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2006 12 06
Climate Change Low on Teens’ Lists of Global Problems
Humans tend to worry about immediate threats. Being robbed. Getting cancer. Losing their job, and in the case of teenagers, not getting into college. Our instinct for self-preservation is strongest in the case of our own living, breathing bodies and weakest when it comes to the human race as a whole. This is a necessary fact of life in the urban jungles of some of the world’s largest cities, and perhaps more so for the teenagers that call them home. A poll conducted in October by Synovate for the BBC World Service surveyed 3050 teenagers in ten cities around the world: London, England; New York, USA; Nairobi, Kenya; Cairo, Egypt; Lagos, Nigeria; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Baghdad, Iraq; Delhi, India; Jakarta, Indonesia; and Moscow, Russia. On a ‘personal level’ the teenagers polled indicated that the most important issue to them at the moment was Education (38%), followed distantly by Terrorism (19%). Career (17%) and Aids (14%) rounded out the double digit percentiles, while Hunger, Obesity and Climate Change (a miniscule 3% worried about this the most) were at the back of their minds. If we run with the idea that teens are concerned mostly with themselves, its not unreasonable to consider their concerns and opinions to be a litmus test of the average adult’s visceral, instinctual reactions. Of course adults (or some of them anyway) attempt to push beyond their immediate reactions and think of someone other than themselves—their children for example, their country, or perhaps even the human race. When the teenagers were asked what which issue was most important on a global scale, their answers were slightly different. Terrorism vaulted to the top of the pack with 36% (and a whopping 63% in New York, which has had one terrorist attack in the last decade as opposed to Baghdad, which suffers one nearly once a week and where 59% cited it as the most important issue). Education retained second place with 25%, Aids stayed in third with 17%, and Climate Change was still down at the bottom with 5%. Flip back in your mind for a moment to Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs from middle school guidance class. Basic needs such as food and shelter, sleep, warmth and sex come first. Security from bodily harm, comfort and peace comes next, then social needs (belonging to a group and acceptance), then self-esteem, and at the tip top of the pyramid, intellectual stimulation and opportunities for creativity and innovation. It could be argued that climate change is the only truly global threat in the list the teenagers were given to choose from. Terrorism doesn’t touch every part of the world—though North American news might make one think it does. Aids is a health threat and therefore needs to be worried about—but at least there are ways to prevent yourself from contracting it, if your lucky enough to get your hands on one (too many are not). Education could be grouped with intellectual stimulation at the top of Maslow’s pyramid, but if one thinks about it as necessary for prosperity, and therefore health, security and safety, it makes sense. Yet there are places in the world where education is free. Climate change is going to affect every single person on earth eventually—through the weather their country receives, resource shortages, the economic changes and challenges it will bring, and the erasure of entire cities (including New York). But these threats are not immediate enough. The possibility that a teenager in any one of these cities could contract HIV is immediate. Immediate is the question of how to become educated, find a job and feed (...read more...)
