2008 01 31
WalMart: Agent Of Green?

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The New York Times ran an article January 24th on the The chief executive of Wal-Mart Stores, H. Lee Scott Jr., said that “we live in a time when people are losing confidence in the ability of government to solve problems.” But Wal-Mart, he said, “does not wait for someone else to solve problems.”WalMart promises to reduce the energy used by its products by 25%, and will force its suppliers to be more ethical in their treatment of workers.

blockquote>Mr. Scott also said he would press for suppliers in China, which are known for flouting environmental rules, to comply with that country’s environmental regulations and would require them to certify that they meet industry standards.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 01/31 Comment Here (1)
2008 01 29
Iraq Votes For Kyoto Protocol

In what seems the biggest irony of modern green politics, the Iraqi government voted last week to endorse the Kyoto Protocol. Mike Niza of the New York Times blog, “The Lede” has this to say:

The Iraqis decided to join the pioneering, yet troubled pact almost two weeks after Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was hailing legislative progress on another front. But the AFP report did not get specific on the amount of greenhouse-gas emissions Iraq would seek to cut.

As was the case when Australia ratified the treaty in December, Iraq’s decision seemed destined to focus more attention on the United States’s status as the only industrialized countries refusing to join.

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2008 01 27
The Story Of Stuff

The “Story of Stuff” goes something like this.... We strip the earth to provide materials to make things that, in their making, produce toxins that kill us while allowing us to be endless consumers. Come to think of it, maybe Annie Leonard tells it better:

Want to see more? Go to the “Story of Stuff“ web site.

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2008 01 21
Will Technology Lead Us Away From Environmental Doom?

"Lies, damn lies, and statistics” goes the often quoted phrase, and it is never more appropriate than when used as a rough description of the battle for the environmental high ground. Statistics are used by both sides in the struggle for public opinion to persuade, cajole, and even intimidate. Recently though, Arik Levinson of Georgetown University released a study showing that American manufacturers increased production by 70% while, simultaneously, reducing the production of primary pollutants by 58%. For advocates of free market responses to the environmental crisis, this study is becoming the holy grail—an illustration that markets can change without wholesale government intervention.

Mr. Levinson concludes:

If the 75% reduction in pollution from US manufacturing resulted from increased international trade, the pundits and protestors might have a case. Environmental improvements might be said to have imposed large, unmeasured environmental costs on the countries from which those goods are imported. And more importantly, the improvements in the US would not be replicable by all countries indefinitely, because the poorest countries in the world will never have even poorer countries from which to import their pollution-intensive goods. The US clean-up would simply have been the result of the US coming out ahead in an environmental zero-sum game, merely shifting pollution to different locations. However, if the US pollution reductions come from technology, nothing suggests those improvements cannot continue indefinitely and be repeated around the world. The analyses here suggest that most the pollution reductions have come from improved technology, that the environmental concerns of antiglobalization protesters have been overblown, and that the pollution reduction achieved by US manufacturing will replicable by other countries in the future.

What the study does not show, however, is the impact governmental intervention (yes, at one time not long ago government did demand industry clean up its act) and social change pressured manufacturers to clean up their act. Reading this analysis one would be forgiven for thinking the market spontaneously self-corrected because that’s what markets do.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Big markets tend to be juggernauts that once on a chosen path take heroic efforts to change. People, on the other hand, know when their environment is collapsing, and can make faster, finer tuned course corrections. We would argue that the reduction in America’s pollution is the result of societal pressure for change driven by the Rachel Carsons and Sierra Clubs of the world, and not the result of some previously unrecognized function of technological determinancy. 

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2008 01 11
Oil Sands Projects Are Planet Killers

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The Pembina Institute and World Wildlife Fund announced yesterday that Canada’s multi-billion dollar oil sands projects rank less than F minus on their environmental scorecards.

Jeffery Jones of the Guardian writes:

Environmental groups Pembina Institute and World Wildlife Fund surveyed 10 Alberta oil sands ventures, including seven yet to start producing, for attention to land, air emissions, water, climate change and overall environmental management.
Authors of the study called on the government to set more stringent limits on water use, emissions and impacts on wildlife and public health.
Only Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s Muskeg River mine got a passing mark, and even that was just 56 percent, according to the report, entitled “Under-Mining the Environment.”
“What this study has shown is that there’s more talk than there is action in terms of meaningful commitments to addressing the issues,” said Dan Woynillowicz, senior policy analyst at the Pembina Institute....

