About 1 percent.

Friedman goes on to argue that regulatory intervention spawned innovation in Denmark not seen in the United States. How does he measure it?

Because it was smart taxes and incentives that spurred Danish energy companies to innovate, Ditlev Engel, the president of Vestas — Denmark’s and the world’s biggest wind turbine company — told me that he simply can’t understand how the U.S. Congress could have just failed to extend the production tax credits for wind development in America.

Why should you care?

“We’ve had 35 new competitors coming out of China in the last 18 months,” said Engel, “and not one out of the U.S.”

For more about the Danish wind power industry, please go here.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 08/12 Comment Here (0)
2008 08 05
The Environmental Macroeconomics Of Predicting The Future

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There was a time when predicting the future was best left to charlatans and religious leaders. Few legitimate academics, if any, were willing to bet their careers on some pie-eyed prognostications on what might be happening globally in, say, 2050. Unfortunately, guessing what might happen fifty years from now is easier than ever, with more and more respected literati lining up to take a shot at it. Why? Well, the world of economic theory has made predicting the future child’s play if you know the rules.

Take, for instance, the world’s energy consumption. Were you aware that the world consumed some 13.5 terawatts of energy from all sources in 2002. BTW, a terawatt equals one trillion watts. That could power a lot of electric cars. The United States was by far the greatest consumer of that power. MIT professor Daniel Nocera calculated that if the world’s population is 9 billion people in 2050, and they consumed electricity like Americans do today, the world would need to produce 102 TWs of power, a staggering amount that could not be supplied with current technologies. (Read the story here) Economics suggests that in a supply and demand world people and governments will respond to this growth in one way. They will produce more energy. So how will they do it?

Given the trend towards more and more energy use as the former third world continues its move to first world standards, possible scenarios get filtered out as being either unsustainable or ridiculous. The truth of 2050 is binary. Either we will have figured out how to produce adequate amounts of power in sustainable ways or we will live in a world that is apocalyptic—at best. The future’s big hope? Solar energy. 

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 08/05 Comment Here (0)
2008 08 01
CKF Film Friday No. 7: How Some Media Spin Green

We all know that in an open society voices from a range of the political spectrum have the right to state their views. In recent years media purveyors have built empires around an extension of this concept: There is no longer truth, there is only opinion. One of the most successful empires built on this strategy is Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News. So, when Al Gore releases “An Inconvenient Truth” it is no surprise that Fox takes a different position. After all, when there is no truth what remains is only ad revenue. Here are some egregious examples of how media influences the masses around green issues.

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2008 07 18
CKF Film Friday No. 6: Al Gore Predicts The Future

In case you didn’t watch or hear about Al Gore’s challenge to citizens of the Untied States yesterday, our film Friday brings it to you in its entirety. What is Gore’s challenge? He wants the U.S. to generate all its electricity from carbon-free sources by 2020. Quite a challenge, but achievable through existing technologies now that oil is over $50 a barrel. Will his desired audience listen? If the comments on YouTube—where the video is posted—are an indication, we are at about 50/50 yes and no.

Here are some of my favourites:

The Chinese have forged a deal with Cuban leader Fidel Castro to explore and tap into massive oil reserves almost within sight of Key West, Florida. At the same time, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who controls the largest oil reserves in the Western Hemisphere, is making deals to sell his country?s oil to China, oil that is currently coming to the United States.

This person’s answer is to invade Cuba and piss off the Chinese—not very good strategy for a host of rather obvious reasons.

Another was more thoughtful, even startling, but their conclusion takes a nasty turn for Gore:

What it takes to make ethanol:

It takes about 600 pounds, or about 10 bushels of either Wheat, or Corn to fill a 25 gallon tank of gas.

You would get about 3 tanks of gas per acre with Wheat and about 9 tanks of gas per acre with Corn.

What it takes in grain to fill up an SUV one time, could feed a person for up to a year.

How large a carbon foot print is crated to grow and harvest an acre of Wheat or Corn?

Starving people all over the world thank you Obama and Al Gore.

Then there are the inevitable arguments over the validity of global warming:

We must remember that it is the TREND that matters. Any given year might be warmer or cooler than any other, especially within eight years. Let’s consider that global warming has raised average temperatures a degree or two, therefore we are not necessarily going to feel it yet, but more sensitive environments, especially those in the polar regions - due to global heat distribution - are warming faster. Just as NASA, NOAA, or any truly credible foundation will tell you, the trends do not lie.

My favourite piece of paranoia makes references to the movie “There Will Be Blood’s” long straw metaphor:

Absolutely, and I know in 50 years we will be. I will be dead by then, so I’m worried about today. Its upsetting Honda just came out with a hydrogen fuel cell car, I constantly hear, “see, we don’t need to drill”. Fact is, that car will not be into production for 10 more years. How many more years after that before electric power plants are running on hydrogen fuel cells? China is right now 30 mile out from our border horizontally drilling the oil we are not allowed to.

If you follow this person’s line of thought the Chines will soon be beating the U.S. over the head with a bowling pin.

Enough of the commentary: here is the Nobel Prize winner speaking for himself. Enjoy.


[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 07/18 Comment Here (0)
2008 07 11
New York TImes: American Energy Policy Asleep At Spigot

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Nelson Schwartz of the New York TImes takes aim at America’s glutinous consumer class and the country’s politicians in a critique of the country’s energy policy.:

Even as politicians heatedly debate opening new regions to drilling, corralling energy speculators, or starting an Apollo-like effort to find renewable energy supplies, analysts say the real source of the problem is closer to home. In fact, it’s parked in our driveways.

Nearly 70 percent of the 21 million barrels of oil the United States consumes every day goes for transportation, with the bulk of that burned by individual drivers, according to the National Commission on Energy Policy, a bipartisan research group that advises Congress.

So despite the fierce debate over what’s behind the recent spike in prices, no one differs on what’s really responsible for all that underlying demand here for black gold: the automobile, fueled not only by gasoline but also by Americans’ famous propensity for voracious consumption.

While everybody knew that the 8 cylinder, gas-guzzling proclivity of the buying public was just not sustainable, turning off all that profit was not going to happen. Instead auto companies and their government enablers poured billions into a model that was never going to bring the North American auto industry the competitive success it wanted.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 07/11 Comment Here (0)
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