New Green Architecture
![]() One of the requirements of sustainable architecture is density: increased housing density reduces a community’s aggregate demand for energy. Now imagine the typical North American suburban home of the last generation. They boast a single dwelling on large plots of land surrounded by metres of pesticide-soaked, fresh-mown grass. To survive, they require vast infrastructures of roads, cars, sewers, electricity generation, gasoline production, natural gas pipelines, and more. Their waste pollutes our air, streams and lakes. They gobbled up millions of acres of Canada’s prime agricultural land and disrupt our aquifers. They are not sustainable. Unfortunately, those kinds of dwellings represent the Canadian dream for many of us. Who wants to live in a condo when it is possible to have people who do make that choice help subsidize—through their taxes—our unsustainable lifestyle. After all, if suburbanites were to pay the real costs of their infrastructure needs they could not afford to live out there on the edge of our cities. Our dreams may be changing. Architects are offering suburban-like dreams in urban form. Eco-friendly condominium designs that offer external green spaces are being built and our cities may never be the same. Here is a story on one such project:
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2006 12 05
Notes from the Belly of the Liberal Leadership Convention
By Toby HeapsThe environment won and the backroom boys lost. That's the story of this weekend's Liberal Leadership Convention. Although he wasn't on the ballot at the end, John Godfrey kicked off the green revolution in the Red party back in March, when he announced he was running for the leadership in order to put the sustainable economy at the centre of the Liberal Party. Stephane Dion quickly took the green baton from Godfrey, put it at the centre of his three-tiered new liberalism (social justice, environmental sustainability, and economic prosperity) and zestfully ran with it all the way to the finish line this weekend. Michael Ignatieff, frontrunner until the last ballot, even signed up Jamie MacDonald, a whiz kid PhD who has worked with Natural Step, to be his sustainability guru and craft his carbon tax proposal. As the campaign wore on all contenders except Joe Volpe caught the green fever (Volpe's theme song was "Life is a Highway". He joked he'd had a good ride in his red Ferrari, and then on Sunday, he showed up for a meeting with Dion, in his red SUV--which he left idling by the curb for a valet to pick up). Even though Dion is the sustainable economy poster child and most of my idealistic Liberal friends were in his corner, some lingering doubts about his cojones remained, leftover from an interview I did with him back when he was Environment Minister. When I asked Dion what he thought about leaders in the business community (like the Shell Chairman) who said a carbon tax would be the best way to meet our Kyoto targets, he recoiled as if I'd hit him with a taser gun. He said carbon tax was a bad idea and wouldn't be considered by a Liberal government.As I went into the convention centre Monday morning (I got in as media--I'd be reluctant to join any party that would accept me, and besides it's a lot cheaper that way), I was keenest on Gerard Kennedy. I knew that he had the biggest upside (his integrity and work ethic) and downside (his obstinacy), and was at least one Berlitz tape short of speaking passable French--but I understand the guy. In conversations with Liberal powerbrokers I learned he didn't return phone calls or "appreciate favours." So when it came time for lunch on Friday, I headed off to the Kennedy suite at the Hyatt for an Indian Buffet. In the elevator on the way up, several attractive Kennedy supporters were discussing their tightly fitting gK t-shirts. But they reached a consensus that the Brison camp had the nicer garb: even tighter shirts sported by cute boys. When I got to the suite I noted two bad omens: One, the food was nowhere to be seen and two, there were some pretty sketchy liberals in the room--the kind you see at nomination meetings rigging outcomes or good-naturedly relishing character assassinations. Usually the sketchy ones are the ambitious ones, so I expected they would be in the Ignatieff camp. Maybe Iggy had a screening process. It was just as well--Indian food always makes me want to take a nap--and as I made my way to the food court for some soup, I decided Kennedy might have a bigger downside than I thought. He didn't seem to have a clear plan beyond party renewal, and I shuddered to think what would happen if he had the Prime Minister's portfolio in his lap without a well-prepared plan of action. Either there would be gridlock, or he would have to rely on his coterie of (...read more...)