Mined oil sands from Shell, Syncrude Canada Ltd. and Suncor Energy Inc, are processed into about 800,000 barrels of refinery-ready light crude a day, which is roughly 30 percent of the country’s overall oil output.
Output is expected to triple by the middle of the next decade, an increase in the energy-intensive business that is alarming to environmentalists and residents of towns near the northern oil sands hub of Fort McMurray, Alberta.

With oil sands refining already responsible for Canada’s abysmal Kyoto record, the thought that production will increase threefold indicates that governments have abdicated any responsibility for the fate of the planet. One day--not long from now--all Canadians will have to pay a price for our lack of environmental stewardship today.

“The government has not been in any way driving environmental performance. The government’s been as focused on growth as the industry has—it’s been ‘How fast can we go?’ not ‘How well can we do it?’” Woynillowicz said.
He said the study is partly aimed at investors, who will eventually have to deal with liabilities among firms that do not live up to coming regulations for things like greenhouse gas emissions, which will carry major costs.

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2008 01 09
“America Is Addicted To Oil” and Canada Will Pay The Price

In case you wondered why Canada has been so far off in its Kyoto carbon reduction plans:

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2008 01 07
Toby Heaps & Karen Kun Interview Preston Manning
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With just an idea and some burning passion rooted in feelings of western alienation and opposition to big government, Preston Manning started up a marginal grassroots political movement in Alberta that gathered momentum, grew its base into a national profile, and has now morphed into the Government of Canada. His new passion: the environment. He calls himself “a green conservative rather than a blue environmentalist,” and wants to install a water metre in his house that is connected to his home computer, so he can track his water use in real time. Corporate Knights caught up with the reinvigorated statesman on September 11 at the Manning Centre for Building Democracy’s Calgary office.

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Most people didn’t associate your old party with environmental leadership. How did you get green?

The Reform Party and the Canadian Alliance—you had to pick your issues. We were brought into being with the fiscal responsibility issue in the days when they were running $50-billion deficits, and that was our main focus and we had to stick to that—we had pretty limited resources. Then the Quebec secession referendum came up quickly; it made these constitutional issues huge. So that was our focus.

[My interest in the environment] came mostly from my association with younger people. I’m a small ”D” democrat probably before I’m a conservative. When I see the younger generation whose participation in the democratic process is not heavy, I keep asking myself: well, these people are interested in something; they’re just not interested in what the parties in power are doing.

When I got out of Parliament I spent time at the University of Calgary and the University of Toronto. I found the two issues that would engage young people. One was the international stuff, but the other was the environment. I have an interest in that issue myself. Seeing this gave me a political interest as well.

My oldest son is quite interested in and concerned with the environment. He did his Master’s degree at Louisiana State University and he believes that people’s attitudes towards the environment are shaped more by culture and their sense of history and place. His studies have been on how we can use literature to get a stronger environmental ethic.

His influence on me has been a big one. And our grandkids—we’ve got nine grandkids under 10. I was helping one of them clean his teeth the other night and when I turned the tap on, he said, “You’re wasting water” [laughs].

This from a seven-year-old! This reflects into the next generation. A lot of messages coming through: you’d better pay more attention to these issues.

Why is the Green Party so popular in Alberta?

Because the environmental ethic is so high here. And Albertans will do something. Albertans are not afraid of supporting a new party. That’s more the culture here than in the older parts of the country—Alberta is willing to try something new.

If you were a consultant to the Green Party, what tips would you give them?

First, decide whether you’re going to be a political party or whether you’re going to be an interest group. A political party that aspires to govern—and I think that should be the aspiration of any party—can’t settle for “We’ll have a position on this and we’ll have a crusade on this but we’ll never have to do it.” I think that makes a party irresponsible.

Then, start doing the things you have to do to be a governing party. One of those things is to be really strong on the issue that’s brought you into being, which is the (...read more...)
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2008 01 04
People Oriented Cities—A Short Film

Want to know what a people oriented city looks like? Watch this film and find out. Here is a quote: “In a country where the average income is higher than that of the United States, many citizens have chosen the bicycle as their means of transportation because they live better that way.”