2006 12 04
Ed Burtynsky: World Changing
![]() Nickel Tailings No. 31, Sudbury, Ontario 1996 Yesterday’s Toronto Star had a good story on Toronto artist Ed Burtynsky. It seems that many are worried Burtynsky’s work will become single-issue posters for environmental issues. While the Liberal’s new leader, Stephane Dion, might say that’s a good thing, it is unlikely that history will come to the same conclusion about the photographs. Burtynsky’s long history of documentation have more to do with the process and effects of massive-scale human activities than they do with the specific environmental impact of those actions. I’ve always thought that his works come from the conceptualist’s tradition which allows him to turns his vision to a host of related topics but maintain an overarching coherence to the work. In his own words:
2006 12 03
If Hummers Can Go Green There Is Hope For The Future Of The Planet
![]() For Canadians who cringe whenever they see a massive, carbon-belching Hummer squeezing through the streets of our cities, this news may surprise and delight. It turns out that the designers at General Motors -- who have long seemed bent on self-destruction by producing cars few consumers wanted to buy -- have discovered that the world wants green alternatives. A generation late to be sure but suddenly they've embraced the religion of sustainability. Take a look at their recent proposal for a "green" Hummer. Called the Hummer O2, the car produces oxygen instead of CO2: This fuel-cell powered Hummer would produce oxygen. Agae-filled body panels could break down C02, a greenhouse gas, releasing oxygen into the atmosphere. When parked, body panels would fan out to catch more light, speeding the process. The 02 would be constructed from 100-percent post-consumer recycled aluminum. GM and Ford managers have long seemed incapable of responding to consumer demands for fuel-efficiency and reliability. As a result, other car producers in Japan or Germany, for example, where urban density demands a smaller, more economical type of automobile, have stepped in to fill the growing demand for more efficient cars. Jobs in the North American automotive sector are now disappearing as a result of the hubris of their 20th Century management choice to ignore consumer needs and build gas-guzzling beasts like the Hummer. Many in the green sector can take a degree of "I told you so" satisfaction. After all, it did not take too much prescience to see the future on this issue. We have to wonder why companies engage in these self-destructive choices. Is it a matter of short-term thinking? If so, our manufacturing class must learn from the disruptive forces that are changing their sectors and refocus on the future. If they don't, we will risk handing over our economic prosperity to those countries who will.
2006 11 29
Lets Green This City
The project is co-sponsored by the Pacific Gas and Electric Company and ReadyMade Magazine. http://www.letsgreenthiscity.com is one component of a campaign dedicated to making San Francisco the “greenest” city in the United States. Given the city of Toronto’s obsession with bad street amenities, maybe trying to make the city “green” would result in 21st. century design solutions.
2006 11 28
Wal-Mart + Green = Disaster?
Mother Jones has a story by writer Bill McGibbon on the green initiatives of major corporations. McGibbon reflects on the paradox created when short-term profit driven corporations embrace what by nature have to be long-term thinking green initiatives. The results can be jarring:
McGibbon’s take is similar to that of the documentary, “The Corporation.” In that film, corporations are portrayed as innately profit-driven entities without a social conscience - sociopaths. As a result, they make choices that are not in the best interest of society. While this argument contains some truth - maybe a lot of truth - it is ultimately superficial. Why? Like good and bad people, good and bad corporations exist in an overarching political and social environment. If we offer effective regulatory infrastructures like, for instance, ISO sustainability standards, good corporations see the benefits of adopting them and the overall market changes. However, if our government does not make strong compliance regulations, the public cannot fault corporations who, to be competitive, produce goods within the constraints of that regulatory environment. We, as the ultimate recipients of the good and bad results of those decisions, have only ourselves to blame. So, it may be comforting for us to blame corporations for our environmental problems. They do deserve criticism. However, we must not forget that as citizens we have the choice of getting involved and changing public policy and, as consumers, of not buying from companies who are intentionally and without regret helping to destroy the place we inhabit.
2006 11 27
Drastic Ideas For Sustainability
![]() Last week the Associated Press reported that scientists at the United Nations conference on climate change offered some "out of the box" ideas on how to reduce global warming. Dr. Paul Grutzen, of Germany's Max Planck Institute, said that unless the world's polluting nations take immediate and strong action to curb emissions we will have to resort to "startling" solutions to the problem. Today, according to Grutzen, the world's policy makers exhibit a "grossly disappointing international political response to warming." What are Grutzen's startling solutions? Well, they are drastic. One involves hoisting heavy guns to high-altitutes where they would blast the stratosphere with sulphates. This action would have an effect much like that created by the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991. When that volcano erupted it cooled the earth by nine-tenths of a degree for one year. The need for drastic ideas like this one are closer than you think. They may be one generation away.
Fish Food At The TD Centre
![]() As I hurried to the Design Exchange last Thursday for the annual design awards, I passed through the lobby of the Mies van der Rohe designed TD Centre. Along the north wall were sculptures made from thousands of cans - food cans destined for Toronto’s Daily Bread food bank. I did not have enough time to stop for details although I think an engineering society created this installation. Does anyone have the story behind the can-based sculptures? They are worth looking at and remember, donations to the food bank are an effective way to contribute to the health of our community. Update: Here is a link to more information on the event. Last year’s winners were Diamond and Schmidt Architects. The sculptures will be on display at the TD Centre until December 1.
2006 11 24
Child Labourers Experience Systemic Violence
Close your eyes, shut your ears and travel into a memory: you and your best friend toboggoning down a snow-covered hill; you, seated in your desk at school, sharpening your HB to a point so you could poke the kid beside you; the smell of rain on hot concrete; what it feels like to nail a cannonball; the taste of cookie batter, licked straight off a wooden spoon; tears, excitement, sheer joy, fear. What would we be like without those memories? Modern childhood in the developed world is a time of carefree discovery for most. Children feel safe and loved, so they're free to explore the world around them with an innocence and wonder that can never be recaptured. My memories give me a safe place to retreat to when I'm sad, scared, frustrated or hurt. I can recapture that feeling of safety, and it grounds me. This past Monday, the United Nations International Labour Organization published a report that outlined the systemic violence committed against child labourers. Many of the world's 218 million child labourers are physically, verbally and emotionally abused every day. Children who work to help feed their family, because they have no family, or are forced to as part of their family's debt bondage are not innocent, but helpless. What will happen to them when they grow up? Where will they go to escape? Without those memories of innocence, discovery and excitement, what will they think of this world? A child without a childhood has nothing to strive for, because they don't know how good life can be. What is there for them to hope for and work towards? Developing countries need their children to grow up into healthy, productive, passionate people--they represent hope for the future. Child labour doesn't only jeopardize the lives of the milllions of children involved, but the lives of whole communities, and the future of countries.
Does Frank Herbert’s “Dune” Predict Today’s Geopolitical Environment?
Dr. Power is a portfolio manager and equity strategist at Investec Asset Management. Working in South Africa, Dr. Power is a long time specialist in the African resource market. His talk Wednesday night explored how the 19th Century geopolitical struggle named, “The Great Game,“ has returned to today’s Asia. The difference today is rather than China and India being subjects of colonial powers, they are emerging super powers—the so-called Chinese Dragon and Indian Tiger. And they are beginning to flex their muscles. Dr. Power predicts that in less than ten years these countries will rival western economic performance. To support their exponential growth, both have engaged in a strategic pursuit of natural resources. That search has come to Africa and that continent is about to emerge as a resource powerhouse. Is Canada next? Power draws some parallels to Frank Herbert’s science fiction novel, “Dune.” If you haven’t read it, well, now is the time to pick up the trilogy. Herbert’s forty year old description of a universe driven by the dominance of one scarce resource, “spice,” predicts many of the geopolitical dynamics now facing the western world. Think O-I-L in the place of spice here, but also steel, copper, gold . . . For commodity market managers these predictions suggest that the current downswing in the resource market is a minor retreat in what will be a prolonged and sustained bull market. Don’t forget politics though. WiIl the US stand by as the world’s resources are locked up by its economic partners? That is unlikely and recent activities in Iraq and Afghanistan may well have more to do with the “new” great game than with the defeat of global terrorism.