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2007 12 24
Happy Holidays

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Corporate Knights Forum wishes everyone a wonderful and happy holiday. We’ll be back later this week with more insights into the environment.

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2007 12 20
Greening Manhattan

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A year ago I was invited to New York to take part in a discussion about the future redevelopment of Governors Island. If you have never heard of it don’t be surprised-most New Yorkers don’t know it exists either despite the fact it is just 500 metres or so from Manhattan. Well it turns out that a decision was made yesterday to enlist Toronto’s Waterfront redesign team “West 8" to work on the redesign of Governors Island. The selected vision is much the same as the one I described last year.

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After my visit to Governors Island, I wrote this opinion piece for the New York Society of Urban Designers—I hope it influenced in some small way the choice of West 8’s scheme:

When the Dutch came to Governors Island, they saw a land green with promise. To them, America’s pristine forests breathed opportunity.  We wonder though, has Governors Island lost its symbolic promise of a better life based on the natural richness of the land? Has America?  The pilgrims moved on to Manhattan but the island’s strategic location at the mouth of New York’s harbor made it an ideal military stronghold.

The Coast Guard left Governors Island in 1996. Their move ended a string of military stewardships going back to before the British. In fact, the island helped save George Washington and his revolution. The old military buildings here smell of history. They became a national monument in 2001.  In 2003, ownership of the Island transferred to the people of the State of New York. It awaits its next great purpose.

A few hundred yards away, alone in an occasional drifting fog, stands the Statue of Liberty. Governor Island’s old flint battlements guard this symbolic gateway to America where the poor of the world came in search of opportunity.

Instead of a gateway to a land green with promise, the island archipelago of New York now risks becoming a gateway to a nation in environmental decline. Even oil barons know we are at a turning point. The American continent that once nutured dreams of prosperity is in peril. Cities and their users have to change - and they know it.

Can we start again – here, where we began? Can we build a sustainable America?

The island could be for urban sustainability what Silicon Valley is for high technology – a center where the best and brightest gather to solve complex problems. Imagine the whole of Governors Island as a 21st century laboratory for the development of sustainable cities (and, of course, a sustainable New York). It would house a human enterprise on the scale of the Manhattan Project but dedicated to life not death. There is also the advantage of having the world’s greatest urban test-bed just across the harbor.

What would it look like? When urban designers get the job of imagining a Governors Island of the future, they must acknowledge that this is not just another green-field site waiting to be planted with so much architectural stuff. These 172 acres need a grand vision.

Santiago Calatrava offers one part of that vision. His scheme for a gondola system connecting the island with Brooklyn and Manhattan is the essence of innovation. In plan, the system looks like a fragile web supporting a pendulum. Maybe, figuratively, it is.  Calatrava’s scheme solves the problem of transporting people to and from Brooklyn to the island quickly. It is an essential first step in the adaptive reuse of this tremendous resource.

A further step might be to create a special kind of park. Imagine a place similar in scale to Chicago’s Millennium (...read more...)

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2007 12 14
Amory Lovins On Winning The Oil Endgame

Take 20 minutes to watch Amory Lovins rebuke just about every argument you’ve ever heard about why we can’t afford to go green.

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2007 12 10
Olivia Chow And Jack Layton Go Green

It doesn’t matter if you’re an NDP, Conservative, Liberal, Green, or belong to any other party that has yet to emerge from the political ooze, living life to reduce rather than increase your environmental footprint is laudable. Take a look at how Jack Layton and Olivia Chow have chosen to live green. Is this a campaign video? Only their organic grocer knows for sure.

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2007 12 05
William McDonough At TED On Rubber Ducks And Other Threats To Our World

Here is McDonough at his best.


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2007 12 03
Wind Is Good

This ad from Europe provides a light-hearted poke at how we ignore the obvious when it comes to saving the environment. Enjoy.


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2007 11 30
Moores Law Meets Sustainability: A Film

In a time where most news about the environment is bad, here is a video that offers some positive thoughts about the future.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 11/30 Comment Here (0)
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