2006 11 23
Laneway Homes To Save Energy
When architects Bridgette Shim and Howard Sutcliffe decided that Toronto’s back lanes were a design opportunity, they had to spend years convincing the city that laneway homes should be part of our urban fabric. After all, Toronto decided it had to intensify its core. Laneway homes offered one way to do that. At the time, our city’s moribund regulatory environment stifled innovative architecture. Toronto’s planners and politicians received a gentle nudge from the two local architects, changed and the city is better for it. Skip ahead a decade or so. Laneway housing is an entrenched part of our city. It works well. However, as Shim and Sutcliffe can confirm, changing the city’s policies did not come easily. Today, we need innovative land use policies more than ever. Look, for example, at the Ontario Liberal government’s decision to build a gas-fired power plant downtown. Instead of using energy wisely, it promotes more consumption. And, according to some critics, it creates a tipping point. They argue the plant’s additional contribution to airborne pollutants will increase the rate of illnesses and cause deaths. In 2005, Toronto suffered through about 50 smog days. Get ready for more. What can government regulations do to make the city healthier to live in? Encouraging energy-efficient buildings is an important step, but the lead time on new office complexes is long and it appears this generation’s condominium tower buildup is just about over. Toronto will just have to live with the big buildings and work to retroactively make them more energy efficient. Fortunately, there is an option that is energy efficient—and we can start implementing it today. Sustain Design Studios’s miniHome is CSA-approved, and production can accommodate 1,000 families in a year. That is, if our regulators are forward-thinking enough to allow it. Architects Andy Thompson and Lloyd Alter of Sustain Design are dedicated to creating and selling well-designed, energy-efficient housing. How efficient? A family of two adults with two small kids can live a year in one of their miniHomes and consume the total energy equivalent of about $200 in propane. Theirs may be the world’s “greenest” mass-produced dwelling. With built-in solar panels and a small wind turbine to generate electricity, the miniHome does not require hookups to the electrical grid. It also has tanks for fresh water and waste water so it can, if needed, be independent of the city’s water and sewer system. Other refinements include a “green” roof that reduces the need for air conditioning. The one problem: Where do we put them? This takes us back to Toronto’s laneways. In many neighbourhoods, long lots back on to viable laneway streets. Shim and Sutcliffe proved that those lots can be subdivided to make room for new housing. Imagine if the city were to decree that miniHome-like solutions could use those lots. In one step, we would create communities of sustainable housing on otherwise underperforming land. Right now, the city and province have regulations that will not allow this type of low-energy home. There are a number of reasons why. Some have to do with building codes and others are planning related. Given an increasingly fragile environment, all cities will sooner or later have to change their building policies. We can plan for that change or react to it. The choice is ours. This story also published in today’s National Post
2006 11 22
World Biospher Reserves: The Niagara Escarpment
![]() Posted by Cathy Schaffter Did you know that the UNESCO World Biosphere Reserves include: the Ayers Rock region, the Central Amazon, the Mojave & Colorado Deserts --- and the Niagara Escarpment. There is more—Great trails of the world include: the Appalachian Trail, Santiago de Compostela, Hadrian’s Wall, the West Coast Trail --- and one lying an hour west of Toronto along the Escarpment from Niagara to Tobermory: The Bruce Trail. Yet, incredibly, most Torontonians aren’t aware of these genuinely `world class’ attractions in the city’s backyard! Maybe an experiment that happened this fall in the heart of downtown condo developments --- on Spadina Avenue by Clarence Square at Wellington Street --- will finally waken Toronto to some true bragging rights. On Sept. 17, Sept. 24 and Oct. 29, and at 9 am on Nov. 19, 25, and 26, this year, volunteers of the Toronto Bruce Trail Club ran a day-trip bus hikes to the wilderness. For years, the 4,000+ Toronto members of the environmentalist Bruce Trail Association have been working to link Torontonians with the beauties of the Trail --- and to gain new members for the cause of preserving the Escarpment from development and rampant quarrying. Bus hikes leaving from the York Mills and Islington subway stations have long allowed carless Torontonians to enjoy easy walks (Level 1 hikes) or four-hour workouts (Level II hikes) in the country. The club is now hoping that the convenience of hikes originating from within walking distance or short streetcar rides of the burgeoning population of the deep downtown will attract many more hikers and environmentalists. (Note for fashionistas: With skinny jeans and leggings making toned legs and butts critical, there’s nothing like a Level II hike to noticeably tighten every relevant muscle! And the view from a hiking trail is infinitely better than from a Stairmaster.) Sarah Harmer (named in Newsweek’s July 17 issue as the natural successor to Joni Mitchell) is a superb articulator of what the BTA is fighting for. On April 13, she inspired the Los Angeles Times to note the Trail and Escarpment from afar: Canada’s rugged and rocky Bruce Trail is reputed to have inflicted more blisters and aching feet than any other hiking path in North America, but for Sarah Harmer the physical challenge of the hike was secondary to its symbolism. The 35-year-old singer-songwriter used it to prepare for the recording of her third and most recent solo album, “I’m a Mountain,” which is themed around a threatened portion of the land upon which the trail sits. `"I spend so much time driving and going to shows and being in a van and not seeing enough details in those places, and I thought, I can do a walking tour on the Niagara Escarpment,” said Harmer, who spent two weeks last summer hiking a portion of the Escarpment’s 480-mile Bruce Trail with her band, performing the folk and bluegrass songs that would eventually become “I’m a Mountain.” “Escarpment Blue”. tells the true story of a quarry’s recent bid to expandits operations into Escarpment farmlands - farms that border the land Harmer grew up on and on which her parents still live."Salamandre," a children’s folk song Harmer sings Edith Piaf style.involved research to show that the land the quarry is seeking is also the habitat of the federally endangered Jefferson salamander.’ Looking forward to posts from people trying out the first Clarence Square hike.’
2006 11 21
Carbon Payback’s A Bitch - Or Is it?
Buying carbon offsets sounds suspiciously like something futures traders indulge in, and indeed it is, but it may just be the way consumers can lessen their impact on the environment.
What does it cost to offset an entire life’s worth of CO2? $4,000. Priceless.
2006 11 20
Enviro-Tower: Saving Water And Electricity
Problem There’s a high demand for A/C in large buildings. That requires cooling towers, which are severe water polluters and greedy energy users. • Cooling towers across North America use 230 billion kwh of energy • Cooling towers flush out 635 billion gallons of water per year Water cooling towers perched atop large buildings are the biggest sources of toxic discharges that end up in municipal sewer systems. This past summer, a small outbreak of Legionnaire’s disease was linked to emitted bacteria from cooling towers in downtown Hamilton, Ontario. Legionnaire’s disease is a potentially serious illness caused by airborne legionella bacteria, which are commonly found in cooling towers. Up until recently, a chemical cocktail that includes hydrazine, polyoxypropylene, specialty acids, and biocides was the only weapon that systematically combated microbiological contaminations like legionella bacteria. It was also the only defense against scaling, fouling and corrosion in cooling towers. Solution EnviroTowerTM uses electrostatic physical water conditioning technology to keep water cooling towers running smoothly without the use of chemicals. It also uses 25 per cent less energy than other systems and reduces operating costs by up to 30 per cent. The EnviroTowerTM system includes a physical water conditioner, which eliminates scale and inhibits fouling and corrosion, a separator that captures and discharges particles created by the conditioner, and a mineralator that adds suppressants to further control corrosion. The Embassy Suites Hotel overlooks on of the largest sources of hydro power on earth - Niagara Falls. EnviroTowerTM was installed in its cooling towers to eliminate the scale that had built up over just six months of use. After the first cooling season with EnviroTowerTM, there was no visible scale or fouling. The technology is sprouting on other rooftops in Canada, including the TSX building. The company recently added Zenon Environmental whiz Rafael Simon to its board. Potential If all cooling towers across North America were updated with EnviroTowerTM, it would save 160 billion gallons of water a year, and 57 billion kwh—roughly equivalent to the power used by all the homes in Ontario - would be returned to the grid. |
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